Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
New research shows that many people are not sleeping enough and that this is having a serious impact on health. Professor Matthew Walker from the Center for Human Sleep Science at the University of California warned that a "catastrophic sleep-misfortune plague" was putting people in danger of ill health. He said a continued lack of sleep was putting people at risk from a large number of possibly fatal diseases. Professor Walker said people need eight hours sleep a night to stay healthy. He continued that people who don't sleep enough will have a shorter life. Walker said the effect of not sleeping enough negatively impacts every single aspect of our health and every part of our body.
Professor Walker warned that a lack of sleep is linked to debilitating diseases such as Alzheimer’s, cancer, heart disease, obesity and diabetes. He warned that we are in a dangerous situation whereby we do not fully understand the very serious, "catastrophic" consequences of not getting eight hours a night. He gave several reasons why we are sleeping less. He said: "First, we electrified the night. Light is a profound degrader of our sleep." He also blamed longer working hours and longer commuting times, a desire to be with friends more rather than sleep, mobile devices, and the increased availability of alcohol and caffeine. He also blamed anxiety and said: "We're a lonelier, more depressed society."
Comprehension questions- What university does this research come from?
- What did the researcher say sleeplessness put people in danger of?
- How much sleep did a researcher say people need?
- What kind of life might people who lack sleep have?
- What parts of the body did a professor say sleeplessness affected?
- How many diseases did the professor link a lack of sleep to?
- What did the researcher say was a profound degrader of sleep?
- What two things did the researcher say were longer?
- What did the researcher say there was an increased availability of?
- What kind of society did the researcher say we now are?
Back to the sleep lesson.