Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
Doctors are now telling us what grandparents have known for decades - don't stick anything smaller than your elbow into your ears. An organization of ear specialists in the USA, the American Academy of Otolaryngology, has said cleaning your ears with cotton buds (aka Q-tips) can cause long-lasting damage to your eardrums and hearing. Dr Jennifer Caudle told Yahoo Beauty that cotton buds seem harmless objects but can cause significant damage. She said: "I know people want to stick things in their ears and they think it’s the right thing to do, but [cotton buds] can cause holes in the eardrum, irritation in the canal, and can predispose you to getting infections."
The Academy has also recommended that people change their image of earwax and think of it as an essential substance to keep our ears healthy. Dr Seth Schwartz said: "There is an inclination for people to want to clean their ears because they believe earwax is an indication of uncleanliness. This misinformation leads to unsafe ear health habits." Doctors say our body produces earwax for a good reason. It does an essential job of cleaning out the ears, stopping them from drying out, and helping them to sweat naturally. It also protects the inner ears against bacteria, bugs, dirt and dust. Using cotton buds can push earwax further inside the ear and cause blockages, which can undo all the good work of earwax.
Comprehension questions- How long have grandparents known about ear cleaning?
- What are cotton buds also known as?
- What did a doctor say cotton buds can seem?
- What can cotton buds cause holes in?
- What can using cotton buds predispose people to get?
- What did an academy recommend people change their image of?
- What do people think earwax is an indication of?
- What did doctors say the body produces earwax for?
- What does earwax protect the ear against besides bacteria and bugs?
- What does pushing earwax inside the ear cause?
Back to the cotton buds lesson.