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Note Making and Summarizing Guide

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92% found this document useful (12 votes)
154K views15 pages

Note Making and Summarizing Guide

Uploaded by

dashash0240
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Solved Passages for Note Making–I

Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:
(1 × 8 = 8 Marks)

1. How does television affect our lives? It can be very helpful to people who carefully
choose the shows that they watch television can increase our knowledge of the outside
world; there are high quality programmes that help us understand many fields of
study, science, medicine, the arts and so on. Moreover, television benefits very old
people who can’t often leave the house, as well as patients in hospital. It also offers
non-native speakers the advantage of daily informal language practice. They can
increase their vocabulary and practice listening.
2. On the other hand, there are several serious disadvantages to television. Of course,
it provides us with a pleasant way to relax and spend our free time, but in some
countries, people watch television for an average of six hours or more a day. Many
children stare at a television screen for more hours each day than they do at anything
else, including studying and sleeping. It’s clear that the tube has a powerful influence
on their lives and that its influence is often negative.
3. Recent studies show that after only thirty seconds of watching television, a person’s
brain ‘relaxes’ the same way that it does just before the person falls asleep. Another
effect of television on the human brain is that it seems to cause poor concentration.
Children who view a lot of television can often concentrate on a subject for only
fifteen to twenty minutes. They can pay attention only for the amount of time between
commercials.
4. Another disadvantage is that television often causes people to become dissatisfied
with their own lives. Real life does not seem as exciting to these people as the lives
of actors on the screen To many people television becomes more real than reality
and their own lives boring. Also many people get upset or depressed when they can’t
solve problems in real life as quickly as television actors seem to.
5. Before a child is fourteen years old, he or she views eleven thousand murders on the
screen. He or she begins to believe that there is nothing strange about fights, killings
and other kinds of violence. Many studies show that people become more violent after
certain watching programmes. They may even do the things that they saw in a violent
show.
1. Make notes on the above passage using proper abbreviations (at least four) and suggest
a suitable title. (3 + 1 + 1 = 05 Marks)
2. Write a summary of the above passage in about 50 words (03 Marks)

32
XI – English
Notes.
1. (a) Title : The Impact of Television
Notes:
1. Benefits of T.V.
1.1 Inc. our know of o/s world
1.2 High quality programmes
1.2.1 Fields – science, medicine, arts
1.3 Old people, patients – can’t leave house
1.4 Non-native speakers – daily informal lang. prac.
1.5 Inc. vocabulary, listening
1.6 Way to Relax
2. Disadvantages of T.V. on body
2.1 Long duration of viewing – affects eyes
2.2 Human brain
2.2.1. gets drained
2.2.2. poor concentration
2.3 Effects of violent shows on adults/behaviour
3. Effects of T.V. on children
3.1. Lack of concentration in studies
3.2. gets used to violence
3.3. Loses discretion / understanding
4. Other effects
4.1 People become dissatisfied
4.2 Unable to diff. b/w reel and real life
4.3 Real life seems boring
4.4 Imitate actors
4.5 Get upset/depressed – unable to solve problems

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XI – English
Key to Abbreviations
1. Inc. – increases
2. o/s – outside
3. know – knowledge
4. lang. – language
5. prac. – practice
6. T.V. – television
7. difft. – differentiate
8. b/w – between

Summary
The Impact of Television
Television viewing is both a boon and a bane. It’s an easily available source of entertainment
for everyone, even old people and patients It offers high quality educational programmes.
But it has a bad side too. It drains our brain of energy and causes poor concentration in
students. Violent shows often lead to violent behaviours in real life among children and
adults. People often get too attached with T.V. shows and actors that they are unable to
differentiate between reel und real life. Thus, T.V. can be helpful to only those people who
carefully choose the shows.
SOLVED EXAMPLE–II

Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow.
In Delhi, where 80% of the people are pedestrians, in some stage of their commuting,
least attention is paid to pedestrian paths. Delhi’s side walks are too narrow, very poorly
maintained and full of potholes, poles, junction boxes and dangerous electrical installation,
not to speak of the garbage dumps that stink and stare at the pedestrian. Ashram Chowk
is a good case in point where thousands of pedestrian change direction from the Mathura
road radial to the Ring Road. A flyover facilitates the automobiles. While the pedestrian
is orphaned by the investment hungry authorities. One corner of the Ashram Chowk has
a ridiculous imitation wood sculpture with an apology of a fountain and across the same
Chowk you have the open mouthed massive garbage dump right on the pedestrain path in
full exhibition for the benefit of the public. These symbols of poor taste and abject apathy
are then connected by narrow dangerous and often waterlogged footpaths for the helpless

34
XI – English
pedestrian to negotiate. At night, street lighting in the central median light up the carriageway
for cars and leave the pedestrian areas in darkness.
Delhi’s citizens leave and want to get to their destination as fast they can. No one
wants to linger on the road, no leisure walks, no one looks a stranger in the eye. It is on the
pedestrian path that citizens encounter head on the poor public management and the excuse
called multiplicity of authorities. One agency makes the road, another digs it up to lay cables,
third one comes after months to clear up the mess and the cycle of unaccountability goes
on. Meanwhile crores are spent in reparing the carriageway for vehicles and in construction
of the flyovers without a care for the pedestrian below. Solution offerd is to make an
expensive underpass or an ugly foot overbridge, ostensibly for facilitating the pedestrian,
while in reality they only facilitate the car to move faster at the expense of the pedestrian.
Take Kashmiri gate, ITO, Ashram Chowk, AIIMS. or Dhaula Kuan, at all these important,
pedestrian crossover points, the story is the same. They have pulled the sidewalk from the
pedestrian’s feet.
In modern cities across the world, the pedestrian is king. The floor of the city is
designed and maintained as an inclusive environment, helping the physically challenged,
the old and the infirm children and the ordinary citizens to move joyful across the city, Delhi
aspires to be world class city. Hopefully the authorities would look once again at the floor
of Delhi.
The pleasure of strolling on the road is deeply connected to our sense of citizenship
and sense of belonging. Pride in the city grows only on a well designed floor of the city.
1. On the basis of your reading of the above passage, make-notes using heading and
sub-heading. Also use recognized abbreviations wherever necessary (minimum 4)
Supply a suitable title. (1+1+3-05 Marks)
2. Write the summary of the passage in about 50 words. (03 Marks)

35
XI – English
Title : ‘PedestrianS In Delhi’
Or
‘Delhi Unsafe For PedestrianS’
Notes :
1. Delhi : a major city for pedestrian
1.1 Poor maint. of sidewalks.
1.2 dangerous elect installation.
1.3 garbage dump.
1.4 Waterlogged footpaths.
2. Life in Delhi for citizens.
2.1 Fast life
2.2 Poor public manag.
2.3 Multiplicity of auth.
2.4 Unaccountability
2.5 Constly constructions but useless.
3. Pedestrian in the modern city.
3.1 Pedestrian; a king
3.2 Floor of the city to provide great help.
3.3 Facilities to the challenged old and the infirm child.

Key to Abbreviations

Maint – Maintainance

Elect – Electrical

Manag – Management

Auth – Authorities

Child – Children

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XI – English
Summary (50 words)
Delhi, although is a major city for the pedesatrians, provides least attention in the matter of
facilities. The sidewalks are dangerous, narrow, poorly maintained, and are full of potholes,
garbage dumps, dangerous electrical fittings and stinky urinals. Public management is poor.
Unaccountability can be seen on the part of authorities. Money is misused without providing
care to the users. In the modern city, where pedestrian is the king, the floor of city should
he maintained by keeping in mind the physically challenged, old and infirm children. For
making Delhi world class, the authorities would once again look at the floor of Delhi.
UNSEEN PASSAGE - 3 FOR NOTE MAKING
(SOLVED)
Read the following passage carefully.
Corruption in one form or another, is a worldwide phenomenon. But everyone admits
that corruption is something ugly, immoral and detestable. Unfortunately, in our country,
corruption has become a part of life. It has entered the very roots of the Indian society.
Corruption, nepotism and dishonesty have tarnished every fabric of our social life. The
law of a land is too weak to deal with the corrupt elements with an iron hand. The vested
interests rule the roost. Everybody feels helpless in such a state of affairs. Some people have
even started talking of the nationalization of corruption in the country. They argue that we
should frankly admit that we are a corruption and that we cannot do without it. It is a matter
of shame and regret for all those who care to hear the call of their conscience.
Corruption is prevailing at all levels- economic, social, administrative, moral and
spiritual. During the past few years, the images of the country has been defaced beyond
redemption. A large number of scams, involving top politicians, administrators and
VVIPs have come to light. These scams, most of them unearthed by the Central Bureau of
Investigation, involve huge sums running into thousands of crores. They have shaken the
entire conscience of the country to the bones. The law enforcing agencies are seeking the
help of the judicial process to bring the culprits to book. The judicial system however, is
full of flaws and the culprits do not find it very difficult to cleverly escape the legal net.
People are beginning to take corruption for granted. The root cause of corruption is red
tape or delay. Persons found guilty should be punished severely. Exemplary punishments
should be given to corrupt officials, national character should be improved. Smugglers, black
marketers and hoarders should be severely dealt with.
Social and spiritual organizations can give a good healthy education to the public.
Persons of strong character should be employed. The Government employees must be told
to withstand any tem potation while discharging their duties. Such officials as lay down
noble standards of honesty and efficiency, should be encouraged and honoured at public
functions. Dishonest public servants should not only be dismissed, but should also be publicly
flogged and put behind the bars. The education system of the country should be re-oriented
to inculcate a spirit of honesty amongst the people.

37
XI – English
All ministers and public servants should be made to declare their assets. The vigilance
department should keep a constant eye on the corrupt officers and other public servants.
Ministers and senior officials must set noble examples of an honest living free from corruption,
bribery, nepotism and immorality. The law of the land should be provided with more teeth
to deal with corrupt elements. Corruption at any level, is bad. The Government should
launch a vigorous campaign against this social evil. Charity, however, must begin at home.
(Words 484)
(a) On the basis of your reading of the above passage make notes on it, using headings
and sub-headings. Use recognizable abbreviations (wherever necessary- minimum 4) and
a format you consider suitable. Also supply an appropriate title to it. (5 marks)
(b) Write a summary of the passage in about 50 words. 3 marks
Ans. Title – Corruption
Note- Making
1. Corruption & it’s impact on social life
1.1 nepo. & dishonesty
1.2 matter of shame & humiliation
2. Prev. of corruption at different levels
2.1 eco. 2.2 Social
2.3 Admn. 2.4 Moral 2.5 Spiritual
3. Role of social & spiritual org.
3.1 healthy edu. To public
3.2 empt. Of strong character persons
3.3 honesty & efficiency be encouraged & honoured
4. Suggestions
4.1 ministers & public servants declare assets
4.2 vigilance department to be vigil on corrupt officers & public servants
4.3 minist6ers & senior officials to set noble ex.
4.4 Strict laws for corrupt elements
4.5 Govt. to launch vigorous campaign against corruption

38
XI – English
Key to abbreviations and symbols
nepo.- nepotism
prey – prevalence
eco – economic
admn. – Administrative
org. – organizations
empt. – Employment

(b) Summary ( Abstraction)


Corruption is an ugly. Immoral and detestable practice. It has entered the very roots of the
Indian society and become a part of life. Corruption, nepotism and dishonesty have stained
every fabric of our social life. The law of our nation is too weak to deal with the corrupt
elements. Corruption is prevalent at every level. Social and spiritual organizations can play
an important role to remove corruption from the Society by providing healthy education
to the public and by employing strong character persons. Moreover honesty and
efficiency should be encouraged and honoured. Strict laws to be imposed by the
Government.

Passage - 4
Read the following passage carefully and answer the questions that follow:-

The conditions of the slum areas in metropolitan cities have deteriorated to such an extent
due to the high density of population that the people there hardly enjoy even the basic
amenities. The lanes are narrow and the houses are nothing but a single room tenement
without the facilities of an open courtyard or an enclosure, thus depriving the people of
natural gifts like sunshine and air.

In such areas, people use common latrines and water taps. Some of the slum areas do
not even have single rooms, they are thick clusters of small, dilapidated mud huts, the roofs
and ceilings of which are made of scraps of wood, gunny sacks, metal or some sort of waste
material. Sometimes. 10 to 12 people live, eat and sleep in the same room. The streets are
narrow and the sewage water stagnates in open surface drains, which emit bad smell. The
children often play in places where the drains are used as open latrines.
Living conditions in main urban slums are worse than those in the poorest rural areas
of the country. This can be attributed to the slum’s exceptional unhealthy environment Many

39
XI – English
of the most serious diseases in cities are ‘environmental’ because they are transmitted through
air. water, soil and food or through insect or animal vectors.
The concentration of people in areas where the provision of water, sanitation, garbage
collection and health care is inadequate creates the conditions where infectious and parasitic
diseases thrive and spread. Around half the slum population is suffering from one or more
of the diseases associated with inadequate provision of water and sanitation.
Despite the exterior appearance of chaos, slum life is highly structured, with many
economic, religious, caste and political interests expressed in the daily activity. Living
conditions are extremely difficult, and slum dwellers fear the constant threat of having their
homes bulldozed in municipal slum clearance’ efforts. Nonetheless, slum life is animated
by a strong sense of joie de vivre.
Growth of slums is a problem peculiar to the urban areas. Slums come up near
industrial areas, railway lines, ports, platforms, river banks, large drains and around wholesale
markets. They emerge in metropolitan cities and in the million plus cities. In metropolitan
cities, more than 25 per cent of the population lives in slums. Dharavi near Mumbai is the
largest slum in Asia.
The houses in slums are mostly kutcha houses made of bricks, mud, tin sheets,
bamboo, tarpaulin sheets etc.
The living area is not more than ten square metres, which is used mainly for storage of
household items, whereas cooking, bathing and sleeping is done mainly in the open. There
are common water taps and public conveniences. An open space, shaded by trees, may be
used as the community space. Slums are often prone to floods, waterlogging, fire etc. There
is no proper drainage and sewerage and this leads to :e of water-borne diseases like cholera,
gastro-enteritis and jaundice
The slum dwellers are mostly rural migrants who live near their workplaces, since
they cannot afford high transportation costs. Generally, workers from the same community
or those coming from the same place and working at the same place, live together. The
slum dwellers also include the self-employed, petty traders, household servants, vendors
and hawkers.
The efforts by various governments for resettlement of slum dwellers have not been
successful, because often the resettlement colonies are on the outskirts-far away from the
workplace.
a. Make Notes on the above passage using proper abbreviations (4 ) and a suitable
title. 5 Marks
b. Write the summary of the above passage in about 50 words. 3 Marks

40
XI – English
Passage - 5
1. Read the following passage and prepare notes on a standard format.
Give a suitable title.
2. Write a summary of the passage in 50 words.

Gender sensitization is the art of being sensitive to the ways people think about gender so
that they rely less on traditions and outdated views of rules of men and women.
I believe that education or schooling is a process through which society creates the
kind of individuals we wish to see in the world. Hence, it’s imperative that school curriculum
lays strong emphasis on inculcating values of equality, inclusivity and diversity, all of which
are essential for building a healthy society.
In a patriarchal country like India, where stark gender roles, overt gender
discrimination and devaluation of women and girls is ingrained into our daily lives. I feel
that it is extremely important to identify and address this problem from a very young age.
Boys and girls start developing their gendered identities from birth. The upbringing at
home also influences them. While egalitarian gender roles may not be present at home,
the school can become a space of transformation where children, especially those hailing
from disadvantaged backgrounds, learn to question gender roles, identify areas of gendered
discrimination, and work towards changing them.
In many families, in both rural and urban areas, while boys are encouraged to study
and have a career, girls are taught to concentrate on household chores. Only when both boys
and girls learn to question this typical gender bias at school, will the situation at home also
change for the better.
The different geographical and cultural contexts I have had the opportunity to work in
has taught me that gender roles and inequalities are very contextual, and rooted in cultural
and social practices. Thus, to have a national policy addressing gender equality is nol affluent.
At a more local level, we need clear directives to understand and address specific gender
norms through the schooling process.
For the longest time, we have been working on bringing girls to school and ensuring
that they complete their schooling. We assume that schooling and academic ability will
empower a girl through financial and social independence. Why then, do we still have a
society where women and girls fear for their safety and well-being, and are considered
‘burdens’ on their families? We may have been able to bring wmen to the forefront, but
without addressing and challenging gender norms at a nascent stage of social development,
we cannot hope to work towards a society where women and girls feel safe and valued.

41
XI – English
Imperative to this process is the need to working with boys. From a young age, i.e.
through schooling itself, if boys are knight to understand how an egalitarian society in
beneficial for all by questioning gender norms, only then will boys learn to treat women as
equals. Thus education can play a critical role in making the society safer for women, and
that can happen by making gender sensitization a pad of the school curriculum.
The importance of gender sensitisation in schools has been recognized and given due
importance in all policy outlining quality education. The Right to Educution Act 2009, and
its operating arm, the Sarva Shiksha Ahhiyan, has clearly mentioned that gender equality
is one of the expected outcomes of elementary education in the country. Schools need to
address unequal gender rules at a critical stage, when children are growing up. Shouldn’t
we insist that schools give due importance to gender sensitization and ensure that it is very
much a part of our children’s schooling process?
If you want to see a society devoid of discrimination, one where women and girls are
not treated as inferior, and where equal opportunities and rights are given to all women, then
I urge you to sign this petition, emphasize on the importance of gender sensitization and
do your part to easure that over time, we move towards a more equal and inclusive society.
(Approx 600 words)

Passage - 6
Read the given passage carefully:
Fasting is said to bring a host of benefits provided if done under medical supervision. Doctors
explain how to go about it. Food is to the body what fuel is to a motor vehicle. It provides
energy, helps repair and rejuvenation and confers many other benefits. A lot of research has
been done and is being done on fasting. When one fasts, the digestive organs get rest and
all body mechanisms are cleansed. While fasting, the natural process of toxin excretion
continues while influx of new toxins is reduced. The energy usually used for digestion is
redirected to immune function and cell growth. Fasting helps you heal with greater speed,
cleanses your liver, kidneys and colon, purifies your blood, helps you lose excess weight
and water, flushes out toxins, clears the eyes and tongue and cleanses the breath.
Another research says fasting, even occasionally, helps in de-toxification. Through
fasting we restrict digestive activity and so energy is utilised to cleanse different systems.
Fasting improves metabolism, sharpens the senses, calms the mind, helps loose weight,
improves general immunity, improves concentration and mental clarity. Fasting, if understood
and done under supervision, has tremendous benefits and impacts one at various planes;
mental, emotional, physical and spiritual. Specifically it serves as an aid to effective
detoxification, helps in repair and rejuvenation, offers rest to the gastro-intestinal system
and promotes mobilisation of excess fat.

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XI – English
The crucial point to note is the difference between fasting and starvation. Research
suggests there are major health benefits to calorie restriction. Among other things it slows
down the aging process. According to the US National Academy of Sciences, other benefits
include stress resistance, increased insulin sensitivity and increased lifespan.
Glucose is the body’s primary fuel source and is essential for the brain’s functioning.
When denied glucose for more than 4 - 8 hours, the body converts glycogen stored in the
liver into a usable form of fuel and supplements it with small amounts of protein. This will
last for upto 12 hours before the body turns to glycogen stored in muscles. If glucose is still
denied at this point, the body continues to use fat for as long as it is available. If the fast is
not broken, starvation occours, as the body begins to use protein for fuel. Death can occur
if fasting is pursued to the point of complete starvation.
Questions:
1. On the basis of your reading of the above passage make notes in points only using
abbreviations wherver necessary. Supply a suitable title. 5 Marks
2. Write a summary of the passage in about 50 words using the notes made. 3 Marks

Passage 7
1. Read the following passage and prepare notes on a standard format.
Give a suitable title. 5 Marks
2. Write a summary of the passage in 50 words. 3 Marks

Passage

In the Vedic calendar, summer is a time for happiness, abundance, and celebration. Trees
are laden with fruits, nature’s bountiful Sustenance. Vegetables and herbs are filling out the
garden. Tall grasses grace meadows, and children play outdoors. Natuarlly, we experience
fullness, fulfillment, and leisure. Cultures all over the world celebrate summer by venerating
solar deities, celebrating bountiful crops, feasting outdoors and honouring their spiritual
reunion with the earth.
To achieve a sense of balance, cooling activities are sought to lessen the heat of the
season. Bathing festivals are a prominent part of the Vedic culture. For example, Snanam
yatra is an auspicious bathing festival occurring in the summer. The season is active and
mostly lived outdoors. It provides you with endless chances to cultivate a life of inner
harmony—ahimsa—and to ward off heated emotions and anxieties in-herent with living in
overdrive.

43
XI – English
When we take care to cross over this season’s rhythms with mindfulness, we find
plentiful energy to celebrate the abundance and richness of summer that surrounds us. On
the other hand, when we are out of balance with seasonal rhythms, we may find ourselves
listless, lethargic and exhausted from the heat of the summer. To prevent dehydration, drink
plenty of water. If your pitta, fire humour, is not well cared for during the spring season,
it will manifest though heat-related conditions causing general pitta symptioms like weak
digestion, fevers, skin disorders, bile accumulation, sunstroke, irritability and listlessness.
This is a wonderful time for rejuvenating baths, swimming and wading and taking
‘moon baths’ by sitting in the moonlight to assuage mind and spirit with Goddess Lalita’s
cooling rays. Surround yourself with fragrant scents from flowers and pure essential oils,
and wear light, natural fibres and light comfortable clothing. Observe two days of fasting
or semi-fasting on Ekadashi.
To strengthen digestion, take light meals with fresh salads; eat chapatis with light
grain such as cracked wheat, bulgur and basmati rice and have sprouted beans and dhals or
bean dishes made with mung, kidney, lentil and soybeans. Eat plenty of fruits such as figs,
grapes, mangoes, melons, peaches and pomegranates. Steam or lightly cook your vegetables.
Beets, brocoli, cauliflower, celery, okra, radishes, snow peas, string beans, summer squash,
sweet corn, sweet pepers, and Swiss chard are a few of the prolific variety of garden fresh
foods available to you during the summer.
Take an occasional afternoon siesta. Follow the rhythms of summer and recover
playfulness, joy and abundance.
Summer is a wonderful time for enjoying nature’s abundant foods and harnessing
their cooling energies to maintain balance during the solar activities of this season. Your
summer menu should have plenty of colourful provisions for your nourishment.
Summer is your chance to learn the exquisite art of rolling out Indian flatbreads
and dunking them into the blissfully golden nourishment of summer dhals. Living Ahimsa
Diet, Nourishing Love & Life.

Questions

1. On the basis of your understading of the above pasage, make notes on it using headings
and sub headings. Use recognizable abbreviations (wherever necessary–minimum
day) and a format you consider suitable. Give suitable title. (5 Marks)

2. Write a summary of the passage in about 50 words. (3 Marks)

44
XI – English
Passage - 8
Read the following passage given below and answer the questions the follow:
The Great wall of China was built to link existing fortifications into a united defense system
and better keep invading Mongol tribes out of china. It is the largest man – made monument
ever to have been built and it is said that it is the only one visible from space. Many thousands
of people must have given their lives to build this huge construction.
The great wall of china is a series of towers made of stone, brick, earth, wood and
other materials, generally built along an east-to- west line across the historical northern
borders of china to protect the Chinese states and empires against the raids and invasions of
the various nomadic groups of the Eurasian Steppe. Several walls were being built as early
as the 7th century BCE, these later joined together and made bigger and stronger, are now
collectively referred to as the Great wall Especially famous is the wall built (220-206 BCE)
by Qin shi Huang, the first Emperor of China. Little of that wall remains. Since then, the great
wall has on and off been rebuilt, maintained and enhanced, the majority of the existing wall
is from the ming dynasty (1368-1644) other purposes of the Great wall have included border
controls, allowing the imposition of duties on goods transported along the silk road, regulation
or encouragement of trade and the control of immigration and emigration. Furthermore, the
defensive characteristics of the Great Wall were enhanced by the construction of watch towers,
troop barracks, gharrison stations, signaling capabilities through the means of smoke or fire
and the fact that the path of the Great wall also served as a transportation corridor.
The Great wall stretches from Dandong in the east to Lop Lake in the west, along an arc
that roughly delineates the southern edge of Inner Mongolia. A comprehensive archaeological
survey, using advanced technologies, has concluded that the Ming walls measure 8,850 km.
This is made up of 6,259 km sections of actual wall, 359 km of trenches and 2,232 km of
natural defensiove barriers such as hills and rivers. Another archaeological survey found that
the entire wall with all of its branches measures out to be 21,196km.
King Zheng of Qin conquered the last of his opponents and unified china as the First
Emperor of the Qin Dynasty Qin shi Huang in 221 BCE. Intending to impose centralized rule
and prevent the resurgence of feudal lords, he ordered the destruction of some sections of
the walls, however, he ordered building of new walls to connect the remaining fortifications
along the empire’s northern frontier. Transporting the large quantity of materials required for
construction was difficult, so builders always tried to use local resources. Stones from the
mountains were used over mountain ranges, while earth was used for construction in the plains.
The Great wall concept was revived under the Ming dynasty in the 14th century, to
gain a clear upper Hand over the Mongolian tribes.
1.1 On the basis of your reading of the above passage make notes on it, using headings and
subheadings. Use recognizable abbreviations ( Wherever necessary, minimum four) and
a format you consider suitable. Also supply an appropriate title to it. 5
1.2 Write a summary of the passage in about 50 words. 3

45
XI – English
Passage 9
Q.2 Read the passage given below and answer the questions that follow:

Whether work should be placed among the causes of happiness or among the causes of
unhappy may perhaps be reagarded as a doubtful question. There is certainly much work
which is exceedi irksome, and an excess of work is always very painful. However, work is
not, to most people, Painful than idleness. There are, in work, all grades; from mere relief
of tedium up o the profound delights, according to the nature of the work and the abilities
of the worker. Most of the work most people, when they are left free to fill their own time
according to their own choice, are at a to think of anything sufficiently pleasant to be worth
doing. And whatever they decide on, they troubled by the feeling that something else would
have been more pleasant here. To beable leisure intelligently is the last product of civilization
and at present very few people have rach this level. Moreover, the exercise of choice is
tiresome in itself. Except, in case of people with unu initiative, it is positively agreeable
to be told what to do at each hour of the day provided that orders are not too unpleasant.
Most of the idle rich suffer from unspeakable boredom. At times, may findrelief by hunting
big game in Africa or by flying around the world, but the number of sensations is limited,
especially after youth is past. Accordingly, the more intelligent rich men nearly as hard as
if they were [Link],

Work, Therefore is esirable, first and foremost as a preventive of boredom, although


uninteres work is as boring as hving nothing to do. with this advantage of work, another
associated advan is that it makes holidays much more delicious when they come. Provided
that a man does not we possible find.

The second advantage of most paid work and some of the unpaid work is that it
gives chanc success and opportunities for ambition. In most work,success is measured by
income and while capitalistic society continuses, the is inevitable. However, dull work too,
becomes bearable, if means of building up a reputation. Continuity of purpose is one of the
most essential ingrdien happines and that comes chiefly through work.

2.1 On the basis of your reading of the above passage makes using headings and sub-
head Use recognizable abbreviations, wherever necessary. 5

2.2 Write a summary of the passage in not more than 50 words using notes made and
suggest a suitable title. 3

46
XI – English

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Government officials can be encouraged to maintain honesty and efficiency by being required to declare assets, having the vigilance department monitor corrupt practices, and public recognition and honoring of officials who set noble standards. Additionally, strict laws should be implemented to deter corruption and demonstrate accountability .

Television negatively affects children's cognitive abilities and social behavior by leading to a lack of concentration in studies and desensitizing them to violence. It can also impair their ability to differentiate between real and reel life, potentially leading to confusion and unrealistic expectations .

Systemic changes recommended to curb corruption include imposing strict laws against corrupt practices, requiring public officials to declare assets, and maintaining vigilant oversight by relevant departments. These changes are necessary to dismantle entrenched corruption and ensure accountability and transparency, thereby restoring public trust in governance .

Persistent issues in slum areas include high population density, poor sanitation, vulnerability to floods, and inadequate infrastructure such as drainage and sewerage. Resettlement efforts have failed largely because the new colonies are often far from workplaces, making them impractical for low-income migrants who cannot afford long commutes .

Social and spiritual organizations can combat corruption by providing healthy education to the public and promoting the employment of individuals with strong character. They play a critical role in fostering honesty and efficiency within communities, thus helping to mitigate corrupt practices at various societal levels .

Delhi's infrastructural issues for pedestrians include narrow, poorly maintained sidewalks filled with hazards such as potholes, poles, and garbage. These challenges reflect poor public management, where pedestrian needs are neglected in favor of automobile infrastructure investments, highlighting a lack of accountability and misuse of public resources .

To improve conditions in metropolitan slums, critical infrastructure developments include constructing proper drainage and sanitation systems, ensuring access to clean water, and developing housing that meets the spatial needs of communities without displacing them from their work environments. These measures are essential to mitigate health risks and improve overall living conditions .

Education can address gender biases by incorporating curriculum that emphasizes inclusivity, diversity, and equality. Schools can serve as transformative spaces where children learn to question traditional gender roles and identify discriminatory practices, thereby fostering an environment that values all genders equally. This foundational change at a young age can lead to broader societal shifts in both urban and rural contexts .

Work is linked to happiness through its ability to prevent boredom and create opportunities for ambition and success. While idleness can be tedious, meaningful work provides a sense of purpose and achievement, enhancing one's overall happiness and personal fulfillment. The continuity of purpose and chance for recognition through work contribute significantly to well-being .

India's patriarchal structure enforces strict gender roles and discrimination, particularly devaluing women and girls. Educational interventions include integrating teachings of gender equality, encouraging questioning of traditional gender practices, and promoting inclusivity. Schools have the potential to become agents of change by providing a balanced perspective that challenges ingrained biases .

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