Category Archives: • Short, High-Interest Articles for Extensive Reading

Short, High-Interest Articles for Extensive Reading: # 6: How Eye Glasses Surprisingly Increased Poor People’s Income.

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

This article in not about fashion. It’s not about the impression people get when they see someone wearing glasses. It’s about helping low-income people.

A 42-year-old grandmother in Bangladesh named Jasmin Atker was making the equivalent of $52 a month on her small family farm. Then one day, a nonprofit organization gave her a pair of glasses. After that, her income jumped almost 200% to $150 a month.

Researchers found similar improvements in people’s income in villages in Bangladesh and India after they had received glasses. (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the sixth article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

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• Short, High-Interest Articles for Extensive Reading: # 5: “Complaining: Sometimes Good, But Sometimes Bad ”

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

Complaining to a friend about something can often become a part of everyday conversation. Perhaps it’s about a teacher’s style, or about the pay at a job, or about the food in the school cafeteria, or about someone you both know.

Researchers have studied the reason why complaining is so common, what benefits it might have, and the problems it can cause the complainer. Also, the researchers looked at ways that we can learn to complain more effectively.

Complaining can actually become a pattern among friends, classmates and co-workers. For example, Allie had a part-time job as a waitress that she enjoyed after classes.The restaurant was supposed to close at 9 p.m., but recently the manager was letting customers enter later than that. This meant that the staff (waiters, waitresses and cooks) often couldn’t leave unit 10 or 10:30 p.m. or later.  This became the most common topic of conversation among the staff members as they were leaving and later in text messages.  (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the fifth article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

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• Short, High-Interest Readings: # 4: “Starting a Conversation With an Attractive Stranger”

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

You are standing with a couple of friends at a party talking. Across the room, you notice someone who looks kind of attractive, and you think that you’d like to meet that person. Maybe if he or she likes you, you’ll be able to get a phone number, or perhaps have a date. You feel a bit excited but also nervous about approaching this good-looking person.

Feeling nervous is a common emotion in this kind of situation. We are often afraid that if we try to start a conversation, the other person will reject us. According to Jean Smith, a social and cultural anthropologist, fear of rejection is the most common reason why we decide not to start a conversation with an attractive person whom we’d like to meet.

However, according to Smith, we can overcome that obstacle if we think in a different way about our goal of being liked or of getting a phone number or having a date. (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the fourth article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

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• Short, High-Interest Readings:# 3 “Why Some Products Are Less Likely To Make It To The Recycling Bin”

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(This posting includes a handout LINK AT THE END OF THIS POST which you are welcome to use with your students.) *

A researcher used to get upset. He often saw people throwing things in the wastebasket, for example soda cans or gum wrappers, that they should have put in the recycling bins. Then he became interested in why they do that. As a result, he set up some experiments.

In one study, 150 volunteer students were asked to give their opinion about a pair of scissors. (The students thought the study was about the scissors, but actually, the researchers were secretly studying recycling.)  They gave each of the students a sheet of paper. They told half of them to practice with the scissors by cutting the paper into eight pieces. The other half were told to just hold and practice squeezing the scissors but not cut the paper. (See complete article below.)

For background information about these articles and for suggestions for how to use them with your students, see  • Introducing “Short, High-Interest Readings”  Also, I’ll be adding more of these articles in the right-hand column: ESL Reading> Short, High Interest Articles for Extensive Readings

Here is the third article. You can download the article for your students by clicking on the link at the end. Also included are three optional exercises: True-False Questions; Paraphrasing Exercise; Reflection Exercise.

Continue reading