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Date: February 28, 2005 THE ARTICLEThe world's first anti-tobacco treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, went into effect yesterday with 167 countries signed up to it and 57 countries ratifying it. The United States and China are still yet to ratify it, which raises fears the overall effectiveness of the treaty may be weakened. Ratifying it means the Framework is legally binding and countries must follow strict regulations for tobacco products, including banning advertising and controlling smoking in public places. It is hoped that the treaty will greatly reduce the number of deaths from smoking worldwide. Adults will be persuaded to kick the habit and children will be dissuaded from starting it. The World Health Organization believes smoking accounts for five million deaths a year. It is the second leading cause of preventable deaths. The WHO's coordinator of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, Douglas Bettcher, says the treaty could do much to reduce global passion for smoking, "It is an historical moment and we are very confident that this treaty is going to save lives. ... It has already started off a powerful process globally and we are very confident that it is going to continue to do so and it is going to prove itself as a very effective public health tool to really curb this unacceptable burden of disease and death." WARM UPS / COOL DOWNS1. CHAT: Talk in pairs or groups about cigarettes / cigars / smoking / Marlboro / tobacco advertising / … To make things more dynamic, try telling your students they only have one minute (or 2) on each chat topic before changing topics / partners. Change topic / partner frequently to energize the class. 2. CIGARETTE BRAINSTORM: Spend one minute writing down all of the different words you associate with the word ‘cigarette'. Share your words with your partner / group and talk about them. 3. 2-MINUTE DEBATES: Students face each other in pairs and engage in the following (for-fun) 2-minute debates. Students A are assigned the first argument, students B the second. Rotate pairs to ensure a lively pace and noise level is kept:
4. 'FILTHY' HABIT: Talk about other ‘filthy’ / bad / unsociable / unhealthy habits. Compare the following with smoking:
5. SMOKERS I KNOW: Write down the names of three smokers you know. Tell each other about these smokers. PRE-READING IDEAS1. WORD SEARCH: Students look in their dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … of the words ‘anti’ and ‘tobacco’. 2. TRUE / FALSE: Look at the headline and guess whether these sentences are true or false:
3. SYNONYM MATCH: Match the following synonyms from the article:
4. PHRASE MATCH: Match the following phrases based on the article (sometimes more than one combination is possible):
WHILE READING ACTIVITIES1. GAP-FILL: Put the missing words under each paragraph into the gaps. Anti-tobacco treaty begins
2. TRUE/FALSE: Students check their answers to the T/F exercise. 3. SYNONYMS: Students check their answers to the synonyms exercise. 4. PHRASE MATCH: Students check their answers to the phrase match exercise. 5. QUESTIONS: Students make notes for questions they would like to ask the class about the article. 6. VOCABULARY: Students circle any words they do not understand. In groups, pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find the meanings. POST READING IDEAS1. GAP-FILL: Check the answers to the gap-fill exercise. 2. QUESTIONS: Students ask the discussion questions they thought of above to their partner / group / class. Pool the questions for all students to share. 3. VOCABULARY: As a class, go over the vocabulary students circled above. 4. STUDENT-GENERATED SURVEY: Pairs/Groups write down 3 questions based on the article. Conduct their surveys alone. Report back to partners to compare answers. Report to other groups / the whole class. 5. ‘ANTI’/ ‘TOBACCO’: Students make questions based on their findings from pre-reading activity #1. 6. DISCUSSION: Students ask each other the following questions:
7. WHY SMOKE?: Students talk in pairs/groups about the following quotes relating smoking: Knowledge and education: "The less educated you are, the more likely you are to smoke" Advertising and the media: The tobacco industry has been accused of targeting groups like young people, women, and ethnic minorities: "We don't smoke that shit. We just sell it. We just reserve the right to smoke for the young, the poor, the black and the stupid." Tobacco company executive in 1990, quoted in a BBC documentary "We try to tap the emerging independence and self-fulfillment of women, to make smoking a badge to express that. "Advertiser working for a 'feminine' cigarette brand in the 1980s Stress and lifestyle: "Lung cancer rates are 5 times higher among the unemployed than professionals. It's not because stress causes lung cancer, it's because stress causes smoking" Professor Richard Peto, researcher for the Imperial Cancer Research Fund Other: Role models and peer group? Money? Self-confidence? Family attitudes to smoking? 8. FLYER: Design and make a handout for parents to read on smoking trends. Here you can mix words, pictures and graphic information. 9. SMOKE OPERA: Improvise a scene from a soap opera. First decide on a cast of characters, including a variety of people (age, sex, work, personality, religion etc) as you would get in a soap opera. Use the smoke opera character sheet below to help you prepare what they are like. (Explain what a soap opera is). Then act out a scene from an episode where the owner of the local meeting place (e.g. a café) decides on a smoking ban. Role play the arguments which develop between your characters (SMOKE OPERA CHARACTER FILE)
10. SMOKER’S VIEW: What do you think of the pro-smoking arguments?: FOREST (a smokers' rights group funded by the tobacco industry) says employers shouldn't ban smoking at work because: * it gives the company a bad image if employees smoke outside the door * workers won't be able to be contacted if they are outside smoking * fire risks are more likely from sneaky smoking (e.g. in the toilet) * employees who smoke will feel tense and angry * it might divide the workforce An American survey looked at 18,000 employees following smoking bans at work - and found that the number of smokers went down by 5%, and that smokers smoked 10% fewer cigarettes as a result. A smoker who takes a 10-minute cigarette break, 9 times a day, loses a whole working day per week. FOREST argues that people like restaurant managers should decide on smoking policies - "according to the needs of their business". 11. SMOKING LAWS ON TRIAL: Role-play characters in the following court cases. After the role plays, come out of your roles and discuss the arguments presented. The Cases: Case 1 - Lung cancer - who's responsible? A 60-a-day smoker wants to sue the tobacco company which makes the cigarettes she has been smoking since she was 15 years old. Now she's 52, and has a year to live because she's got lung cancer. Would you give the smoker compensation? Would you make the tobacco company pay a punishment fine? Case 2 - A smoke-free night out - your right? An asthma sufferer goes to a rock concert. She becomes ill due to people smoking, and is forced to leave. Who, if anyone, is to blame? Should the asthma sufferer get compensation? Case 3 - Cigarette sales to children - who's responsible? A shop keeper is caught selling cigarettes to an under-16 year old. The child has been sent under-cover to the shop by the local council. Should the shop keeper be fined? What should happen to a child under-16 caught buying cigarettes? HOMEWORK1. VOCAB EXTENSION: Choose several of the words from the text. Use a dictionary or Google’s search field (or another search engine) to build up more associations / collocations of each word. 2. INTERNET: Search the Internet and find more information on the treaty. Share your findings with your class next lesson. 3. LETTER: Write a letter to a tobacco company executive explaining your views on cigarettes. 4. PUBLIC POLICY: You are the leader of your country. Create a list of rules about when and where smokers can smoke, complete with penalties for not following these rules. ANSWERSTRUE / FALSE:
SYNONYM MATCH:
PHRASE MATCH:
Anti-tobacco treaty beginsThe world's first anti-tobacco treaty, the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, went into effect yesterday with 167 countries signed up to it and 57 countries ratifying it. The United States and China are still yet to ratify it, which raises fears the overall effectiveness of the treaty may be weakened. Ratifying it means the Framework is legally binding and countries must follow strict regulations for tobacco products, including banning advertising and controlling smoking in public places. It is hoped that the treaty will greatly reduce the number of deaths from smoking worldwide. Adults will be persuaded to kick the habit and children will be dissuaded from starting it. The World Health Organization believes smoking accounts for five million deaths a year. It is the second leading cause of preventable deaths. The WHO's coordinator of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, Douglas Bettcher, says the treaty could do much to reduce global passion for smoking, "It is an historical moment and we are very confident that this treaty is going to save lives. ... It has already started off a powerful process globally and we are very confident that it is going to continue to do so and it is going to prove itself as a very effective public health tool to really curb this unacceptable burden of disease and death." Help Support This Web Site
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