Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Eng Sas2
Eng Sas2
Eng Sas2
Welcome to Cycle 1! This session is a Reading Session. Remember, this Student Activity Sheet
(SAS) is a study guide. Its activities are thoughtfully designed to be used in sequence to help you
learn or practice concepts and skills. Go through each activity as it appears in your SAS. Do not
jump activities unless instructed by your teacher. Follow instructions so you can have a more
complete learning experience.
A. INTRODUCTION (2 mins)
Reading comprehension is an involved skill. One is simultaneously extracting meaning and
constructing meaning with what is read and seen. Some of the factors that come into play are
language proficiency, reading fluency, richness of life experiences, and exposure to quality reading
materials. Whether print or online, you will encounter materials that you need to be able to
understand accurately.
Reading sessions like today will focus on a specific skill but will always involve practice work on
other comprehension skills.
B. LESSON TARGETS
Lesson targets are skills and knowledge you want to be able to accomplish at the end of the
session. Keep today’s lesson targets in mind as we go through today’s session:
□ To accurately answer questions based on information from charts
□ To complete answering a reading comprehension practice test for 50 minutes
□ To reflect and list the kind of comprehension skills I need to work on
C. LESSON REVIEW/PREVIEW
Activity 1: Pre-Test: Charts (3 mins)
Individual task. True or False. Read the statements about charts and graphs and determine
whether these statements are true or false. Write ✔ if the statement is true. Write X if the
statement is false.
Charts ✔or X
1. Charts summarize information.
🗹 Check your answers with the Key to Corrections found in the last pages of this SAS. Write your
score here: ___________
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
___________________________________
🗹 Compare your answers with the Key to Corrections found in the last pages of this SAS. Did you
come to the same generalization?
Data can be summarized in charts – bar graph, line graph, pie chart, and diagrams. Bar graphs
show relationships between different data series that are independent of each other. The height
or length of the bar shows the value or frequency. Line graphs show how data changes over time.
This is used when showing trends or numbers that are connected like how sales vary within one
quarter. Pie charts show how a whole is divided into various parts. It shows percentage
distribution. Diagrams show how different parts work and overlap.
This graph shows information about technology usage in the UK over time. The following is a
description of the chart lifted from the source material for the day.
Activity 3.2 Read and encircle or highlight the important phrases or statements used to describe
the chart.
“The graph shows the rate at which British people adopted new technology over a 15-year period
from 2000 to 2015. The figures are given as percentages of population. Overall, there was a
widespread adoption of new technology during these years. Nearly nine out of ten people in the
UK were online by 2015. The figures for having broadband in the home, ownership of a
smartphone, and use of social media platforms were all high that year too, at around 70 to 80
percent, and nearly half the population owned a tablet. The only exception to this is smartwatch
ownership, which remained comparatively low at 5 percent.
If we look at the trends over time, we can see that the uptake of new technology increased
dramatically in this period. For example, internet usage tripled, and social media usage grew
strikingly by 78 percentage points. Smartphones and tablets appeared in 2010 and similarly, these
followed a steep upward trajectory. However, for some products, the graph shows that growth
slowed down noticeably after an initial surge. Social media usage, for instance, was near zero in
2005 and shot up to 52 percent in 2010 before climbing more slowly to 80 percent in 2015. Also,
broadband subscriptions rose steadily by 30 percentage points every five years to 2010, but by a
modest 4 percentage points after then. In contrast, the newer technologies such as tablets
showed no sign of leveling off. Ownership of all the technologies was increasing; it will be
interesting to see when it peaks.”
Activity 3.3. Carefully read the caselet and answer the question that follows.
You are a student who is trying to be more active physically. You have been doing a 30-day push
up challenge but you’re having trouble following your progress. You decided to create a graph to
record your work in the challenge. You want to create a graph that will show the following data:
the number of push ups done within 30 days. Among the kinds of graphs you know, which one
should you be making? ___________________________________________________________________________
🗹Compare your notes with the Key to Corrections found in the last pages of this SAS. Give yourself
1 point each for every similar highlight that you made. Write your score here: ___________
Score: ____________
1 11 21
2 12 22
3 13 23
4 14 24
5 15 25
6 16 26
7 17 27
8 18 28
9 19 29
10 20 30
Part of effective learning is also thinking about your own learning. When you know how you think
and how you work then studying, preparing, and practicing will be more efficient. Let’s start with
some reflection questions. Answer the following in one sentence:
KEY TO CORRECTIONS
Activity 1: 1) ✔ 2) ✔3) X Range is the distance between the farthest points.4)✔5) X Charts
that you use need to be appropriate to the data that you are showcasing. Pie charts are easy to
read and can be attractive, but are ideal only for showing only one kind of data. It shows you parts
of a whole.
Activity 2: Based on the source, the key idea is that “Nearly 1 in 4 young women has mental
illness.” You can also say that there are more female teenagers who suffer mental illnesses.
Activity 3: