Adrian Fox and Janet Thomson report.
Reading UNIT 1
9 What is the writers' purpose in the first paragraph?
10 Is there a sentence that best summarises the main idea in this first paragraph?
These are the types of questions that you can ask yourself when you first read
a text. They form part of our reading strategies.
Read this title and
sub-heading and discuss
Questions 6-8 above with
a partner:
*a person who manages something (like a park or property)
• Now read the first two paragraphs of the article:
Soil, air and water are the three essentials for life on land. But
environmental policies have often taken soil for granted. Soil is of vital
importance because we use it to produce our food. It is also an
integral part of the landscapes and habitats we value so highly in the
countryside,
We published our report, Sustainable Use of Soil, this week, In it,
the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution set out to establish
what the effects would be if current human activities that affect soils,
and present trends, continued unchanged for the next 100 years.
11 What do you learn about the writer and his purpose in the second paragraph?
12 How do you expect the article to continue?
13 How do you think the style of this article may be different from 'The Dynamic
Continent'?
It is important to gradually build on your understanding of the information that
is provided in each paragraph of a text. If you begin your reading by asking the
type of questions you have met in this unit, you will begin to interact with the
text immediately and you will be off to a good start.
For more practice in reading titles and sub-headings, do Exercise A in the
Supplementary activities on page 111.
How useful were
the title and the
sub-heading in
orientating you
towards the text?
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