Now do this put-the-text-back-together activity.
This is the text (if you need help).
Millions of mice have been creating havoc in Australia. The state of New South Wales is suffering from its worst mouse plague in decades. The mouse population started growing on farms in spring last year because of a bumper wheat harvest. The rodents have been causing farmers a major headache for over a year. The plague has now caused problems for a prison. The Wellington Correctional Centre, about 350km west of Sydney, has been forced to evacuate. Up to 200 staff and 420 prisoners have been transferred to other jails in the region because of health and safety reasons. It will take 10 days for the prison to be cleaned and for repairs to electric cables and woodwork to be carried out.
Mice have been causing damage to buildings throughout the region. Their droppings have become a health hazard that has cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to clean up. In addition, they have chewed through electrical wiring, which has become a danger to property and human life. Prisons spokesperson Peter Severin spoke about the cleaning and repair operations at Wellington. He said: "The health, safety and wellbeing of staff and inmates is our number one priority, so it's important for us to act now to carry out the vital repair work....We need to take this step now to ensure the site is thoroughly cleaned and infrastructure is repaired." Staff will also look at ways to protect against plagues in the future.
Comprehension questions- What Australian state is the mice plague in?
- What was there a bumper harvest of?
- How far west of Sydney is the prison in the article?
- How many prisoners were transferred to other prisons?
- How long will the cleaning of the prison take?
- What does the article say is a health hazard?
- What have mice chewed through?
- Who is Peter Severin?
- Who is the number one priority of the prison?
- What will prison staff hope to safeguard against in the future?
Back to the mouse plague lesson.