Title: Main Menu
1Main Menu
Unit 6 Menu of Preparation
- Risks in Jobs
- Discussion Sample Video
- Which Activity Is Riskier?
- Why do people take risks?
2Risks in Jobs
- Directions Work in pairs to classify the
following list of jobs according to the risks
involved in the jobs. Some jobs have different
types of risks.
3Jobs
- nurse, psychiatrist (?????), businessman,
policeman, coalminer, lawyer, stockbroker
(?????), president, secretary, beggar, teacher,
fighter pilot (??????), accountant (??),
interpreter, fireman (????), singer, peasant,
football player, writer, cleaner, psychologist,
civil servant (???), tourist guide, host of a TV
show, factory worker, ambassador (??), model,
journalist, chemical engineer, computer
programmer.
4Risks in Jobs
Physical risks Financial risks Emotional risks
nurse, policeman, coalminer, secretary, teacher,
fighter pilot, interpreter, fireman, football
player, writer, cleaner, tourist guide, factory
worker, chemical engineer, computer programmer
businessman, stockbroker, accountant, peasant,
writer, civil servant, tourist guide
nurse, psychiatrist, lawyer, president, teacher,
singer, psychologist, tourist guide, writer,
anchorperson, ambassador, model, journalist
5Discussion Sample Video
Risks in Jobs
Click to enjoy the video clip
62. Which Activity Is Riskier?
- STEP ONE
- Directions Work in groups to list the following
activities in order of riskiness. - rock climbing, working on a farm, driving a car,
skydiving, skiing, flying in an airplane,
driving a motorcycle, being a 65-year-old man.
- The following is a list of the activities from
the riskiest to the safest - rock climbing ?skydiving ?driving a motorcycle
?being a 65-year-old man?skiing? flying in an
airplane? driving a car? working on a farm
7STEP TWO
- Directions The following table presents the time
or effort involved in each activity to produce a
1-in-1000 risk of death. For example, 25 hours of
rock climbing produces 1 death per 1000 climbers.
So, hour for hour, rock climbing is twice as
risky as skydiving. Look at the table carefully
and check your list in Step One.
8STEP TWO
Activities producing a 1-in-1000 risk of death Activities producing a 1-in-1000 risk of death
Activity Time or effort involved
Rock climbing 25 hours
Skiing 340 hours
Working on a farm 22 years
Being a 65-year-old man 336 hours
Driving a car 2,000 hours
Driving a motorcycle 55 hours
Flying in an airplane 1,200 hours
Skydiving 50 hours
9STEP THREE
- Directions Which of the activities in the above
table would you prefer to do? Why?
10Sample
- I prefer to do rock-climbing. I know its a risky
sport but I really want to challenge myself and
see how I can use my muscles and brain to do a
tough job. You may ask why I like this risky
sport while there are so many safer ones to test
my strength and determination. - I was born in a mountain area and Ive been
enjoying mountain climbing since my childhood. I
always feel excited while climbing a mountain,
and rock-climbing is ever more exciting. Its
true rock-climbing is full of danger, but life
itself is full of dangers too. With modern
equipment and our brains, we can prevent serious
accidents and minor injuries wont hurt us too
much.
113. Why would people like to take risks?
- Sample
- I am really impressed by these quotes. They tell
us life is full of risks. As Ali put it, he who
is not courageous enough to take risks will
accomplish nothing in life. So taking risks is
an essential part of growth and progress. If we
look at some famous people we know, obviously
they are all good risk takers.
12Sample
- In addition to making achievements, some people
take risks to enjoy a new experience and to
challenge themselves. They want to look like a
courageous guy or a strong person. Taking risks
will make them feel more confident and competent.
They also want to enjoy the excitement in risk
taking because their lives are otherwise too
peaceful and comfortable.
13Unit 6 Menu of Word Study
- Key Words Study
- Phrases and Expressions
- Vocabulary Exercises
14Menu of Key Words Study
- Accordingly
- Disaster
- Inconvenience
- Rob
151. accordingly -1
adv. ??,????(??)??? ????? The point is to
inform ourselves about the relevant risks and
then act accordingly.
- ????????????????????
- ???? 1. We must ascertain the
actual conditions and arrange accordingly. - ??????????,???????
16accordingly -2
2.The weather has changed suddenly. Accordingly,
we must alter our plans for camping.
???? accordance n. ?? according to
??
172. disaster
n. ?? ????? By contrast, only about 300
die per year in mine accidents and disasters.
- ????,????????????????? ????
- ????All these difficulties were caused by
natural disasters. - ????????????????
???? (1)???disastrous ????
(2)???catastrophe
183. inconvenience -1
n. ??? ????? But is the added cost and
inconvenience worth the difference in price,
even supposing you could afford it? (L. 41)
- ??,?????????,?????????? ?????????????????????
- ??????put to inconvenience
19 inconvenience -2
???? 1)Im sorry for all the
inconvenience Ive brought you.
- ?????????,??????
- 2)Im sorry my questions have put you to
inconvenience. ??????????????
???? convenience ?? convenient ???
204. rob
V. ??
????? Am I likely to be robbed on
vacations?(L. 9)
- ???????????
- ?????? rob sb. of sth.
- ???? He was robbed of money on his way to
office. - ???????????
- The shock robbed him of speech.
- ??????????
???? (1)???rob ? robber ? robbery (2)???steal,
burgle
21Phrases and Expressions
- feed on
- reduce to
221. feed on -1
??? ????? Anxiety about the risks of
life is a bit like hypochondria in both, the
fear or anxiety feeds on partial
information.(L.11)
- ????????????????????? ??????????????
- ??????
- feed on ???
- be fed up (with)?????
- ????
- Sheep feed chiefly on grass. ????????
23feed on -2
Hatred feeds on envy. ???????
I am fed up with your grumbling. ????????? ?????
???live on
242. reduce to
?????(??)???? ?????But the fact that there are
risks associated with everything we are going
to do does not, or should not, reduce us to
trembling neurotics. (L.31)
- ??????,???????????????? ???,??????????????
- ????
- Laziness has reduced him to a beggar.
- ?????????
- After the teachers scolding, the students
were reduced to silence. - ??????,?????????
25Menu of Vocabulary Exercises
- Decide Which Word Fits the Sentence Best
- Fill in the Blanks with an Appropriate Word
- Translation
26Vocabulary Exercises 1-1
- Directions Work in pairs to decide which of the
italicized words fits the sentence best. Use your
dictionary if necessary. - She listens to you, and I wish youd give her
sensible/sensitive advice.
1)sensible ???????,????????????????? ??sensible
???,???,???sensitive ???,?????
27Vocabulary Exercises 1-2
- 2) He weighed the relevant/relative advantages of
buying a house against those of renting an
apartment. - 3) Roy took the back off his clock in order to
see the machine/mechanism that worked the alarm.
2)relative????????????????????? ??relevant
???,???relative ???,???? 3)mechanism????????????
??????????? ??machine ?n.? ??mechanism ?n.?
??,??,???
28Vocabulary Exercises 1-3
- 4) The toy requires/requests quite a bit of skill
to operate. - 5) She went through the tapescript carefully, to
reduce/eliminate all the errors.
4)requires ???????????????????? ??require ?v.?
??,??request ?v.???? 5)eliminate
???????????????????? ??reduce ?v.? ??eliminate
?v.? ??,????? all the errors ?????,??? reduce
?????
29Vocabulary Exercises 1-4
- 6) It was reported that 41 people were killed in
a plane crash/collision.
6)crash ?????,?41????????? ??plane crash
?????,????,???collision ???????
30Vocabulary Exercises 2-1
- 2. Directions Fill in each of the blanks with an
appropriate word or phrase from the box. Change
the form if necessary.
character risky sensible inform rarely all
manner of end up definitively casual
31Vocabulary Exercises 2-2
character
- We often discover that the true 1) __________ of
many risks is quite different from what we might
have imagined. Too often, we 2) ________
preparing ourselves for the impossible risk while
failing to take precautions against more likely
ones. The media, in particular, have a habit of
selecting two or three risks every season to
publicize while playing down others.
end up
1) ?? ??????, the true character of many risks
????????????character ??,??? 2) ??end up doing
?????,???????????????????????????????,???????????
???
32Vocabulary Exercises 2-3
Rarely
- Newspapers often scream about a cancer risk
associated with this or that. 3) _______,
however, do we learn the risk level. Such a 4)
_______attitude towards the risk level certainly
sells newspapers.
casual
3) ???????? do we learn the risk
level,????????????,??????????????????? 4) ????
attitude (??)????? casual, ?????,???????????
33Vocabulary Exercises 2-4
risky
all manner of
- Because virtually everything is 5) ______, and
there are 6) ____________ risks in our daily
life. But ordinary people should 7) ______
themselves not only about what is risky, but also
about what the level of the risk is.
inform
5) ???????????????????? risky a.
???,?????virtually adv. ???,??? 6) ??there are
all manner of risks? ????????????????????? 7)
??should ???????,inform sb. about sth.
??,???????
34Vocabulary Exercises 2-5
- Because ignoring the risk level makes
- 8) ________risk management impossible.
Indeed my general rule is this Unless someone
can 9) ___________ tell you what level of risk is
associated with a particular activity, do as
you wish.
sensible
definitively
8) ???????????????????,????????
????,??????????????????????? 9) ????????,
definitively ?????,????? ??????????????????
???????????,???????????
35Vocabulary Exercises 3-1
- 3. Directions Complete each of the following
sentence by translating the Chinese in brackets
into English. - 1) (??) those
grades, he won the scholarship to Syracuse
University. - 2) The market has (????)
interesting things for sale. - 3) Faith does not
(???)thin air but on facts.
On the strength of
all manner of
feed on
36Vocabulary Exercises 3-2
reduce
- 4) The teacher told the girl to
an equation (??) to its simplest form. - 5) Keep on doing that and youll
(??????) in serious trouble. - 6) The environmental problems are often
(????) nuclear waste. - 7) Today we are going to (?????)
the question of homeless people. -
to
end up
associated with
focus on
37Vocabulary Exercises 3-3
turned to
- 8) For assistance, they (???)
one of the citys innovative museums. - 9) Everyone in the class is expected to
actively (??)these
discussions. - 10) The southern weekend identified at least two
village officials said to be
(??) the trade.
participate in
involved in
38Menu of Reading Comprehension
- Related Information
- Pre-Reading Questions
- Intensive Study
- Post-Reading
39Menu of Related Information
- Fear, Risk and Rational Suicide
- How Life Insurance Works
- Risk Its Effect On The Price of Life Insurance
- The Risk of Life
- Risk
40Menu of Pre-Reading Questions
Pre-Reading Questions
- Directions Discuss in pairs the following
question.
- In a normal day, what are the three riskiest
things you do? - Sample
- The three riskiest things I do in a normal day
ride my bicycle in heavy traffic run downstairs
do science experiments.
41Passage Study
- Active Text
- Notes to the Text
- Difficult Sentences
- Summary of the Text
42Risks and You
Para.1 Para.2 Para.3 Para.4 Para.5 Para.6
Para.7 Para.8
43Paragraph 1Â
- At some time or other, all of us have played the
part of a hypochondriac, imagining that we have
some terrible disease on the strength of very
minor symptoms. Some people just have to hear
about a new disease and they begin checking
themselves to see if they may be suffering from
it. But fear of disease is not our only fear,
and neither is risk of disease the only risk we
run. Modern life is full of all manner of
threatsto our lives, our peace of mind, our
families, and our future. And from these threats
come questions that we must pose to ourselves
Is the food I buy safe? Are toys for my children
likely to hurt them? Should my family avoid
smoked meats? Am I likely to be robbed on
vacations? Our uncertainties multiply
indefinitely.
1
2
3
4
5
1
44Paragraph 2
- Anxiety about the risks of life is a bit like
hypochondria in both, the fear or anxiety feeds
on partial information. But one sharp difference
exists between the two. The hypochondriac can
usually turn to a physician to get a definitive
clarification of the situationeither you have
the suspected disease or you dont. It is much
more difficult when anxiety about other forms of
risk is concerned, because with many risks, the
situation is not as simple.
6
7
8
45Paragraph 3
- Risks are almost always a matter of probability
rather than certainty. You may ask, Should I
wear a seat belt? If youre going to have a
head-on collision, of course. But what if you get
hit from the side and end up trapped inside the
vehicle, unable to escape because of a damaged
seat belt mechanism? So does this mean that
you should spend the extra money for an air bag?
Again, in head-on collisions, it may well save
your life. But what if the bag accidentally
inflates while you are driving down the highway,
thus causing an accident that would never have
occurred otherwise?
9
2
10
3
46Paragraph 4
- All of this is another way of saying that nothing
we do is completely safe. There are risks, often
potentially serious ones, associated with every
hobby we have, every job we take, every food we
eatin other words, with every action. But the
fact that there are risks associated with
everything we are going to do does not, or should
not, reduce us to trembling neurotics. Some
actions are riskier than others. The point is to
inform ourselves about the relevant risks and
then act accordingly.
11
12
13
47Paragraph 5
- For example, larger cars are generally safer than
small ones in collisions. But how much safer? The
answer is that you are roughly twice as likely to
die in a serious crash in a small car than in a
large one. Yet larger cars generally cost more
than small ones (and also use more gas, thus
increasing the environmental risks!), so how do
we decide when the reduced risks are worth the
added costs? The ultimate risk avoider might, for
instance, buy a tank or an armored car, thus
minimizing the risk of death or injury in a
collision. But is the added cost and
inconvenience worth the difference in price, even
supposing you could afford it?
14
48Paragraph 6-1
- We cannot begin to answer such questions until we
have a feel for the level of risks in question.
So how do we measure the level of a risk? Some
people seem to think that the answer is a simple
number. We know, for instance, that about 25,000
people per year die in automobile accidents. By
contrast, only about 300 die per year in mine
accidents and disasters. Does that mean that
riding in a car is much riskier than mining? Not
necessarily. The fact is that some 200 million
Americans regularly ride in automobiles in the
United States every year perhaps 700,000 are
involved in mining.
15
49Paragraph 6-2
- The relevant figure that we need to assess a risk
is a ratio or fraction. The numerator of the
fraction tells us how many people were killed or
harmed as the result of a particular activity
over a certain period of time the denominator
tells us how many people were involved in that
activity during that time. All risk levels are
thus ratios or fractions, with values between 0
(no risk) and 1 (totally risky).
50Paragraph 7-1
- By reducing all risks to ratios or fractions of
this sort, we can begin to compare different
sorts of riskslike mining versus riding in a
car. The larger this ratio, that is, the closer
it is to 1, the riskier the activity in question.
In the case just discussed, we would find the
relative safety of car travel and coal mining by
dividing the numbers of lives lost in each by the
number of people participating in each. Here, it
is clear that the riskiness of traveling by car
is about 1 death per 10,000 passengers with
mining, the risk level is about 4 deaths per
10,000 miners.
16
17
51Paragraph 7-2
- So although far more people are killed in car
accidents than in mining, the latter turns out to
be four times riskier than the former. Those
ratios enable us to compare the risks of
activities or situations as different as apples
and oranges. If you are opposed to risks, you
will want to choose your activities by focusing
on the small-ratio exposures. If you are
reckless, then you are not likely to be afraid of
higher ratios unless they get uncomfortably large.
18
4
52Paragraph 8
- Once we understand that risk can never be totally
eliminated from any situation and that,
therefore, nothing is completely safe, we will
then see that the issue is not one of avoiding
risks altogether but rather one of managing risks
in a sensible way. Risk management requires two
things common sense and information about the
character and degree of the risks we may be
running. - (963 words)
53Note 1
- smoked meat ??
- It is known that artificially smoked meats like
bacon (???) and ham (??) contain nitrates (???)
which are carcinogenic (???) substances.
54Note 2
- air bag ????(???,???????????,??????????)
55Note 3
- But what if the bag accidentally inflates while
you are driving down the highway, thus causing an
accident that would never have occurred
otherwise?What if... means what would happen
if... - What if it rains when we cant get under
shelter?Here otherwise means if you hadt
placed an air bag in your car. - ??????????????????????????,????????????,????????
???????,????????
56Note 4
- compare the risks of activities or situations as
different as apples and oranges means compare
two totally different things that seem to be not
comparable".
57Difficult Sentence 1
- At some time or other, all of us have played the
part of a hypochondriac, imagining that we have
some terrible disease on the strength of very
minor symptoms.
???????????,????????????????????????????????????
????
58Difficult Sentence 2
- Some people just have to hear about a new disease
and they begin checking themselves to see if they
may be suffering from it.
???????have to??????????,??????????,???? ???????
?????????,????????????????????
59Difficult Sentence 3
- But fear of disease is not our only fear, and
neither is risk of disease the only risk we run.
??????,??????????????????,???????????????????
60Difficult Sentence 4
- And from these threats come questions that we
must pose to ourselves
??????????????????????
61Difficult Sentence 5
- Are toys for my children likely to hurt them?
??????????????????
62Difficult Sentence 6
- Anxiety about the risks of life is a bit like
hypochondria in both, the fear or anxiety feeds
on partial information.
???????????????????????????????????????
63Difficult Sentence 7
- The hypochondriac can usually turn to a physician
to get a definitive clarification of the
situationeither you have the suspected disease
or you dont.
??????????????????,??????????????????,??????
64Difficult Sentence 8
- It is much more difficult when anxiety about
other forms of risk is concerned, because with
many risks, the situation is not as simple.
?????????????????,????????,?????????,?????????
65Difficult Sentence 9 Â
- But what if you get hit from the side and end up
trapped inside the vehicle, unable to escape
because of a damaged seat belt mechanism?
?????????????,???????????????,??????
66Difficult Sentence 10
- Again, in head-on collisions, it may well save
your life.
??????,?????????????,?????????????
67Difficult Sentence 11
- There are risks, often potentially serious ones,
associated with every hobby we have, every job we
take, every food we eatin other words, with
every action.
???????????often potentially serious
ones????,?????/?????????????????????????,??risks?a
ssociated with??????(????,????(that)????)???????
???????,??with??????associated? ????????(?????????
)????????????????????????????,????,?????????????
68Difficult Sentence 12
- But the fact that there are risks associated with
everything we are going to do does not, or should
not, reduce us to trembling neurotics.
??????????????the fact,???that there are risks
associated with everything we are going to do
?????,??we are going to do??everything?????? ?????
?????,???????????????????,??????????????
69Difficult Sentence 13
- The point is to inform ourselves about the
relevant risks and then act accordingly.
???????????????????,???????
70Difficult Sentence 14
- The answer is that you are roughly twice as
likely to die in a serious crash in a small car
than in a large one.
????????????that??????????? ????????????????????
???????????????????
71Difficult Sentence 15
- By contrast, only about 300 die per year in mine
accidents and disasters.
???? by contrast??????????? ????????,?????????????
????????
72Difficult Sentence 16
- The larger this ratio, that is, the closer it is
to 1, the riskier the activity in question.
??????????????? ??????????,???????1,
???? ??????????
73Difficult Sentence 17
- In the case just discussed, we would find the
relative safety of car travel and coal mining by
dividing the numbers of lives lost in each by the
number of people participating in each.
????????by dividing ?????????,??????,lost in
each?lives???,each? car travel ?mining???in
case??????????,??(??)??? ?????????????,?????????
?????????????????????????????????
74Difficult Sentence 18
- So although far more people are killed in car
accidents than in mining, the latter turns out to
be four times riskier than the former.
??????,?????????????????????,?????????????
75Summary of the text
- This text mainly deals with the risks in our
daily life. The author thinks that risks are
almost always a matter of probability rather than
certainty and nothing we do is completely safe.
The author makes a comparison between
hypochondria and anxiety about the risks of life.
He explains how to measure the risk level of
activities by means of ratio or fraction. At last
the conclusion he draws is that the problem is
not to avoid risks but to manage them in a
sensible way, which includes two things common
sense and information about the character and
degree of the risks we may be running.
76Menu of Post-Reading
- Reading Comprehension
- Understanding the Organization of the Text
- Understanding Specific Information
- Group Discussion
771. The Organization of the Text 3-1
- 1) Directions Work in groups to answer the
following questions based on the information you
get from Paragraphs 13.
A. What is the main idea of this part? Risks
are always a matter of ___________ rather than
_________. B. How does the author support
this main idea? The author supports the main
idea by means of a comparison between
____________and____________ _____________,
and an analysis of injury prevention.
probability
certainty
hypochondria
anxiety about the risks of life
78The Organization of the Text 3-2
- 2) Directions Work in groups to complete the
following diagram with the information you get
from Paragraphs 47. Some boxes have been partly
done for you. - Risk level number of casualties / total
number of participants
79The Organization of the Text 3-3
We should inform ourselves about the
______________ before making any decision.
(Para.4)
Example 1 We need to know the relative safety of
__________ and __________ before our purchase.
relevant risks
large cars
small cars
Example 2 Which activity is ____________________or
_______? (Para.6)
Problem How do we measure the _____ of a risk?
(Para.6)
level
riskier, riding in a car
mining
Solution Risk levels can be expressed in ______
or _________. (Para.67)
______ is four times riskier than
_____________. (Para.7)
Mining
riding in a car
ratios
fractions
802. Understanding Specific Information 3-1
Directions Many times an idea is best understood
when it is compared with something else. Often
authors will intentionally compare one idea with
another in order to clarify or emphasize a
particular idea or point of view. Work in groups
to make comparisons between hypochondria and
anxiety about the risks of life.
81Understanding Specific Information 3-2
Similarity Difference
Hypochondria
Anxiety about the risks of life
The hypochondriac can turn to a physician to get
a definitive clarification of the situation.
In both cases, the fear or anxiety feeds on
partial information.
Risks are a matter of probability rather than
certainty.
82Understanding Specific Information 3-3
2) How Do We Measure the Risk Level?
- Directions Fill in the blanks with the
information from the passage.
Total number of deaths People involved in the activity The risk level
Traveling by car
Coal mining
200 million
1/10,000
25,000
300
700,000
4/10,000
833.Group Discussion 2-1
- Directions The following pie chart indicates the
relative risks of different means of
transportation in America. Work in groups to
answer the following questions. - 1) Which means of transportation is safer,
airplanes or cars? - Samples
- I think airplanes are safer because the relative
risk level of airplanes is almost ten times lower
than that of cars.
84Group Discussion 2-2
- 2) Why do most people fear airplane accidents
more than car accidents? - Sample
- Perhaps because airplane crashes are almost
always fatal. And it seems unsafe to fly in the
air, which causes psychological uneasiness in
peoples mind.
This is the end of Reading-Centered
Activities. Click the return button to go back to
the menu.
85Home
86Unit 6 Menu of Further Development
- Case Study
- Sample VideoVolcano
- Personal Safety
- Writing
871.Case Study
- STEP ONE
- Directions Read the following description of a
real situation carefully.
88A Real Situation
- One afternoon you go for a long walk in the
forest with your 10-year-old son and your
14-year-old nephew.The weather is pleasant but
cool. The night temperature might drop to 0? or
lower. You become lost. - You have no equipment or food except some raisins
(???) and chocolate bars. - How can you get help or find your way again?
89STEP TWO
- Directions Discuss the various risks involved
in each of the following possibilities. Then
choose the safest one and explain your choice.
90Choice-1
- You leave the two children and swim across a lake
where you think there might be houses.
- Possibility 1 Swimming across a lake in cold
weather is extremely dangerous. Leaving two young
children alone in the woods is unwisesomething
unexpected could happen to them. And if you
drown, they might never be found.
91Choice-2
- You stay with the 10-year-old boy and send the
14-year-old boy to explore a path you think might
lead to the main path.
- Possibility 2 Letting the 14-year-old boy go
alone to try to find the right path is very
foolish. He could fall and hurt himself or he
could get lost and get very frightened.
92Choice-3
- You decide not to move and spend the night in the
forest in the hope that someone will find you.
- Possibility 3 Not moving and spending the night
in the forest is also risky. The temperature
might drop, you might be very cold and you still
might not be found the next day.
93Suggestion
- All three possibilities are full of risks. But,
if you are a very good swimmer and you are fairly
confident that there are houses on the other side
of the lake, then Possibility 1 would be a fairly
safe choice. If you are quite confident that
people might start looking for you in daylight,
then Possibility 3 might be a safe choice. If you
huddle close together, you will be able to keep
warm. Getting sleep or rest will help conserve
your energy.
94Sample video
952.Personal Safety
- Directions Accidents are the major cause of
death for people between the ages of 1 and 44.
The following picture shows the number of deaths
caused by various types of accidents. Work in
groups to do the following tasks.
96The Picture
97Task-1
- Describe the figure in your own words.
- e.g. Falls account for about 15 percent of all
accidental deaths. - Or About 15 percent of all accidental deaths
are caused by falls.
98Task-2
- Describe the figure in your own words
- Motor vehicle accidents account for the largest
number (59.0) of all accidental deaths. - Only about 2.5 of all accidental deaths are
caused by firearms.
99Task-3
- Suggest ways of preventing accidents.
- Suggested ways of preventing accidents reduce
the speed limit make less powerful cars never
go swimming alone and be careful not to swim in
dangerous areas keep poisons out of reach of
children ban all firearms never ride a
motorcycle without wearing a helmet and
protective gear wear a safety belt on the
highway wear a life jacket when swimming...
1003.Writing
- Directions Write a composition entitled Are
Environmental Risks Worth Taking? based on the
results of your discussion in Activity 1. Your
article should be no less than 120 words.
Remember to write neatly.
101Sample 1
- Yes, environmental risks are worth taking. China
is a great nation and she must compete in the
modern world. In order to do this, she has to
take risks of all kinds. Pollution is one of the
major consequences of technological and economic
growth.
102Sample 1-2
- If stricter controls are placed on companies and
if laws are made to help limit pollution, we can
reduce the risks on the environment.
Unfortunately, installing anti-pollution devices
on chimneys and cleaning up the rivers and lakes
are very costly.
103Sample 1-3
- It is too late to turn back. The market economy
has brought many good changes that have improved
peoples lives. Progress of any kind has always
involved risks. We must be prepared to take risks
in order to move ahead. However, we must not move
blindly. We must remain vigilant with regard to
the environmental consequences of our economic
development. We must not proceed so quickly that
we put the health of the population at risk. -
(160 words)
104 Sample 2
- No, environmental risks are not worth taking. Man
has already done too much damage to the planet.
We will all suffer the consequences of increased
global warming, massive pollution of rivers and
oceans, and continued destruction of forests. We
must start looking for more ways to improve the
environment rather than continuing to damage it.
105 Sample 2-2
- Of course, we all want to have a more
comfortable life. We want to be able to buy more
and more things. But at what cost? If we produce
more garbage, if we pollute the air, the land and
the great rivers, we will suffer. We will not be
able to breathe fresh air or drink clean water.
Health risks will increase and our life span will
decrease.
106 Sample 2-3
- The environmental risks we are taking today are
not worth taking in the long run. The short-term
gains are not worth the long-term pain and
suffering. -
(165 words)
107This is the end of Unit 6