Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
Climate activist Greta Thunberg has been named TIME magazine's Person of the Year for 2019. The 16-year-old from Sweden beat New Zealand's Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and the Hong Kong democracy protestors to win the award. Ms Thunberg shot to fame in 2018 for raising people's awareness of the threat to the planet from climate change. She started a global movement when she decided to go on a climate strike outside the Swedish parliament in August 2018. Schoolchildren around the world then followed her example. She has since addressed the United Nations in New York and has met the Pope. After hearing about the award, she tweeted: "Wow, this is unbelievable! I will share this great honour."
Greta Thunberg is the youngest person ever to receive the award. TIME magazine wrote about why it gave the prize to Ms Thunberg. It said she has, "succeeded in creating a global attitudinal shift" in getting millions of people to join a "worldwide movement calling for urgent change". It added: "Greta has offered a moral call to those who are willing to act, and put shame on those who are not." Not everyone is happy with Ms Thunberg receiving the award. Donald Trump Jr said TIME was using a teenager "as a marketing gimmick". In contrast, Hillary Clinton tweeted: "I am grateful for all she's done to raise awareness of the climate crisis, and her willingness to tell hard, motivating truths."
Comprehension questions- Which Prime Minister did Greta Thunberg beat to win the TIME prize?
- In what year did Greta become famous?
- Outside what building did Greta go on strike?
- Who did Ms Thunberg talk to in New York?
- What did Ms Thunberg say she would do with her prize?
- How many people younger than Greta have won the prize?
- How many people did Greta get to join the climate change movement?
- What did TIME say Greta put on people who would not act?
- Who said Greta's prize was a "marketing gimmick"?
- What did Hillary Clinton say Greta was willing to tell?
Back to the Greta Thunberg lesson.