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  • 8/9/2019 You've Got Mail Ss

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    www.english-4U.com: OCTOBER 2005 1

    LEVEL: 3 SUITABLE FOR ADULTS / especially BUSINESS PEOPLE

    Language functions:

    Topic:Grammar:

    discussing issues; reading comprehension; talking about the past

    electronic messaging; healthused to do sth

    YYoouuvveeggoottmmaaiill!!STUDENT WORKSHEET

    ffooccuuss oonn ddiissccuussssiioonn

    ACTIVITY 1

    Discuss these questions.

    1. How long have you been using email?

    2. How have your communication habits changed since the

    advent of email?

    ACTIVITY 2

    How often did you use different means of communication in the past and howoften do you use them now?

    Write: never, hardly ever, sometimes, usually, quite often, often

    10 YEARS AGO NOW

    traditional letters traditional letters

    postcards postcardstelephone telephone

    text messaging text messaging

    fax fax

    Internet communicators Internet communicators

    Now present the information in the following way:

    Example: I used to write traditional letters very often, but now I usually sendtext messages.

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    www.english-4U.com: OCTOBER 2005 2

    ACTIVITY 3

    Email is undoubtedly an effective means of communication for business andpersonal use but it has also some serious disadvantages. Which of them, in youropinion, are most important?

    ADVANTAGES:

    1. Email is faster than ordinary mail; messages travel almost instantaneously.

    2. Email is most effective in providing quick answers to yes and no type of questions.

    3. Email is cheaper and less intrusive than traditional forms of communication,

    especially in comparison to telephone calls.

    4. Email is effective in finding the right person in an organisation or company.

    5. Email can distribute information to many people during the same time that it takes toemail one person.

    6. You can attach all kinds of different material to emails: pictures, video clips, music,

    etc.

    7. Using email you can communicate with other people enjoying the comfort of your

    own home. There is no need to go to the post office and you can work at home.

    8. Email communication is environmentally friendly we use less paper.

    DISADVANTAGES:

    1. You need access to the Internet.

    2. Email can become time-consuming when answering complicated questions and

    misunderstandings can arise because cultural differences in the interpretation of

    certain words. The telephone, is much better for providing detailed answers or if you

    feel that the question is not absolutely clear.

    3. Email can compromise the security because sensitive information can be easily

    distributed accidentally or deliberately.

    4. Email can become impersonal or misunderstood.

    5. Spam can be a real nuisance

    6. Reading emails on a computer screen is physically more difficult.

    7. Because email is such an effective means of communication, we receive more

    messages and spend more time dealing with them than in case of traditional

    correspondence.

    8. Emails may contain viruses.

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    www.english-4U.com: OCTOBER 2005 3

    ffooccuuss oonn rreeaaddiinngg

    ACTIVITY 4

    The article below is about the effect of emails on our health. Can you guess whatkind of influence electronic messaging might have on our health? Read and check

    if you were right. What do you think about the action presented in the article?

    Getting fat @ work? Well, lay off the emailsby Robin McKie

    The Observer, 16 October 2005

    DOCTORS have hit on a cunning plan to transform fatties into slim-line wonders: stop

    sending emails.

    Health experts believe millions of hours of vital exercise are being lost every week thanks to

    the explosion in electronic messaging.

    Once we walked to a colleague's desk to pass on a filthy joke or reveal what the boss and his

    secretary were doing in the photocopier room for three hours during the office Christmas

    party. Now it is easier to tap a short note on the computer, hit the send button and the world

    knows in seconds what has happened. It's great for gossip: bad for the figure.

    As a result, Sport England, as part of its Everyday Sport campaign, is launching Email-Free

    Friday this week. Employers, it says, should introduce a ban on internal emails and get staff

    walking around their office presumably to complain that they can no longer send emails.

    'We're losing millions of hours of exercise through the explosion of email,' said Dr Dorian

    Dugmore, a health adviser to Sport England. 'People email colleagues who sit next to them,never mind those who work on the other side of the office. We have to change people's lazy

    attitudes.' Increasing activity levels by 10 per cent could save 6,000 lives and 500 million per

    year, as well as leading to one million fewer obese people in England, it is argued.

    The idea also reveals a growing antagonism felt by many bosses to electronic messaging. John

    Caudwell, chief executive of Phone 4u, has banned his 2,500 staff from using email in the

    office. 'We have email paralysis,' he said. 'If you have a cancer, you have to cut it out.'

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    www.english-4U.com: OCTOBER 2005 4

    ffooccuuss oonn vvooccaabbuullaarryy

    ACTIVITY 5

    Find the words and expressions in the article on page 3.

    1. to stop using something (phrasal verb)

    2. tricking or deceiving people (adjective)

    3. informal word for a fat person (noun)

    4. necessary, essential (adjective)

    5. to give something to somebody, especially after receiving it (phrasal verb)

    6. rude or offensive, usually connected with sex (adjective)

    7. an informal talk about other people (noun)

    8. a formal rule not allowing something (noun)

    9. probably (adverb)

    10.fat (adjective)

    11.to inform about something not know earlier (verb)

    12.feeling of hatred or opposition (noun)

    13.group of people working for one organisation (noun)

    14.to stop doing something (phrasal verb)