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Friends
Research by a British anthropologist shows that the optimum number of friendships that the human brain can maintain is about 150. But that’s in the real world. What happens on Facebook where the maximum number of ‘friends’ permitted is 5000? According to social networking statistics, the average Facebook user has 130 friends.
Some people have a lot more.
Ivy Bean from Bradford in the north of England became Facebook’s oldest known user at the age of 102 in 2008. She quickly started making friends and became an online celebrity. When she maxed out her 5000 friend count on Facebook Ms. Bean joined the Twitter website and continued her social networking. At the time of her death in July 2010, she had 4,962 friends on Facebook and more than 56,000 followers (including the Prime Minister’s wife) on Twitter. Ms. Bean’s last tweet was July 6 2010. It read, “Going to have my lunch now will be back later.’’

2. Read the text again and find these numbers. What do the numbers refer to?


150 - the optimum number of friendships
130
2008
2010
5000
4962
56000

 In task 2 students read the text again in more detail. They could work in pairs to underline the numbers and say each one refers to. You may need to explain the difference between optimum and maximum.


Answers task 2:
150 - the optimum number of friendships
130 – the average Facebook user has 130 ‘friends’
2008 – Ivy Bean joined Facebook
2010 –Ivy died in 2010
5000 - the maximum number of ‘friends’ permitted on Facebook
4962 – Ivy had 4,962 friends on Facebook
56000 – Ivy had 56000 followers on Twitter
 Tell the students to imagine that they want to join an imaginary social networking website called FriendPage. Display task 3 in the classroom (or copy it onto the board) and do an example profile as class. Elicit or feed in
useful language e.g.,
interested in: sports, languages, travel, music, films, computers
personality: sporty, artistic, unconventional, chatty, quiet, studious, musical
right now I feel: relaxed, stressed, tired, bored, energetic
 Hand out the task 3 profiles and ask student to use their imagination to complete the profile. Set a time limit to keep things snappy.
 Collect in the completed forms then redistribute them so that each student now
has a different profile.

3. Imagine you want to join FriendPage. Fill in your profile


FriendPage profile. Basic information:
name:
age:
gender
location:
hometown:
interested in:
personality:
right now I feel:

 Tell the students that they are going to use their profile information in a moment but first they need to look at the FriendPage house rules in task 4. Ask students to complete the rules in pairs.


4. Complete the Friend Page house rules with must/mustn’t:


1 You ________ write in English.
2 You ________ be rude or nasty.
3 You ________ be boring.
4 You ________ be under 18.
Answers task 4: 1 must, 2 mustn’t, 3 mustn’t, must
Tip: For task 5 to work smoothly the students need to follow your instructions step by step.

5. The wall


1 Introduce yourself.


Hi I’m …… …………….. …Fold the paper…………………………………………………………………………………………

2 Write a question:


3 Answer the question:


……………… Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………

4 Write a question:


5 Answer the question:


………………
Fold the aper……………………………………………………………………………………………

6 Write a question:


7 Answer the question:
………………
Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………

8 Write a question:


9 Answer the question:


………………
Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………
10 Write a question:

11 Answer the question:


 Display or hand out task 5 and tell students that they have to listen carefully and follow your instructions. They shouldn’t write anything yet. This task works like a game of ‘consequences’ and mimics a Facebook wall.
 Ask students to complete part 1 of task 5. They should introduce themselves using the information from the FriendPage profile (task 3). Demonstrate with an example on the board if necessary, e.g., Hi I’m Ruby. I’m 14 and I’m a girl. I live in London but my hometown is……
 When everyone has completed their introduction, ask students to fold over the paper on the dotted line and then write a question next to ‘2 Write a question:’
 Now everyone passes their paper to the person on their left. If students can sit in a circle that’s great. If not – set up a figure of 8 passing system.
 Students write a reply next to ‘3 Answer the question:’ and again fold the paper. They now write another (different) question. Next to ‘4 Write a question:’
 Everyone passes their paper to the person on their left.
 Continue like this until finished. Students can now unfold their paper and read what’s on their ‘wall’. You could display the ‘walls’ in the classroom for everyone to read.
 To follow up – collect some common errors from students’ questions and answers for a class correction activity. Write up extracts containing errors on the board and have students correct them in pairs.
Tip: Help a weaker class with task 5 by writing up some topics on the board and eliciting questions that students could ask each other about these topics. Here are some suggestions:
Mobile phones
Sport
School
Friends
TV
Games
The future
Family
Holidays
Football
Do you like…?
What’s your favourite….?
Where do you….?
Where did you….?
When do you…..?
Do you ever….?
Are you…….?
Would you like to…..?

Worksheets


1.Read the text quickly. Why was Ivy Bean famous?
Friends
Research by a British anthropologist shows that the optimum number of friendships that the human brain can maintain is about 150. But that’s in the real world. What happens on Facebook where the maximum number of ‘friends’ permitted is 5000? According to social networking statistics, the average Facebook user has 130 friends.
Some people have a lot more.
Ivy Bean from Bradford in the north of England became Facebook’s oldest known user at the age of 102 in 2008. She quickly started making friends and became an online celebrity. When she maxed out her 5000 friend count on Facebook Ms. Bean joined the Twitter website and continued her social networking. At the time of her death in July 2010, she had 4,962 friends on Facebook and more than 56,000 followers (including the Prime Minister’s wife) on Twitter. Ms. Bean’s last tweet was July 6 2010. It read, “Going to have my lunch now will be back later.’’

2. Read the text again and find these numbers. What do the numbers refer to?


150 - the optimum number of friendships
130
2008
2010
5000
4962
56000

3. Imagine you want to join FriendPage. Fill in your profile


FriendPage profile. Basic information:


name:
age:
gender
location:
hometown:
interested in:
personality:
right now I feel:

4. Complete the FriendPage house rules with must/mustn’t:


1 You ________write in English.
2 You ________be rude or nasty.
3 You ________be boring.
4 You ________ be under 18.
5. The wall
1 Introduce yourself.
Hi I’m ……

…………….. …Fold the paper…………………………………………………………………………………………


2 Write a question:


3 Answer the question:


………………
Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………


4 Write a question:


5 Answer the question:


……………… Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………


6 Write a question:


7 Answer the question:


………………
Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………

8 Write a question:


9 Answer the question:


………………
Fold the paper……………………………………………………………………………………………


10 Write a question:
11 Answer the question:
What Is Globalization?
Globalization is a process of interaction and integration among the people, companies, and governments of different nations, a process driven by international trade and investment and aided by information technology. This process has effects on the environment, on culture, on political systems, on economic development and prosperity, and on human physical well-being in societies around the world.
Globalization is not new, though. For thousands of years, people—and, later, corporations—have been buying from and selling to each other in lands at great distances, such as through the famed Silk Road across Central Asia that connected China and Europe during the Middle Ages. Likewise, for centuries, people and corporations have invested in enterprises in other countries. In fact, many of the features of the current wave of globalization are similar to those prevailing before the outbreak of the First World War in 1914.
But policy and technological developments of the past few decades have spurred increases in cross-border trade, investment, and migration so large that many observers believe the world has entered a qualitatively new phase in its economic development. Since 1950, for example, the volume of world trade has increased by 20 times, and from just 1997 to 1999 flows of foreign investment nearly doubled, from $468 billion to $827 billion. Distinguishing this current wave of globalization from earlier ones, author Thomas Friedman has said that today globalization is “farther, faster, cheaper, and deeper.”
This current wave of globalization has been driven by policies that have opened economies domestically and internationally. In the years since the Second World War, and especially during the past two decades, many governments have adopted free-market economic systems, vastly increasing their own productive potential and creating myriad new opportunities for international trade and investment. Governments also have negotiated dramatic reductions in barriers to commerce and have established international agreements to promote trade in goods, services, and investment. Taking advantage of new opportunities in foreign markets, corporations have built foreign factories and established production and marketing arrangements with foreign partners. A defining feature of globalization, therefore, is an international industrial and financial business structure.
Technology has been the other principal driver of globalization. Advances in information technology, in particular, have dramatically transformed economic life. Information technologies have given all sorts of individual economic actors—consumers, investors, businesses—valuable new tools for identifying and pursuing economic opportunities, including faster and more informed analyses of economic trends around the world, easy transfers of assets, and collaboration with far-flung partners.
Globalization is deeply controversial, however. Proponents of globalization argue that it allows poor countries and their citizens to develop economically and raise their standards of living, while opponents of globalization claim that the creation of an unfettered international free market has benefited multinational corporations in the Western world at the expense of local enterprises, local cultures, and common people. Resistance to globalization has therefore taken shape both at a popular and at a governmental level as people and governments try to manage the flow of capital, labor, goods, and ideas that constitute the current wave of globalization.
To find the right balance between benefits and costs associated with globalization, citizens of all nations need to understand how globalization works and the policy choices facing them and their societies. Globalization101.org tries to provide an accurate analysis of the issues and controversies regarding globalization, without the slogans or ideological biases generally found in discussions of the topics. We welcome you to our website.

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