beginner - Reader`s Digest Malaysia
Transcription
beginner - Reader`s Digest Malaysia
READER’S DIGEST CLASSROOM FEBRUARY BEGINNER YOUR RESOURCE FOR ENGLISH COMPREHENSION AND CREATIVE TASKS Editors’ Note Welcome to RD Classroom LEARNING A LANGUAGE is a lifetime commitment, so every chance you have to expand your English skills will help. That’s why we’ve developed RD Classroom, to turn your favourite magazine into a textbook. To use this special guide, you’ll need a copy of the February 2016 edition of Asia Reader’s Digest. Don’t worry if you missed it at the newsagency, you can go to rdasia.com and call the customer service numbers at the top left to order a copy. This month, our stories include ‘Know Better’ – all the latest research on how to improve your ability to learn, ‘Powerful Ways to Use Body Language’, where you’ll learn that gesturing with both hands helps creativity and much more, and ‘Under Pressure’, about the most creative ways to get rid of stress. We’ve included a set of questions and activities for each story to help you test your comprehension. Answer sheets will be uploaded at the start of March, along with the next edition of RD Classroom. Contact us on social media and tell us what you would like to learn about next! Contents What you’ll find 4 QUESTIONS FOR ‘KNOW BETTER’ From pages 66-73 in Reader’s Digest February 2016. From eating fish to teaching empathy, the latest research on learning. 5 QUESTIONS FOR ‘POWERFUL WAYS TO USE BODY LANGUAGE’ From pages 81-82 in Reader’s Digest February 2016. 6 QUESTIONS FOR ‘UNDER PRESSURE’ From pages 83-85 in Reader’s Digest February 2016. Take out your frustrations in ways that won’t hurt. 7 WORD HELP Explanations of difficult words from this month’s stories. JOIN THE CONVERSATION Read more, learn more and talk with the RD team through Digest’s communities online facebook.com/ReadersDigestAsia twitter.com/rdasia pinterest.com/readersdigestas www.rdasia.com The Editors 2 | RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 | 3 QUESTIONS QUESTIONS FOR ‘KNOW BETTER’ (PAGE 66) 1. Dr Cyrus Raji states that humans became smarter when they settled close to rivers. What reasons are suggested for this? Do these reasons make sense to you? 2. Why might writing notes and letters using pen and paper instead of a computer be better for people? Which do you prefer? Why? 3. Smoking is bad for you for many reasons but the article suggests it may also be bad for your brain. Why is this? Can a person change this if they stop smoking? 4. Is physical exercise helpful for the brain and why? What useful exercise tips does the article give the reader? 4 READER’S DIGEST QUESTIONS FOR ‘POWERFUL WAYS TO USE BODY LANGUAGE’ (PAGE 81) 1. What do you think the term ‘body language’ means? 2. What did a University of Maryland study discover about different types of voice? How is this discovery useful when dealing with young children? 3. How long does physical contact with another person need to last to create a human bond? 4. Why would a low-pitched voice make listeners think that you were feeling confident and unstressed? 5. How should you hold your chin to convince someone that you are making a sincere apology? Why? ACTIVITY The writer tells us why coffee may be good for your long-term memory. Create a poster explaining to people how coffee may be good for them. Use the positive points in the article to help you convince people to drink a cup of coffee. ACTIVITY Try using one or more of the powerful body language suggestions listed in the story. Did it change the way you felt? Did it change the way people reacted to you? Write a paragraph or two about your experience. | RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 | 5 QUESTIONS QUESTIONS FOR ‘UNDER PRESSURE’ (PAGE 83) 1. What does the writer of the article say the internet provides? What do these two qualities facilitate (make easier)? 2. ‘Venting’ can be good for a person but perhaps not online. Why is this? What is suggested as the alternative? 3. Is exercise useful for helping people who are frustrated? Why? WORD HELP KNOW BETTER Neuron A specialised cell in the body that transmits nerve impulses. You have neurons all through your body, not just in your brain. All of your thoughts, your senses and the movements of your body rely on neurons. Virtuoso An expert or genius at a particular skill. This word is mostly used to describe someone particularly talented at music or in the arts. Innate This word means natural, or inborn, and is used to describe some quality that did not need to be learned or practised. Analogue This is one of those words that used to have a single specific meaning, but now has a number of new meanings, too. Here, it means ‘not digital’, so your old record or tape player is analogue and writing a letter is an analogue version of email. Sensorimotor Using both the senses and the motor functions of the body. These are the parts of the brain that combine the information we take in about the world. Hand-eye coordination is an example of a sensorimotor skill. 4. What do you understand the term ‘self distancing’ to mean? How does this help you to deal with stress and anger? Is a thought such as my friend is angry, but I think she is mostly angry that she is running late, not that I ordered a cold drink without her an example of self-distancing? Narcissist Someone who is exceptionally vain and admiring of their own self, usually to the exclusion of other people. The word comes from the Greek myth of Narcissus, a beautiful but selfabsorbed young man who fell in love with his face reflected in a pool of water. He spent so long staring at his reflection that he eventually died. ACTIVITY Everyone becomes stressed, angry and frustrated at times. Think of a time when you became frustrated and didn’t act in the best way you could have. After reading the article, what could you have done instead to help or what might you try in the future to help yourself or someone else? 6 READER’S DIGEST | RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 Empathy The ability to understand and share the feelings of another person. Workaround A useful trick or technique to overcome a difficult problem. ‘My door would not stay shut, but I came up with a workaround using cardboard in the doorjamb.’ Callous Insensitive and cruel. Do not confuse this word with callus, which means a thick and hardened patch of skin. Herculean This is an adjective – a describing word – that means requiring or having great strength or effort. It comes from the mythological figure Hercules who was famed for his strength. RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 | 7 Hours of great reading QUESTIONS Don’t miss out. Each issue is packed with real-life drama, laughs and inspiring stories SAVE on retail price Subscription runs for 12 issues PLUS FREE HOME DELIVERY! VISIT rdasia.com/subscribe 8 | RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 READER’S DIGEST Mnemonic A pattern of letters or words formulated as an aid to memory. So the notes that fill the spaces in the treble stave of a sheet of music are FACE, F, A, C and E. For the bass stave, they can be remembered by the mnemonic phrase All Cows Eat Grass: A, C, E and G. Placebo A substance given as a medicine that has no intrinsic effect. Placebos are used in medical studies, where one group is given placebos to contrast with another group who receive an active medicine. The differences are then studied. They are also sometimes used where an active medicine could cause more harm than good and a psychological boost might be all the patient needs. When this happens, the patient is usually told that it is a surprisingly effective and safe medicine. Phonetically Of speech sounds. So you might phonetically spell out a complicated word such as antidisestablishmentariansim. By breaking it down into smaller parts (anti-dis-est and so on), it becomes much easier. But this does not work for words such as knight, which 700 years ago was pronounced more like ‘ker-nicht’ but is now simply pronounced ‘nite’. POWERFUL WAYS TO USE BODY LANGUAGE Body language We use this term to describe any communication that is done by the posture of the body and expressions of the face. It can be friendly (for example, open arms and a smile) or shy (hiding away and hunching over to make yourself seem smaller). The other term for body language is ‘non-verbal communication’, meaning the message is conveyed without words. Significant other This is an informal term that has become popular in English. It means any person who is in a close romantic relationship with you, usually a husband, wife, boyfriend or girlfriend. It can also be used in a humorous or non-serious way to refer to close friends and house mates, so you might say: “My significant other is my flatmate, and he was very upset when I went out to lunch with a girl instead of playing football with him.” Oxytocin A hormone that is produced naturally in the brain. It is sometimes called the ‘trust hormone’, and it plays an important role in social bonding. RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016 | 9 QUESTIONS Cortisol Another hormone that is produced naturally, in this case in the adrenal glands. It is released in response to stress. Brainstorming A group discussion to produce ideas. Persuasively In a convincing manner. Someone who speaks persuasively might be seen as more trustworthy, or a better candidate for a job. UNDER PRESSURE Umpteen This is an informal word that means ‘many’, or an uncountable number. You will frequently hear it being used with a th on the end: Lin shouted, “For the umpteenth time, Lee, do the dishes!” Metastudy A metastudy brings together separate but related studies and subjects them to new analysis or looks at the data with different statistical tools. It is also called a meta-analysis. Altercations Noisy arguments or disagreements. Tempering This word comes from blacksmiths and others who work with metal and originally described a process of treating a piece of metal to make it harder. Now it is used more widely to describe making a thing or person stronger or more resilient. Anagrams A word or phrase formed by rearranging the letters of another word or phrase: ‘meat balls’ is an anagram of ‘stale lamb’. DID YOU KNOW? n Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and the Indus Valley are three of the areas where human civilisation first formed significant large settlements. These cultures invented the city, writing and other basics of our world. Ancient Egypt arose in the Nile Valley, where annual floods created excellent farming lands. The Pyramids and Sphinx date back to this civilisation. Mesopotamia stretched across what is now Iraq, Syria and Kuwait, between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers. It is the civilisation that brought us the wheel and much of modern agriculture and mathematics. The Indus Valley civilisation was located in modern-day Pakistan and India, around the Indus River, and invented city planning and plumbing, along with an elegant writing system that scholars still can’t decipher. 10 | RD CLASSROOM FEBRUARY 2016