The World Mobile Congress in Barcelona whirled around 5G technology -which won't be widely available until 2020- while it showcased the latest in mobile phones, foldable smartphones like the Samsung Galaxy S10, the Huawei Mate X or the Nokia 9 PureView -with more rear cameras than any other. But there were other gadgets on the Fira Gran Via floor: Microsoft presented its HoloLens 2, a light mixed reality headset only available for enterprises right now. The best camera zoom was the Oppo 10x and the biggest microSD card was the ScanDisk Extreme with 1TB of storage capacity. Huawei launched a faster and more powerful laptop, the MateBook X Pro (2019). The prices of these devices match their top-notch quality, as you can read in this link to Mashable, which opens the door to the technology you will be using in the future.
Although the Mashable report above is short and it illustrated with photos, the density of the information and the technical vocabulary makes this text a C1 reading task.
If you still want to find out more about the organization of the WMC -the exhibitors, the speakers, the seminars, the programmes, the networking possibilities and much more- you can click here on the official web page of the congress. Reading this long and technical text could be a C2 task.
jueves, 28 de febrero de 2019
martes, 26 de febrero de 2019
Winter Heatwave Starts Wildfires and Picnics in Britain
lunes, 25 de febrero de 2019
domingo, 24 de febrero de 2019
From Astray Cat to Local Celebrity
This story from Animalkind, a USA Today video franchise, talks about Pip, a cute street cat that was adopted by a family in the summer resort of Ocean City, Maryland, and has become a local celebrity. Pip is a restless, adventurous cat that has helped some people overcome loss and sadness and has put a smile on the face of those who have seen him playing around.
The speed of delivery in the speech and the vocabulary are challenging, so, this short video can be classified as C1, although the subtitles can make it accessible to lower level students.
jueves, 21 de febrero de 2019
The Neuroscience of Addiction
Psychology professor Judith Grisel talks on Fresh Air about the neuroscience of addiction. She compares alcohol to a sledgehammer on the brain, cocaine is like a laser -it is very specific, whereas marijuana floods the brain with one specific effect. She explains how our brain learns to react against these addictive substances when they are used regularly to bring you to a state of balance, "homeostasis", which reduces the effects of drugs in the long run. Then she discusses binge drinking, the legalization of marijuana, among other things. Professor Grisel was a marijuana and alcohol addict in her youth, but she has been clean for 30 years. She is the author of the book "Never Enough: the Neuroscience and Experience of Addiction".
This NPR interview lasts 36':03", but it has a script, so it can be classified as C1.
This NPR interview lasts 36':03", but it has a script, so it can be classified as C1.
Labels:
Audio with Script,
Books & Reading,
Health,
Link (C1),
Science,
USA
lunes, 18 de febrero de 2019
A Quick Make-up Routine, When You Are in a Hurry
sábado, 16 de febrero de 2019
Jon Batiste, a Talented Pianist Live on NPR
Jon Batiste is a talented pianist who leads the band at The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. In this Fresh Air interview (44':25"), he starts explaining how he grew up in a musical family in Louisiana, where he started singing, and then turned to percussion and the piano. But what makes this interview unique is that he plays the piano to illustrate his technique (02':53"- 05':27"), his style (14':36"- 16'-30") and influences like the bamboula rhythm (07':37"- 10':05"), Thelonious Monk (17':20"- 20':12"), (20':38"- 21':47"), or Bach (23':20"- 24'-33"). Jon Batiste also shows how music can create an atmosphere and convey feeling like in "St James Infirmary", which he subsequently analyzes (25':43"- 29':10"), and he finally performs his own personal version of the children's song "If you are happy and you know it" (40':11"- 42'-40"). Jon Batiste has recently published an album called Hollywood Africans, "a mix of boogie woogie, blues, standards and originals, including compositions inspired by classical music".
The language in the interview is rather technical at times, so the interview is classified as C2, but the music Jon Batiste plays can be enjoyed by anyone at any level.
The language in the interview is rather technical at times, so the interview is classified as C2, but the music Jon Batiste plays can be enjoyed by anyone at any level.
jueves, 14 de febrero de 2019
Valentine's Day with Bolliwood Movies
martes, 12 de febrero de 2019
Art for Rent at the Weisman Art Museum
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The Pond, by Hide Kawanishi (1957) |
Here you can find a link to the Weisman Art Museum webpage that explains the characteristics of the art rental programme.
domingo, 10 de febrero de 2019
The Beautiful Brain: The Drawings of Santiago Ramon y Cajal
![]() |
The Purkinje cell in the cerebellum |
A resource kit for elementary and secondary education teachers and students was published in pdf and here you can see the reproductions of some of the original drawings by Cajal as well as lesson plans to use in the classroom (C2 Level). Cajal's drawings inspired artists like Dalí, Miró or Tanguy.
Santiago Ramón y Cajal is considered the father of neuroscience, he was awarded the Nobel prize for Medicine in 1906, and he was a fine artist too. Here you can find a link to Cajal's Wikipedia page.
viernes, 8 de febrero de 2019
Chef José Andrés: "Vegetables are so Sexy"
jueves, 7 de febrero de 2019
Crazy Rich Asians: a Hollywood Hit or a Flop?
Crazy Rich Asians is the first Hollywood release featuring an Asian and Asian-American cast since 1993's The Joy Luck Club. It has been a box-office hit worldwide, making $230 million (Warner Bros invested $30 million in the movie). Film critic Richard Lawson describes it as a "fairy-tale romp, full of direct Cinderella references that has some muddied messaging about wealth. Mostly it just whisks us away on a whirlwind tour of an almost fantastical world. Crazy Rich Asians is breathless fun -but rather weightless too" (Vanity Fair). The richness of the language and the style make reading this review a C2 task.
But in mainland China, the reception of the film has been quite different. Katrina Yu, writing for Aljazeera, explains that Crazy Rich Asians has been a box office flop in China, it has only made $1.5 million, an "atrocious performance" according to independent China film industry consultant Jonathan Papish. The film is not seen as "a celebration of Asian culture, but a demonisation of it", according to popular reviews on Chinese movie websites. This Arts & Culture report can also be recommended for C2 students.
Finally, you can listen to NPR and read a Fresh Air interview to Kevin Kwan, the writer of the best selling novel that the film is based on, where he talks about his upbringing in a wealthy family and his gradual exposure to Bohemian society in Singapore, and where he also responds to the criticism of the movie for starring Henry Golding, a half British, half Malay actor and model. This radio interview with a script could be accessible to C1 students.
But in mainland China, the reception of the film has been quite different. Katrina Yu, writing for Aljazeera, explains that Crazy Rich Asians has been a box office flop in China, it has only made $1.5 million, an "atrocious performance" according to independent China film industry consultant Jonathan Papish. The film is not seen as "a celebration of Asian culture, but a demonisation of it", according to popular reviews on Chinese movie websites. This Arts & Culture report can also be recommended for C2 students.
Finally, you can listen to NPR and read a Fresh Air interview to Kevin Kwan, the writer of the best selling novel that the film is based on, where he talks about his upbringing in a wealthy family and his gradual exposure to Bohemian society in Singapore, and where he also responds to the criticism of the movie for starring Henry Golding, a half British, half Malay actor and model. This radio interview with a script could be accessible to C1 students.
martes, 5 de febrero de 2019
The Chinese Around the World Celebrate the Year of the Pig

domingo, 3 de febrero de 2019
All the World is a Stage
William Shakespeare can be fun! This lesson, which starts with a listening, vocabulary and speaking task from Headway Upper-Intermediate, Oxford Univerty Press, 1987, continues with a discussion about the seven ages of man and aging, a topic that has changed very little since Elisabethian times. Then you can find two videos that explain the plot of the play "As You Like It", one from Shmoop and the other one by a teacher, Ian Finley. Finally, you can find four renditions of Jaques' classic monologue "All the World is Stage" performed by Digital Theatre Plus, Morgan Freeman, Tom O'Bedlam and Beth Kennedy in Troubadour Theatre Company. The picture in this post shows Orlando and Rosalind, the two main characters in "As You Like It".
Shakespeare still has something to say 500 years later, you only have to decide whose performance you prefer.
Shakespeare still has something to say 500 years later, you only have to decide whose performance you prefer.
viernes, 1 de febrero de 2019
Japan's Elderly Crime Wave
The number of crimes committed by people over 65 in Japan is on the rise. Meagre state pensions that do not pay bills and loneliness are pushing a growing number of elderly Japanese to commit petty crimes, reoffend and serve long terms in prison, where they can find food, accommodation and healthcare for free... and company too! If you want to find out more, you can read this BBC News Stories article, which includes a short video (in Japanese and English with subtitles) and a link to a radio report from BBC radio 4 and the BBC World Service programme "Assignment". Both the text and the video can be classified as B2 level.
Here you can find a direct link to the BBC Radio 4 report (and the BBC World Service Assignment programme) on Japan's Elderly Crime Wave, which lasts 28 minutes. The narrator speaks slowly and very clearly, but there is no transcript, so the documentary is classified as C2.
Here you can find a direct link to the BBC Radio 4 report (and the BBC World Service Assignment programme) on Japan's Elderly Crime Wave, which lasts 28 minutes. The narrator speaks slowly and very clearly, but there is no transcript, so the documentary is classified as C2.
miércoles, 30 de enero de 2019
A High Fashion, Trash Shopping Mall in Sweden
BBC News reports about this shopping mall in Eskilstuna, near Stockholm, where everything is recycled. It is located right next to the city's recycling centre, shopkeepers pick unwanted household objects which they resell or upcycle. The mall also hosts a design school, where students learn how to upcycle donated objects. It is creative, sustainable and a business success. Do you think this idea would work outside Sweden? Why/why not?
Do not miss the short video with subtitles at the bottom of the report, there you can see the shopping mall with your own eyes.
lunes, 28 de enero de 2019
How the Immune System Works
Immunologist professor, Daniel Davies from Manchester University, has recently published a book, "The Beautiful Cure: the Revolution in Immunology and What It Means for your Health". Here he talks to NPR's Fresh Air host, Terry Gross, about the complexity of the immune system: how differently it works during the day and during the night, how stress can weaken the immune system, how age changes the immune system and how discoveries in immune system research can help fight diseases like cancer or rheumatoid arthritis. Finally, Daniel Davies explains how difficult it is for scientists to understand the data that they gather from immune system research because it is very surprising and counter-intuitive.
The novelty of the content, the density of information, the fuzziness of the expression and the technicality of the language make it difficult to follow professor Davies in some parts of the interview, so this link is classified as Ex (for Experts and teachers) beyond the top C1 and C2 levels of the Council of Europe.
The novelty of the content, the density of information, the fuzziness of the expression and the technicality of the language make it difficult to follow professor Davies in some parts of the interview, so this link is classified as Ex (for Experts and teachers) beyond the top C1 and C2 levels of the Council of Europe.
Labels:
Audio with Script,
Books & Reading,
Health,
Link (Ex),
Science,
UK
domingo, 27 de enero de 2019
sábado, 26 de enero de 2019
Will Mr. Bean Be Back Again?
Why is "The Scream" Still an Icon Today?

viernes, 25 de enero de 2019
The Coolest Gadgets for 2019
The CES 2019 at Las Vegas is the largest consumer technology fair in the world. It showcases more than 4,500 exhibiting companies that present their latest gadgets. Here you can find the coolest gizmos from this year's edition: a rool-up TV screen, an electric Harley Davidson motorbike, a quantum computer, a headband for insomniacs, an instant water-heater for tea, the fastest tooth brush in the world and the most beautiful gaming monitor ever.
CES 2019 displayed amazing innovations in TV technology. Here you can watch a video and read an article about the latest trends in TV sets.
CES 2019 displayed amazing innovations in TV technology. Here you can watch a video and read an article about the latest trends in TV sets.
miércoles, 23 de enero de 2019
The Brexit Debate in the Streets of Westminster
lunes, 21 de enero de 2019
Bangladesh Garment Workers Strike
Workers in the garment industry in Bangladesh went on strike over low wages for more than two weeks. One worker was killed and 50 were injured in clashes with the police. International retail giants like H&M, Walmart, Primark, Tesco or Aldi are among the main buyers of clothes made in Bangladesh.
Here you can read a report from The Times of India about the unrest and the clashes with the police (Jan. 9th, 2019).
And here you can read another story from Channel News Asia (Singapore) that reports about the sacking of hundreds of workers after the protest ended and strikers returned to work (Jan. 16th., 2019).
Here you can read a report from The Times of India about the unrest and the clashes with the police (Jan. 9th, 2019).
And here you can read another story from Channel News Asia (Singapore) that reports about the sacking of hundreds of workers after the protest ended and strikers returned to work (Jan. 16th., 2019).
domingo, 20 de enero de 2019
In Praise of Boredom
Boredom has very bad press these days. People seem to fear boredom and try to live fast and multitask. So, it is striking to hear somebody mounting a full-blown argument in defense of... creative, detoxing boredom! This is what Rev. Dr. Giles Fraser, an Anglican priest, does in the recording below, which was broadcast on 17/09/18, on the BBC Radio 4 programme "Today". It is an episode of the slot "Thought for the Day" ,where thinkers of different faiths reflect on people and issues in the news.
You can find a link to a Google Drive download of the recording of Rev. Dr. Giles Fraser's reflection on boredom, here (The BBC website only keeps podcasts of past programmes for 30 days) and a transcription of the words, thanks to my colleague Pablo A.
Do you agree with Rev. Giles Fraser? Should you allow yourself 10 or 15 minutes of "creative, detoxing, boredom" everyday? Should you stop learning English right now, and get bored for a little while?
You can find a link to a Google Drive download of the recording of Rev. Dr. Giles Fraser's reflection on boredom, here (The BBC website only keeps podcasts of past programmes for 30 days) and a transcription of the words, thanks to my colleague Pablo A.
Do you agree with Rev. Giles Fraser? Should you allow yourself 10 or 15 minutes of "creative, detoxing, boredom" everyday? Should you stop learning English right now, and get bored for a little while?
viernes, 18 de enero de 2019
Bill Cunningham: Colours in Winter
Queen Letizia in a Tracksuit-style Outfit
Labels:
Celebrities,
Fashion & Design,
Link (B2),
Spain,
Text,
Video
miércoles, 16 de enero de 2019
World's 'Loneliest' Frog Gets a Date

Do not miss the comments from the readers at the bottom of the report, some of them are very funny!
lunes, 14 de enero de 2019
Kumbh Mela: the Biggest Festival in the World
domingo, 13 de enero de 2019
Fake News, Conspiracy Theories and InfoWars
Fake news and disinformation campaigns have been the focus of media attention in the USA since the 2016 Trump-Clinton presidential campaign. In this interview a New York Times reporter, Adam B. Ellick talks about the use Vladimir Putin has made of disinformation campaigns, quoting the AIDS conspiracy theory in the 1980's, or the campaign against himself after publishing the story of the Pakistani girl education campaigner, Malala Yousafzai. He also discusses with Terry Gross President Trump's discredit of American media and the current division in American politics and society. Level: C2
Adam B. Ellick is the Director and Producer of Opinion Video at the New York Times. He has won Pulizer and Emmy News Video prizes for his work as a video journalist. You can watch the Opinion Video page of the New York Times here: The Seven Commandments of Fake News or The Worldwide War on Truth. The videos cover very similar content to the radio interview, but they do not have subtitles, so they may be more difficult to understand than the radio interview (with script) above.
***
Adam B. Ellick is the Director and Producer of Opinion Video at the New York Times. He has won Pulizer and Emmy News Video prizes for his work as a video journalist. You can watch the Opinion Video page of the New York Times here: The Seven Commandments of Fake News or The Worldwide War on Truth. The videos cover very similar content to the radio interview, but they do not have subtitles, so they may be more difficult to understand than the radio interview (with script) above.
sábado, 12 de enero de 2019
Monster Fatberg of Wet Wipes Blocks Sewer
Climate Change with Somini Sengupta
NPR's host Terry Gross interviews Somini Sengupta, an international climate correspondent for The New York Times. They discuss the scientific debate about climate change, water scarcity, unemployment and conflict (in Syria, Somalia and Kenya, for example), heat waves in India and Pakistan, power failures, the Paris agreement on global warming and the coal industry etc.
If you want to read more about Climate Change, you can find here an article that Somini Sengupta wrote for the New York Times in August 2018, where she talks about rising temperatures around the world and the future consequences of this global trend.
***
If you want to read more about Climate Change, you can find here an article that Somini Sengupta wrote for the New York Times in August 2018, where she talks about rising temperatures around the world and the future consequences of this global trend.
martes, 8 de enero de 2019
Rosalía tipped 5th singer to watch by the BBC
Labels:
Fashion & Design,
Link (B2),
Music,
Spain,
Text,
UK,
Video with Subtitles,
Women
lunes, 7 de enero de 2019
jueves, 3 de enero de 2019
Queen: Rami Malek in Bohemian Rhapsody and Guitarrist Brian May
First-generation American actor, Rami Malek, talks about how he auditioned to get his starring role as Freddie Mercury in the film Bohemian Rhapsody and how he prepared for the job. The son of an Egyptian coptic Christian family of inmigrants to the USA, Rami Malek worked his way in Hollywood by delivering pizzas with his CV (resumé in American English) to all famous producers that came to his fast food restaurant. He also had a starring role in the TV show "Mr. Robot", where he plays a brilliant computer hacker who has serious mental problems.
***
On this second link, Terry Goss talks to Brian May, Queen guitarrist, about the making of the songs "We Will Rock You" and "Bohemian Rhapsody", about the ups and downs of the popularity of Queen in the USA, about astrophysics, among other things. Brian May speaks excellent English with a very clear British accent.
Angelina Jolie into Politics?
Labels:
Celebrities,
Link (B2),
Politics,
USA,
Video with Subtitles,
Women
martes, 1 de enero de 2019
Nayim's Goal for Real Zaragoza and David Seaman's Ballad
This version of The Lobbing of David Seaman was performed live on 29th May 2010, on Ireland's RTÉ Radio 1 programme "The Loneliness of the Goalkeeper". A slightly different version of the ballad is available in the YouTube video below:
Finally, you can watch Nayim's historic goal with the comments in English in the video below:
*****
Listening task for the ballad The Lobbing of David Seaman (RTÉ's version) by poet Murray Lachlan Young:
Ah, come all ye teenage goalkeepers
And listen unto me,
I'll tell you of a goalie
Who went out to gay Paree;
The Gunners called him '(1) ___________ Hands',
David Seaman was his name,
But that (2) ______________ night in Paris
Was his world consumed in flames.
And listen unto me,
I'll tell you of a goalie
Who went out to gay Paree;
The Gunners called him '(1) ___________ Hands',
David Seaman was his name,
But that (2) ______________ night in Paris
Was his world consumed in flames.
It was in the
final minutes
And the game was
surely gone
With oaken heart
and broken (3) ___________
He urged the Gunners on,
The (4) ____________
expecting penalties
were whistling
full time,
But one (5)
_____________ Zaragozan
Saw the keeper
off his line.
So up steps
Seaman's nemesis
and his name it
was Nayim,
He kicked a
mighty lofted (6) __________
So high above the
scene
Poor Seaman scrambled backwards
To face this
final card
To be (7)
____________ by a cannon ball
From over fifty
yards.
Oh! The tears of
David Seaman
They define the Gunners'
(8) ______________,
But he could not
change the score line
And he could not
change his name.
So he took the
well-trod channel
Of a man whose (9)
______________ has failed,
Oh! He posed for
lifestyle magazines,
And he (10)
___________ a pony tail.
[Second Part, from 17:38 to 18:43]
KEY: (1) Safe; (2) lonely; (3) ribs; (4) crowd; (5) cruel; (6) shot; (7) beaten; (8) pain; (9) luck; (10) grew.
[Second Part, from 17:38 to 18:43]
And as his pony
tail grew longer
The memories did
fade
And Seaman soon
was recognized
As a master of
his trade
A hero for his
country
And a father to
his team
Oh! But never
could he wash away
The stain left by
Nayim.
So, come all ye
teenage goalkeepers
And listen to
what I say,
Be careful what
you wish for,
For it might just
come your way
And looking at
your jersey
As in loneliness
you crave
To be judged on
what you miss
And not on what
you save.
KEY: (1) Safe; (2) lonely; (3) ribs; (4) crowd; (5) cruel; (6) shot; (7) beaten; (8) pain; (9) luck; (10) grew.
Labels:
Audio with Script,
Feelings,
Lesson (B2),
Music,
Spain,
Sports,
UK
lunes, 31 de diciembre de 2018
Kofi Annan, a World Peacemaker
Two Feminists Have a Conversation

You can watch some of her songs on YouTube:
Sisters, a song that was inspired by the feminist rally in March 2018 in London, it says "I am a mother, I am a sister and I fight like a girl".
In Queen, she wonders "Am I queen? Do I ever find love? Or I'm still waiting".
In Air, she talks about growing up as a girl and she sings: Oh, oh, oh, I need some air/I need air/And I like the boys, the boys, the boys, the boys/I love the boys/But they like, the girly, girly, girly, girly, girls/And look straight through me/Like plate glass, like fresh air/Like I wasn't even there/I need air/I need some air/I need air.
Emily Blunt, the New Mary Poppins
Labels:
Audio with Script,
Cinema TV & Theatre,
Link (C1),
Text,
UK
Roma, a film by Alfonso Cuaron
sábado, 29 de diciembre de 2018
Aretha Franklin: An Interview, her Biography and Some Hits

***
She gave rare interviews, but in 1999 she talked to Terry Gross for Fresh Air on NPR, about her upbringing and her background in gospel, and her gradual exposure to jazz and pop music. She also talked about her professional career in Columbia and Atlantic records, the recording of some of her major hits, like "Respect", her relationship with Dr. Martin Luther King, and her work with opera arias. On the webpage you can find a written summary of the interview, but you can also listen to the full interview (47:55), and read the transcipt for support.
martes, 25 de diciembre de 2018
Best Movies of 2018
Which were the best movies of 2018? Here your can find 3 different lists, from The New York Times, The Guradian and Esquire Magazine. You can choose which list to read, or you can compare lists, and you can finally make your own personal list of the best movies of 2018. Have you seen any of them? What's your opinion?
The New York Times Best Movies 2018: Roma, Burning, Shoplifters, Zama, Happy as Lazzaro, BlackKklansman, First Reformed, The Death of Stalin, Monrovia, Indiana and Colophone (for the Arboretum Cycle).
The Top UK movies of 2018, according to The Guardian are: Roma, Phantom Thread, Leave No Trace, Loveless, Private Life, Black Panther, Cold War, Widows, Coco and Hereditary.
Finally at the top of the list of the 2018 films, according to the Esquire, you can find: Mandy, Annihilation, Love After Low, The Rider, Cold War, You Were Never Really Hear, First Reformed, Zama, Eighth Grade and Thunder Road.
![]() |
The Top UK movies of 2018, according to The Guardian are: Roma, Phantom Thread, Leave No Trace, Loveless, Private Life, Black Panther, Cold War, Widows, Coco and Hereditary.
Finally at the top of the list of the 2018 films, according to the Esquire, you can find: Mandy, Annihilation, Love After Low, The Rider, Cold War, You Were Never Really Hear, First Reformed, Zama, Eighth Grade and Thunder Road.
domingo, 16 de diciembre de 2018
Best Songs of 2018 by NPR

Best Books of 2018 by the the New York Times

domingo, 2 de diciembre de 2018
Art is Everywhere, 2018 by Mary Anne Hobbs, BBC Radio 6


http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/articles/4FVJ1DZNKr41XsfcMmM5K8n/art-is-everywhere-2018
jueves, 29 de noviembre de 2018
British Doctors to Prescribe Arts & Culture
The UK's Health Secretary has recently encouraged British doctors to prescribe Arts, Culture & Social Activities to improve the health and wellbeing of patients.
Below you can find a reading and speaking task for B2 students and upwards:
The arts and humanities are
afterthoughts in many American schools, rarely given (0) ______ priority________ as part of a comprehensive education,
though they formed the basis of one for thousands of years elsewhere. One might
say something similar of preventative medicine in the U.S. (1) _______________________. It’s tempting to idealize the
priorities of other wealthy countries. The Japanese investment
in “forest bathing,” for example, comes to
mind, or Finnish public
schools and France's funding
of an Alzheimer’s village.
But everyplace has its
problems, and no country is an island, exempt from the global pressures of
capital or hostile interference.
But if we consider such things
as art, music, and dance as essential—not only to an education, but to our
general (2) _________________ —we
must commend the UK’s Health Secretary, Matt Hancock, for his “social
prescribing” initiative.
Hancock wants “the country’s
doctors to prescribe therapeutic art- or hobby-based treatments for ailments
ranging from dementia to psychosis, lung conditions and mental health issues,”
reports Meilan Solly at Smithsonian. The plan “could find patients enrolled in dance classes and singing
lessons, or perhaps enjoying a personalized music playlist.”
In a speech
Hancock delivered on what happened to be
election day in the U.S., he referred to a quote from Confucius that represents
one particularly ancient educational tradition: “Music produces a kind of
pleasure, which human nature cannot do without.” (He also quotes the Rolling
Stones' “Satisfaction.”) Hancock’s idea goes beyond aristocratic traditions of
old, proclaiming a diet of the arts for everyone.
They’re not
just a right in their own terms as the search for truth and expression of the
human condition. We shouldn’t only value them for the role they play in
bringing meaning and dignity to our lives. We should value the arts and social
activities because they’re essential to our health and wellbeing. And that’s
not me as a former Culture Secretary saying it. It’s scientifically proven.
Access to the arts and social activities improves people’s mental and physical
health.
We’ve (3) ____________________ all
come across research on the tremendous health benefits of what Warnock calls
“social activities,” maintaining friendships and getting out and about. But
what does the research into art and health say? “The medical benefits of
engaging with the arts are well-recorded,” Solly writes, citing studies of (4) ______ ________________ making
great strides after performing with the Royal Philharmonic; dance lessons
improving clarity and concentration among those with early psychosis; and those
with lung conditions improving with singing lessons. Additionally, many studies
have shown the emotional lift museum visits and other cultural activities of a
social nature can give.
Similar trials have taken
place in Canada, but the UK project is “simultaneously more (5) ___________________ and less
fleshed-out,” aiming to encourage everything from cooking classes, playing
bingo, and gardening to “more culturally focused ventures.” The proposal does
not, however, fully address funding or accessibility issues for the most at-risk
patients. Hancock’s rhetoric also perhaps heedlessly pits “more prevention and perspiration”
against “popping pills and Prozac,” a characterization that seems to trivialize
drug therapies and create a false
binary where the two approaches can work well hand-in-hand.
Nonetheless, a shift away from
“over-medicalising” and toward preventative and (6) _______________________ has the potential to address not only
chronic symptoms of disease, but the non-medical causes—including stress,
isolation, and sadness—that contribute to and worsen illness. The plan may (7) __________________ a rigorously
individualized implementation by physicians and it will "start at a
disadvantage," with 4% cuts per year to the NHS budget until 2021, as
Royal College of Nursing public health expert Helen Donovan points out.
Those (8) ______________ aside, given all we know about the importance of
emotional well-being to physical health, it’s hard to argue with Hancock’s
premise. “Access to the arts improves people’s mental and physical
health,” he tweeted during his November 6th roll-out of the initiative. “It makes us
happier and healthier." Art is not a luxury, but a necessary ingredient in
human flourishing, and yet "the arts do not tend to be thought of in
medical terms," writes
professor of health humanities Paul Crawford, though
they constitute a "shadow health service," bringing us a kind of
happiness, I’d argue with Confucius, that we simply cannot find anywhere else.
1.- Vocabulary: Fill-in the gaps with one of the words or
phrases below.
comprehensive
|
likely
|
|
stroke survivors
|
healthcare system
|
challenges
|
holistic approaches
|
well-being
|
require
|
2.- Reading Comprehension
1.- What does Matt Hancock want British doctors
to do?
2.- What does research say about the
medical benefits of art?
3.- Can you explain what the phrase in
paragraph 8 “create a false binary”
means?
4.- How is this proposal going to be
funded?
3.- Speaking: Discuss the following statements
1.-"Access to the arts improves people's mental and physical health".
2.- "More perspiration against popping pills and Prozac".
3.-"The proposal does not fully address funding and accessibility issues (#8).
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