FIGHTING THE COMPUTER BRAIN INVASION
Date: 2015-10-07; view: 821.
You are going to read the article about children using computer games. Six sentences have been removed from it. Choose from the sentences A-F , the one which fits each gap (1-5). There is an example at the beginning.
How can you interpret your favourite games?
When children get to age for games consoles, try to know what they are playing. Computer games range from highly educational, creative, delightful ones such as Sim City, which is training a whole new generation of enlightened city planners, via games of skill such as ski, flight, skateboard and sailing simulations, to pretty disgustingly violent ones such as the Carmageddon series and Carpocalypse Now and Tomb Raider, artfully designed to lure teenagers and alarm parents. 0)And when you ask which games he likes they do not know. Would these people, if asked who was babysitting, say ‘Oh, some guy from the park'?
1)Walk past, discuss what the game is about while you get on with the supper. Encourage sharing with other children. 2)
Enforce screen breaksfor the sake of the eyes and nerves. Give warning, let a level be finished, but enforce it.
3)If you have a teenager who spends a lot of time online, you probably need the software that records every site visited, any time spent; you may want one of the ‘filter' programmes that cuts out dodgy sites. Unfortunately, these appear to do most caveman-simple things such as cutting out anything with the word ‘sex' in it, which can seriously rot your A level biology student's research material and cause undue resentment.
4)This, during teenage years, can be a problem but it is always worth persevering with. If a parent or relative is around for enough time, slow to leap to judgement or hysteria, and willing to listen (leaning on the kitchen work-top while one of you has a late-night pizza, in the car, wherever) then important issues will eventually come up. If not, they won't.
5) . So is an alternative, sociable, physical pastime. We all know that a
healthy small child gets more fun out ofa sociable kitchen than out of Furby, and relishes a rough-and-tumble game wills Dad more than a television programme. We need to extend that common sense into older ages too.
AProbably the best guarantee against damage or confusion is the normal communication you have with your child.
BAny game using two controllers is better than a lonely one.
CIndeed, personal happiness and reasonable self-esteem are the best weapons against any kind of computer brain invasion.
DAs with television sets, keep the computer gaming area in one of the shared parts of the house.
EIt is self-evident that parental responsibility has to be applied to Web-surfing just as it must to every other kind of encounter.
FIt always amazes me to hear the parents of a nine or ten-year-old saying ‘He's up playing computer games'.
VOCABULARY & GRAMMAR
| A
| B
| | console
| cursedly
| | encounter
| offence
| | enforce
| barbarian
| | caveman
| control panel
| | dodgy
| imaginative
| | disgustingly
| turbulent
| | software
| first contact
| | resentment
| program support
| | lure
| urge, compel
| | creative
| shaky
| | violent
| tempt
|
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