The Reading / Listening - Hugging at Airports - Level 3

A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land you in trouble. The international airport in Dunedin has set a three-minute limit on the time people can spend hugging each other at the drop-off zone. An airport official said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing. He said there has recently been a problem of traffic jams near the departures building. The official said too many people were taking too long in the drop-off zone in front of the building. The airport now has warning signs that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer than three minutes saying their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could get a fine or get their wheels clamped.

The airport's new hugging policy is not popular with everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters that he has received many complaints. He said: "We were accused of breaching basic human rights." He added that another person said: "How dare we limit how long someone can have a hug." Someone on the airport's Facebook page called the policy "inhumane". Mr De Bono defended the hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is plenty of time to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones and move on. The time limit is really a nicer way of saying get on with it." He added that airports were "hotbeds of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug was "really awkward".

Try the same news story at these easier levels:

    Hugging at Airports - Level 0 Hugging at Airports - Level 1   or  Hugging at Airports - Level 2

Sources
  • https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/oct/21/new-zealand-dunedin-aiport-hug-sign-cap-3-minute
  • https://apnews.com/article/new-zealand-airport-goodbye-hugs-time-limit-d6176082ffb6ab66e8d2f05dd590b8aa
  • https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13981771/Sign-New-Zealand-airport-hugging.html


Make sure you try all of the online activities for this reading and listening - There are dictations, multiple choice activities, drag and drop activities, sentence jumbles, which word activities, text reconstructions, spelling, gap fills and a whole lot more. Please enjoy :-)

Warm-ups

1. HUGGING: Students walk around the class and talk to other students about hugging. Change partners often and share your findings.
2. CHAT: In pairs / groups, talk about these topics or words from the article. What will the article say about them? What can you say about these words and your life?
       goodbyes / hugs / goodbye hugs / being in trouble / traffic / car park / penalty / fine /
       popular / reporters / complaints / human rights / inhumane / posters / emotions
Have a chat about the topics you liked. Change topics and partners frequently.
3. TIME LIMIT: Students A strongly believe there should be a time limit on hugging at airports; Students B strongly believe the opposite. Change partners again and talk about your conversations.
4. HUMAN RIGHTS: Are the things below human rights? Why? Complete this table with your partner(s). Change partners often and share what you wrote.

 

Human Right?

Why?

Hugging

 

 

Having a friend

 

 

Studying English

 

 

Shopping

 

 

Free speech

 

 

Having money

 

 

MY e-BOOK
ESL resource book with copiable worksheets and handouts - 1,000 Ideas and Activities for Language Teachers / English teachers
See a sample

5. AIRPORT: Spend one minute writing down all of the different words you associate with the word "airport". Share your words with your partner(s) and talk about them. Together, put the words into different categories.
6. NO HUGGING: Rank these with your partner. Put the places at the top where we shouldn't hug. Change partners often and share your rankings.

  • Airport drop-off zones
  • Supermarket checkouts
  • School classrooms
  • Buses
  • Swimming pools
  • Soccer pitches
  • An art gallery
  • An expensive restaurant

 

Vocabulary

    Paragraph 1

      1. land you in trouble a. Decide or fix something (like a time or a rule).
      2. set b. A person who has an important job or role, usually in a company or the government.
      3. limit c. Money you have to pay because you did something wrong.
      4. official d. The maximum or highest amount allowed.
      5. traffic e. Moving smoothly and continuously, like water in a river.
      6. flowing f. Cause you to have problems or be punished.
      7. fine (noun) g. The cars, buses, and other vehicles moving on the road.

    Paragraph 2

      8. popular h. When someone says they are not happy about something.
      9. complaint i. Say that someone did something wrong.
      10. accused j. Uncomfortable or not easy to do or talk about.
      11. breaching k. Very cruel or not kind.
      12. inhumane l. Breaking a rule or law.
      13. farewell m. Liked by many people.
      14.

awkward

n.

Saying goodbye.

 

Before reading / listening

1. TRUE / FALSE: Read the headline. Guess if 1-8 below are true (T) or false (F).

  1. People can get in trouble for hugging at one airport in New Zealand.     T / F
  2. The airport says all hugs must be at least three minutes long.     T / F
  3. Overly-long goodbyes have caused traffic jams at the airport.     T / F
  4. The airport recommends the car park for longer goodbyes.     T / F
  5. The airport's CEO said many people complained about the hugging limit.  T / F
  6. Someone said the hugging ban was a breach of human rights.     T / F
  7. The airport says the three-minute time limit was not nice.     T / F
  8. The airport CEO said emotional people need a hot bed.     T / F

2. SYNONYM MATCH: Match the following synonyms from the article.

  1. goodbye
  2. limit
  3. zone
  4. fine
  5. clamped
  6. policy
  7. complaints
  8. accused
  9. inhumane
  10. awkward
  1. objections
  2. area
  3. immobilized
  4. guidelines
  5. farewell
  6. cruel
  7. blamed
  8. cap
  9. tricky
  10. financial penalty

3. PHRASE MATCH: (Sometimes more than one choice is possible.)

  1. A long goodbye hug
  2. An airport official said the limit is
  3. a problem of traffic jams near
  4. too many people
  5. They could get a fine or
  6. The airport's new hugging policy
  7. We were accused of breaching
  8. Someone on the airport's Facebook page
  9. say farewell to your
  10. He added that airports were hotbeds
  1. the departures building
  2. get their wheels clamped
  3. loved ones and move on
  4. is not popular with everybody
  5. called the policy "inhumane"
  6. at an airport in New Zealand
  7. so traffic can keep flowing
  8. of emotion
  9. were taking too long
  10. basic human rights

Gap fill

Put these words into the spaces in the paragraph below.
signs
limit
fine
departures
saying
long
official
zone

A (1) ______________________________________________ goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land you in trouble. The international airport in Dunedin has set a three-minute (2) ______________________________________________ on the time people can spend hugging each other at the drop-off zone. An airport (3) ______________________________________________ said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing. He said there has recently been a problem of traffic jams near the (4) ______________________________________________ building. The official said too many people were taking too long in the drop-off (5) ______________________________________________ in front of the building. The airport now has warning (6) ______________________________________________ that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer than three minutes (7) ______________________________________________ their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could get a (8) ______________________________________________ or get their wheels clamped.

Put these words into the spaces in the paragraph below.
dare
plenty
complaints
hotbeds
awkward
inhumane
policy
way

The airport's new hugging (9) ______________________________________________ is not popular with everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters that he has received many (10) ______________________________________________. He said: "We were accused of breaching basic human rights." He added that another person said: "How (11) ______________________________________________ we limit how long someone can have a hug." Someone on the airport's Facebook page called the policy "(12) ______________________________________________". Mr De Bono defended the hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is (13) ______________________________________________ of time to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones and move on. The time limit is really a nicer (14) ______________________________________________ of saying get on with it." He added that airports were "(15) ______________________________________________ of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug was "really (16) ______________________________________________".

Listening — Guess the answers. Listen to check.

1) A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land ______
     a.  you on trouble
     b.  you in trouble
     c.  you out trouble
     d.  you win trouble
2)  a three-minute limit on the time people can spend ______
     a.  hugging each another
     b.  hugging that other
     c.  hugging each others
     d.  hugging each other
3)  An airport official said the limit is so traffic ______
     a.  can keep flow in
     b.  can keep flown
     c.  can keep flowing
     d.  can keep flowering
4)  The official said too many people were taking too long in the drop-off zone in front ____
     a.  of a building
     b.  of then building
     c.  of the building
     d.  off the building
5)  People who spend longer than three minutes saying their goodbyes could ______
     a.  get a penalty
     b.  get a red card
     c.  get a yellow card
     d.  get a sin bin

6)  The airport's new hugging policy is not ______
     a.  populate with everybody
     b.  poplar with everybody
     c.  popularity with everybody
     d.  popular with everybody
7)  CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters that he has ______
     a.  received many complains
     b.  received many complaints
     c.  received many compliance
     d.  received many compliments
8)  Someone on the airport's Facebook page called ______
     a.  the policy "inhumane"
     b.  the police "inhumane"
     c.  the poll icy "inhumane"
     d.  the politics "inhumane"
9)  plenty of time to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones ______
     a.  and move on up
     b.  and moved on
     c.  and moves on
     d.  and move on
10)  "hotbeds of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug ______
     a.  was "real awkward"
     b.  were "really awkward"
     c.  was "really awkward"
     d.  wasn't "really awkward"

Listening — Listen and fill in the gaps

A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land (1) __________________________________________________. The international airport in Dunedin has set a three-(2) __________________________________________________ the time people can spend hugging each other at the (3) __________________________________________________. An airport official said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing. He said there has recently been a problem (4) __________________________________________________ near the departures building. The official said too many people were taking too long in the drop-off zone in front of the building. The airport now (5) __________________________________________________ that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer than three minutes saying their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could (6) __________________________________________________ or get their wheels clamped.

The airport's new hugging policy is (7) __________________________________________________ everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters that he has received many complaints. He said: "We were (8) __________________________________________________ basic human rights." He added that another person said: "How dare we limit how long someone can have a hug." Someone on the airport's Facebook page called (9) __________________________________________________. Mr De Bono defended the hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is (10) __________________________________________________ to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones and move on. The time limit is really a nicer (11) __________________________________________________ get on with it." He added that airports were "hotbeds of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug (12) __________________________________________________.

Comprehension questions

  1. What kind of airport is the one in the news article?
  2. Where at the airport are people hugging each other?
  3. What has there been a problem of recently?
  4. Where did the airport recommend for longer goodbyes?
  5. What could happen to the wheels of the cars of long huggers?
  6. What has the airport CEO received?
  7. What did someone say the hugging limit was a breach of?
  8. What did a Facebook user call the hugging limit?
  9. What did the CEO say airports were?
  10. What did the CEO say was awkward?

Multiple choice quiz

1) What kind of airport is the one in the news article?
a) a domestic one
b) an international one
c) a new one
d) a mountain-top one
2) Where at the airport are people hugging each other?
a) at check-in
b) in the departures lounge
c) at immigration
d) in the drop-off zone
3) What has there been a problem of recently?
a) traffic jams
b) arguments
c) kissing
d) illegally parked cars
4) Where did the airport recommend for longer goodbyes?
a) a train station
b) a hotel
c) the car park
d) the departures hall
5) What could happen to the wheels of the cars of long huggers?
a) they could get a puncture
b) they could get clamped
c) they could be stolen
d) they could explode

6) What has the airport CEO received?
a) many complaints
b) compliments
c) flowers
d) hugs
7) What did someone say the hugging limit was a breach of?
a) trust
b) terms
c) basic human rights
d) a breach of court
8) What did a Facebook user call the hugging limit?
a) inhumane
b) too short
c) great
d) necessary
9) What did the CEO say airports were?
a) hotbeds of emotions
b) great fun
c) a good place to have a hug
d) environmentally unfriendly
10) What did the CEO say was awkward?
a) introducing the ban
b) hugging in front of people
c) being CEO
d) hugs longer than 20 seconds

Role play

Role  A – Airport Drop-off Zones
You think airport drop-off zones are the worst places to hug people. Tell the others three reasons why. Tell them why their places are OK. Also, tell the others which of these places are OK to hug in (and why): art galleries, swimming pools or supermarket checkouts.

Role  B – Art Galleries
You think art galleries are the worst places to hug people. Tell the others three reasons why. Tell them why their places are OK. Also, tell the others which of these places are OK to hug in (and why): airport drop-off zones, swimming pools or supermarket checkouts.

Role  C – Swimming Pools
You think swimming pools are the worst places to hug people. Tell the others three reasons why. Tell them why their places are OK. Also, tell the others which of these places are OK to hug in (and why): art galleries, airport drop-off zones or supermarket checkouts.

Role  D – Supermarket Checkouts
You think supermarket checkouts are the worst places to hug people. Tell the others three reasons why. Tell them why their places are OK. Also, tell the others which of these places are OK to hug in (and why): art galleries, swimming pools or airport drop-off zones.

After reading / listening

1. WORD SEARCH: Look in your dictionary / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … for the words...

'hug'

  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • and 'airport'.

  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • ________________
  • • Share your findings with your partners.

    • Make questions using the words you found.

    • Ask your partner / group your questions.

    2. ARTICLE QUESTIONS: Look back at the article and write down some questions you would like to ask the class about the text.

    •Share your questions with other classmates / groups. •Ask your partner / group your questions.

    3. GAP FILL: In pairs / groups, compare your answers to this exercise. Check your answers. Talk about the words from the activity. Were they new, interesting, worth learning…?

    4. VOCABULARY: Circle any words you do not understand. In groups, pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find their meanings.

    5. TEST EACH OTHER: Look at the words below. With your partner, try to recall how they were used in the text:

    • long
    • spend
    • problem
    • front
    • please
    • fine
    • popular
    • received
    • dare
    • page
    • move
    • 20

    Student survey

    Write five GOOD questions about this topic in the table. Do this in pairs. Each student must write the questions on his / her own paper. When you have finished, interview other students. Write down their answers.

    (Please look at page 12 of the PDF to see a photocopiable example of this activity.)

    Discussion - Hugging at Airports

    STUDENT A’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student B)

    1. What did you think when you read the headline?
    2. What images are in your mind when you hear the word 'hug'?
    3. What do you think of airports?
    4. What do you think of hugging?
    5. Should there be a time limit for hugging at airports?
    6. Should there be a hugging zone at airports and train stations?
    7. What problems does hugging at airports cause?
    8. What do you think of the hugging sign?
    9. How do you say farewell to loved ones?
    10. How much should people be fined for a 4-minute hug?

    STUDENT B’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student A)

    1. Did you like reading this article? Why/not?
    2. What do you think of when you hear the word 'airport'?
    3. What do you think about what you read?
    4. Would you complain about the hugging sign?
    5. Have you ever complained online about something?
    6. Is hugging a basic human right?
    7. What feelings do you have when you hug someone?
    8. Are there different rules for hugging different people?
    9. Why are airports 'hotbeds of emotion'?
    10. What questions would you like to ask the airport?

    Discussion — Write your own questions

    STUDENT A’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student B)

    (a) ________________

    (b) ________________

    (c) ________________

    (d) ________________

    (e) ________________

    STUDENT B’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student A)

    (f) ________________

    (g) ________________

    (h) ________________

    (i) ________________

    (j) ________________

    Language — Cloze (Gap-fill)

    A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could (1) ____ you in trouble. The international airport in Dunedin has set a three-minute (2) ____ on the time people can spend hugging each other at the drop-off zone. An airport official said the limit is so traffic can keep (3) ____. He said there has recently been a problem of traffic (4) ____ near the departures building. The official said too many people were taking too long in the drop-off zone in front of the building. The airport now has (5) ____ signs that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer than three minutes saying their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could get a (6) ____ or get their wheels clamped.

    The airport's new hugging policy is not (7) ____ with everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters (8) ____ he has received many complaints. He said: "We were accused of breaching basic human rights." He added that another person said: "(9) ____ dare we limit how long someone can have a hug." Someone on the airport's Facebook page called the policy "inhumane". Mr De Bono defended the hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is plenty of time to pull (10) ____, say farewell to your loved ones and move on. The time limit is really a nicer way of saying get (11) ____ with it." He added that airports were "(12) ____ of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug was "really awkward".

    Which of these words go in the above text?

    (a)     take off     (b)     land     (c)     ground     (d)     cuddle    
    (a)     height     (b)     limit     (c)     target     (d)     reward    
    (a)     frowning     (b)     frown     (c)     flown     (d)     flowing    
    (a)     preserves     (b)     jams     (c)     sticks     (d)     jellies    
    (a)     wanting     (b)     warming     (c)     waning     (d)     warning    
    (a)     find     (b)     good     (c)     fine     (d)     embrace    
    (a)     popular     (b)     polar     (c)     poplar     (d)     populate    
    (a)     what     (b)     which     (c)     that     (d)     then    
    (a)     Which     (b)     That     (c)     What     (d)     How    
    (a)     up     (b)     down     (c)     in     (d)     under    
    (a)     on     (b)     up     (c)     out     (d)     over    
    (a)     hotbeds     (b)     flowerbeds     (c)     sickbeds     (d)     waterbeds

    Spelling

    Paragraph 1

    1. land you in bolutre
    2. An airport oifcifla
    3. the limit is so ctfifar can keep flowing
    4. jams near the ptarseuedr building
    5. get a tanyepl
    6. get their wheels lecapdm

    Paragraph 2

    1. The airport's new hugging oclypi
    2. he has received many coltaipsmn
    3. eccdaus of breaching basic human rights
    4. Mr De Bono eddndfee the hug posters
    5. He added that airports were hotbeds of ionetmo
    6. a 20-second hug was really akdawrw

    Put the text back together

    (...)  rights." He added that another person said: "How dare we limit how long someone can have
    (...)  hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is plenty of time to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones and move
    (...)  on. The time limit is really a nicer way of saying get on with it." He added that airports were "hotbeds
    (...)  airport in Dunedin has set a three-minute limit on the time people can spend hugging each other at the drop-
    (...)  of emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug was "really awkward".
    (...)  than three minutes saying their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could get a fine or get their wheels clamped.
    (...) A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land you in trouble. The international
    (...)  off zone. An airport official said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing. He said there has recently been a problem
    (...)  The airport's new hugging policy is not popular with everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local
    (...)  a hug." Someone on the airport's Facebook page called the policy "inhumane". Mr De Bono defended the
    (...)  reporters that he has received many complaints. He said: "We were accused of breaching basic human
    (...)  of traffic jams near the departures building. The official said too many people were taking too
    (...)  long in the drop-off zone in front of the building. The airport now has warning
    (...)  signs that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer

    Put the words in the right order

    other   .   hugging   spend   each   can   The   time   people
    been   problem   of   a   There   jams   .   traffic   has
    people   too   many   long   .   were   Too   taking
    fonder   the   car   park   .   please   farewells,   For   use
    than   longer   their   minutes   three   goodbyes   .   Spend   saying
    new   The   not   airport's   policy   is   hugging   popular   .
    human   were   accused   breaching   rights   .   basic   of   We
    loved   to   Say   on   .   farewell   and   ones   move
    of   were   that   emotion   .   airports   hotbeds   added   He
    awkward   .   longer   Anything   20-second   was   hug   a   than

    Circle the correct word (20 pairs)

    A long goodbye hug at an airport in New Zealand could land / ground you in trouble. The international airport in Dunedin has let / set a three-minute limit on the time people can spend hugging each another / other at the drop-off zone. An airport official / officially said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing. He said there has recently / recent been a problem of traffic jams near the departures building. The official said too many people were taking / taken too long in the drop-off zone in front of the building. The airport now / that has warning signs that say: "Max hug time 3 minutes. For fonder / founder farewells, please use the car park." People who spend longer than three minutes saying / speaking their goodbyes could get a penalty. They could get a find / fine or get their wheels clamped.

    The airport's new hugging police / policy is not popular with everybody. CEO Daniel De Bono told local reporters that he has received / receives many complaints. He said: "We were accusation / accused of breaching basic / basically human rights." He added that another person said: "How dare we limit how long someone can have a hug." Someone / Anybody on the airport's Facebook page called the policy "inhumane". Mr De Bono defended / attacked the hug posters. He said: "Three minutes is enough / plenty of time to pull up, say farewell to your loved ones and move on. The clock / time limit is really a nicer way of saying get in / on with it." He added that airports were "hotbeds of emotional / emotion" and that anything longer than a 20-second hug was "really awkward".

    Talk about the connection between each pair of words in italics, and why the correct word is correct. Look up the definition of new words.

    Insert the vowels (a, e, i, o, u)

    _  l_ng  g__dby_  h_g  _t  _n  __rp_rt  _n  N_w  Z__l_nd  c__ld  l_nd  y__  _n  tr__bl_.  Th_  _nt_rn_t__n_l  __rp_rt  _n  D_n_d_n  h_s  s_t  _  thr__-m_n_t_  l_m_t  _n  th_  t_m_  p__pl_  c_n  sp_nd  h_gg_ng  __ch  _th_r  _t  th_  dr_p-_ff  z_n_.  _n  __rp_rt  _ff_c__l  s__d  th_  l_m_t  _s  s_  tr_ff_c  c_n  k__p  fl_w_ng.  H_  s__d  th_r_  h_s  r_c_ntly  b__n  _  pr_bl_m  _f  tr_ff_c  j_ms  n__r  th_  d_p_rt_r_s  b__ld_ng.  Th_  _ff_c__l  s__d  t__  m_ny  p__pl_  w_r_  t_k_ng  t__  l_ng  _n  th_  dr_p-_ff  z_n_  _n  fr_nt  _f  th_  b__ld_ng.  Th_  __rp_rt  n_w  h_s  w_rn_ng  s_gns  th_t  s_y:  "M_x  h_g  t_m_  3  m_n_t_s.  F_r  f_nd_r  f_r_w_lls,  pl__s_  _s_  th_  c_r  p_rk."  P__pl_  wh_  sp_nd  l_ng_r  th_n  thr__  m_n_t_s  s_y_ng  th__r  g__dby_s  c__ld  g_t  _  p_n_lty.  Th_y  c__ld  g_t  _  f_n_  _r  g_t  th__r  wh__ls  cl_mp_d.

    Th_  __rp_rt's  n_w  h_gg_ng  p_l_cy  _s  n_t  p_p_l_r  w_th  _v_ryb_dy.  C__  D_n__l  D_  B_n_  t_ld  l_c_l  r_p_rt_rs  th_t  h_  h_s  r_c__v_d  m_ny  c_mpl__nts.  H_  s__d:  "W_  w_r_  _cc_s_d  _f  br__ch_ng  b_s_c  h_m_n  r_ghts."  H_  _dd_d  th_t  _n_th_r  p_rs_n  s__d:  "H_w  d_r_  w_  l_m_t  h_w  l_ng  s_m__n_  c_n  h_v_  _  h_g."  S_m__n_  _n  th_  __rp_rt's  F_c_b__k  p_g_ c_ll_d  th_  p_l_cy  "_nh_m_n_".  Mr  D_  B_n_  d_f_nd_d  th_  h_g  p_st_rs.  H_  s__d:  "Thr__  m_n_t_s  _s  pl_nty  _f  t_m_  t_  p_ll  _p,  s_y  f_r_w_ll  t_  y__r  l_v_d  _n_s  _nd  m_v_  _n.  Th_  t_m_  l_m_t  _s  r__lly  _  n_c_r  w_y  _f  s_y_ng  g_t  _n  w_th  _t."  H_  _dd_d  th_t  __rp_rts  w_r_  "h_tb_ds  _f  _m_t__n"  _nd  th_t  _nyth_ng  l_ng_r  th_n  _  20-s_c_nd  h_g  w_s  "r__lly  _wkw_rd".

    Punctuate the text and add capitals

    a long goodbye hug at an airport in new zealand could land you in trouble the international airport in dunedin has set a threeminute limit on the time people can spend hugging each other at the dropoff zone an airport official said the limit is so traffic can keep flowing he said there has recently been a problem of traffic jams near the departures building the official said too many people were taking too long in the dropoff zone in front of the building the airport now has warning signs that say max hug time 3 minutes for fonder farewells please use the car park people who spend longer than three minutes saying their goodbyes could get a penalty they could get a fine or get their wheels clamped

    the airports new hugging policy is not popular with everybody ceo daniel de bono told local reporters that he has received many complaints he said we were accused of breaching basic human rights he added that another person said how dare we limit how long someone can have a hug someone on the airports facebook page called the policy inhumane mr de bono defended the hug posters he said three minutes is plenty of time to pull up say farewell to your loved ones and move on the time limit is really a nicer way of saying get on with it he added that airports were hotbeds of emotion and that anything longer than a 20second hug was really awkward

    Put a slash (/) where the spaces are

    AlonggoodbyehugatanairportinNewZealandcouldlandyouintrouble.
    TheinternationalairportinDunedinhassetathree-minutelimitonthet
    imepeoplecanspendhuggingeachotheratthedrop-offzone.Anairpor
    tofficialsaidthelimitissotrafficcankeepflowing.Hesaidtherehasrecent
    lybeenaproblemoftrafficjamsnearthedeparturesbuilding.Theofficial
    saidtoomanypeopleweretakingtoolonginthedrop-offzoneinfrontofth
    ebuilding.Theairportnowhaswarningsignsthatsay:"Maxhugtime3mi
    nutes.Forfonderfarewells,pleaseusethecarpark."Peoplewhospendlo
    ngerthanthreeminutessayingtheirgoodbyescouldgetapenalty.They
    couldgetafineorgettheirwheelsclamped.Theairport'snewhuggingpol
    icyisnotpopularwitheverybody.CEODanielDeBonotoldlocalreporters
    thathehasreceivedmanycomplaints.Hesaid:"Wewereaccusedofbrea
    chingbasichumanrights."Headdedthatanotherpersonsaid:"Howdar
    ewelimithowlongsomeonecanhaveahug."Someoneontheairport'sFa
    cebookpagecalledthepolicy"inhumane".MrDeBonodefendedthehug
    posters.Hesaid:"Threeminutesisplentyoftimetopullup,sayfarewellto
    yourlovedonesandmoveon.Thetimelimitisreallyanicerwayofsayingg
    etonwithit."Headdedthatairportswere"hotbedsofemotion"andthata
    nythinglongerthana20-secondhugwas"reallyawkward".

    Free writing

    Write about airport hugs for 10 minutes. Comment on your partner’s paper.

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    Academic writing

    Everybody should hug more often and for longer. Discuss.

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    Homework

    1. VOCABULARY 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 out more about this news story. Share what you discover with your partner(s) in the next lesson.
    3. HUGGING: Make a poster about hugging. Show your work to your classmates in the next lesson. Did you all have similar things?
    4. AIRPORT FAREWELLS: Write a magazine article about banning the saying of farewells in front of airport buildings. Include imaginary interviews with people who are for and against this.
    Read what you wrote to your classmates in the next lesson. Write down any new words and expressions you hear from your partner(s).
    5. WHAT HAPPENED NEXT? Write a newspaper article about the next stage in this news story. Read what you wrote to your classmates in the next lesson. Give each other feedback on your articles.
    6. LETTER: Write a letter to an expert on hugging. Ask him/her three questions about it. Give him/her three of your ideas for hugging rules. Read your letter to your partner(s) in your next lesson. Your partner(s) will answer your questions.

    A Few Additional Activities for Students

    Ask your students what they have read, seen or heard about this news in their own language. Students are likely to / may have have encountered this news in their L1 and therefore bring a background knowledge to the classroom.

    Get students to role play different characters from this news story.

    Ask students to keep track of this news and revisit it to discuss in your next class.

    Ask students to male predictions of how this news might develop in the next few days or weeks, and then revisit and discuss in a future class.

    Ask students to write a follow-up story to this news.

    Students role play a journalist and someone who witnessed or was a part of this news. Perhaps they could make a video of the interview.

    Ask students to keep a news journal in English and add this story to their thoughts.

    Also...

    Buy my 1,000 Ideas and Activities for Language Teachers eBook. It has hundreds of ideas, activity templates, reproducible activities for:

    • News
    • Warm ups
    • Pre-reading / Post-reading
    • Using headlines
    • Working with words
    • While-reading / While-listening
    • Moving from text to speech
    • Post-reading / Post-listening
    • Discussions
    • Using opinions
    • Plans
    • Language
    • Using lists
    • Using quotes
    • Task-based activities
    • Role plays
    • Using the central characters in the article
    • Using themes from the news
    • Homework

    Buy my book

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    Answers

    (Please look at page 26 of the PDF to see a photocopiable example of this activity.)

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