English Unlimited HTL 2, Schulbuch mit Audio-CD und CD-ROM
47 Safe and healthy 04 LANGUAGE SKILLS EXPLORE LOOK AGAIN EXTRAS 14 a You’re going to read an article about why people are accident-prone. How do you think these things can make people have more accidents? Read the article to check. Can you remember what the article says about these things? Complete the sentences. Do you agree with ideas 1–5? Why? /Why not? Write definitions of these words from the article. Use a dictionary if you need help. READING 13 a WRITING 15 upbringing adolescence watching TV being left-handed b 1 Parents are usually stricter with . 2 Adolescents are often clumsy because . 3 Watching too much TV affects children’s . 4 Watching cartoons doesn’t help children to understand . 5 The world is designed for . 1 clumsy: 2 upbringing: 3 cautious: 4 accident-prone: 5 adolescence: 6 left-handed: What makes one person have more accidents than another? Most people would say that it’s to do with taking risks. Take fewer risks and you’ll have fewer accidents. But is taking risks really a matter of choice? Some experts believe that whether or not you take risks in life has a lot to do with your upbringing and, some believe, with your birth order. Parents are o en stricter and more careful with their rst child, and so rst-born children tend to grow up taking fewer risks and being more cautious. Parents are o en more relaxed with a second or third child, so these children tend to take more risks. But why do children tend to be more accident- prone than adults? During childhood and adolescence, the body grows very quickly. ere seem to be periods in these years when our brain and body are at dierent stages of development. Our arms are longer than the brain thinks they are, so we knock things over; our legs are longer than the brain believes, so we trip over easily. Another explanation has been oered by scientists in Spain who have found a possible link between the number of hours a child watches TV and how accident-prone they are. e research suggests that the more time a child spends watching TV, the less they are developing their physical co-ordination skills. If a child doesn’t run around a lot, they don’t begin to understand that the world is full of physical risk. Watching cartoons and action adventure lms doesn’t help either. It gives the child a false sense of how the world works and of how much danger it contains. So, what about adults? Some studies have shown that le -handed people are more accident-prone than right-handed people. Why the dierence? No one knows for sure. One theory is that we live in a right-handed world. Everything – from cars to door handles, from children’s toys to engineering tools and equipment – is made by right-handed people for right-handed people. So le -handed children and adults are more likely to have accidents because the modern world is not designed for them. Why so clumsy? b Nur zu Prüfzwecken – Eigentum des Verlags öbv
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