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Article by Sean Banville / Ideas & Activities by David Robinson
Date: Oct 11, 2006
THE ARTICLEMen Suffer From Compulsive Shopping TooA recent survey* has found that one in 20 American adults buy things they may not even want or never need or use. In today’s world of consumerism, where we are constantly bombarded by ads, this is perhaps not surprising. What may raise an eyebrow or two is a further finding in the study that men are just as likely as women to suffer from “compulsive buying”. Gone seem to be the days when women dragged their bored and fed-up-looking men around shopping malls. The new research from Stanford University has revealed that men are now just as avid and compulsive shoppers as their female counterparts. Researcher Dr Lorrin Koram said that the numbers of men who indulge in unnecessary shopping sprees has rocketed: "That's the biggest surprise -- men engage in this behavior almost as commonly as women," he said. This finding runs counter to the conventional and rather stereotyped view that compulsive buying is very much a "woman's disease." Dr. Koram said trends and figures may have been unfairly skewed as male obsessive shoppers used to be more reluctant than women to recognize that they have a problem and then come forward and admit it. He pointed out that: "Generally, in psychiatry, men seek care less often than women…It's not 'manly' to seek help." And help seems to be exactly what the doctor ordered for any compulsive shopper, who is usually not made any happier by his or her relentless buying. Dr Koram warned: "It's always important to encourage people who have these types of disorders to seek treatment." Many find themselves laden with debt and filled with shame and suicidal tendencies as they attempt to hide their addiction. *http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/reprint/163/10/1670 START1. DICTATION: The teacher will read to you slowly and clearly the first half of the first paragraph, repeating passages where necessary. Students will write down the speech. The teacher will repeat the passage slowly again. Self correct your work. Be honest with yourself on the number of errors. Advise the teacher of your total no of errors. 10 are acceptable. Any more is room for improvement! 2. READING: Get students to read the passage aloud. Swap readers every paragraph. 3. VOCABULARY: Students circle any words you do not understand. In groups, pool unknown words and use dictionaries to find their meanings. 4. COMPULSIVE SHOPPING: Walk around the class and talk to as many students as you can. Find out their opinions on compulsive shopping. What is the difference between compulsive shopping and impulsive shopping? Share your finding with new partners. The teacher can select some students to find out your results. 5. CHAT: In pairs / groups, decide which of these topics or words from the article are the most interesting (circle) and which are the most boring (underline).
Have a chat about the topics you liked. For more conversation, change topics and partners frequently. 6. SHOPPING: Fill in the following table on what men and women might compulsively buy. Conduct a survey of your class members to find out. Share your findings with new partner(s)
7. QUICK DEBATE: Students A believe women are more compulsive shoppers than men. Students B believes men are as bad as women for compulsive shopping. Debate this with your partners. Change partners often. 8. ONE MINUTE: Spend one minute writing down all of the different words you associate with compulsive shopping. Share your words with your partner(s) and talk about them. Together, put the words into different categories. 9. FIVE MINUTES: Choose three of these words. Write a sentence using each word. Try to associate them with compulsive shopping. Discuss with your partner. Spend five minutes on this exercise. BEFORE/AFTER READING / LISTENING (I)1. TRUE / FALSE: Look at the article’s headline and guess whether these sentences are true (T) or false (F):
2. SYNONYM MATCH: Match the following synonyms from the article:
3. PHRASE MATCH: Match the following phrases from the article (sometimes more than one combination is possible):
READING GAP FILL:Put the words in the column on the right into the gaps in the text. Men Suffer From Compulsive Shopping Too
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A recent __________ has found that one in 20 American adults buy things they may not even want or never need or use. In today’s world of ___________, where we are constantly bombarded by ads, this is perhaps not __________. What may raise an __________ or two is a further finding in the study that men are just as likely as women to suffer from “compulsive buying”. Gone seem to be the days when women dragged their bored and ________-looking men around shopping malls. The new research from Stanford University has __________ that men are now just as avid and compulsive shoppers as their female ___________. Researcher Dr Lorrin Koram said that the numbers of men who indulge in unnecessary shopping sprees has rocketed: "That's the biggest surprise -- men engage in this behavior almost as commonly as __________," he said.
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revealed Fed-up women eyebrow survey consumerism surprising counterparts |
This finding runs counter to the conventional and rather stereotyped view that compulsive buying is very much a "woman's disease." Dr. Koram said trends and figures may have been __________ skewed as male obsessive shoppers used to be more reluctant than women to recognize that they have a problem and then come forward and __________ it. He pointed out that: "Generally, in psychiatry, __________ seek care less often than women…It's not 'manly' to seek help." And help seems to be exactly what the doctor ordered for any compulsive shopper, who is usually not made any happier by his or her relentless buying. Dr Koram warned: "It's always important to __________ people who have these types of disorders to seek __________." Many find themselves laden with __________ and filled with shame and suicidal __________ as they attempt to hide their __________. |
addiction tendencies debt Men Treatment Encourage Admit unfairly
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Listen and fill in the spaces.
A recent survey has found that one in 20 American adults buy things they _______________ want or never need or use. In today’s world of consumerism, where we are constantly _____________ ads, this is perhaps not surprising. What may raise an ____________ two is a further finding in the study that men are just as likely as women to suffer from “_______________”. Gone seem to be the days when women dragged their bored and fed-up-looking men around shopping malls. The new research from _____________ has revealed that men are now _________ avid and compulsive shoppers as their female counterparts. Researcher Dr Lorrin Koram said that the numbers of men who indulge in unnecessary shopping sprees has rocketed: "That's the biggest surprise -- men __________ this behavior almost as commonly as women," he said.
This finding runs __________ the conventional and rather stereotyped view that compulsive buying is very much a "______________." Dr. Koram said trends and figures may have been unfairly skewed as male obsessive shoppers used to be more reluctant than women to recognize that __________ a problem and then come forward and admit it. He pointed out that: "Generally, in __________, men seek care less often than women…It's not '_______' to seek help." And help seems to be exactly what the doctor ordered for any compulsive shopper, who is usually not made any happier by his or her relentless buying. __________ warned: "It's always important to encourage people who have these types of ___________ seek treatment." Many find themselves laden with debt and filled with shame and ________________ as they attempt to hide their addiction.
1. WORD SEARCH: Look in your dictionaries / computer to find collocates, other meanings, information, synonyms … for the words ‘compulsive’ and ‘shopping’.
2. ARTICLE QUESTIONS: Look back at the article and write down some questions you would like to ask the class about the text.
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…?
5. STUDENT “SHOPPING” SURVEY: In pairs / groups, write down questions about shopping and compulsive shopping.
6. TEST EACH OTHER: Look at the words below. With your partner, try to recall exactly how these were used in the text:
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STUDENT A’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student B)
Did the headline make you want to read the article?
STUDENT B’s QUESTIONS (Do not show these to student A)
AFTER DISCUSSION: Join another partner / group and tell them what you talked about.
SHOPPING: With your partner(s), discuss the following statistics:
Answer the following questions:
1 Do you agree with them?
2 Is there a trend?
Think of two questions to ask your partner about them
The researchers found that:
http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/reprint/163/10/1670
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 information about compulsive shoppers. Talk about what you discover with your partner(s) in the next lesson.
3. NEWS REPORT: Write a newspaper report on why people compulsively shop. Interview (imagine) several shoppers in town. Ask them if they are compulsive shoppers? (Minimum 100 words) Read your report to your classmates in the next lesson. Which report was best and why?
4. LETTER: Write a letter to a chairman of a big supermarket chain you visit. Tell him what you think of his company bombarding you with junk mail and continual advertisements. Ask him three questions. Show your letter to your classmates in the next lesson. Your classmates will write a reply.
TRUE / FALSE:
a. T |
b. T |
c. F |
d. F |
e. T |
f. F |
g. T |
h. F |
SYNONYM MATCH:
a. |
compulsive |
obsessive |
b. |
shoppers |
customers |
c. |
malls |
arcade |
d. |
commonly |
usually |
e. |
encourage |
foster |
f. |
relentless |
continuous |
g. |
addiction |
dependence |
h. |
bored |
restless |
i. |
world |
earth |
j. |
rocketed |
soared |
PHRASE MATCH:
a. |
In today’s |
world of consumerism |
b. |
Many find themselves |
laden with debt |
c. |
What may raise |
an eyebrow or two |
d. |
Men engage |
in this behaviour |
e. |
It’s not ‘manly’ |
to seek help |
f. |
Trends and figures |
may have been unfairly skewed |
g. |
They attempt to hide |
their addiction |
h. |
Women dragged their bored |
and fed-up-looking men |
i. |
Men are just as avid |
and compulsive shoppers |
j. |
Men seek care |
less often than women |
GAP FILL:
A recent survey has found that one in 20 American adults buy things they may not even want or never need or use. In today’s world of consumerism, where we are constantly bombarded by ads, this is perhaps not surprising. What may raise an eyebrow or two is a further finding in the study that men are just as likely as women to suffer from “compulsive buying”. Gone seem to be the days when women dragged their bored and fed-up-looking men around shopping malls. The new research from Stanford University has revealed that men are now just as avid and compulsive shoppers as their female counterparts. Researcher Dr Lorrin Koram said that the numbers of men who indulge in unnecessary shopping sprees has rocketed: "That's the biggest surprise -- men engage in this behavior almost as commonly as women," he said.
This finding runs counter to the conventional and rather stereotyped view that compulsive buying is very much a "woman's disease." Dr. Koram said trends and figures may have been unfairly skewed as male obsessive shoppers used to be more reluctant than women to recognize that they have a problem and then come forward and admit it. He pointed out that: "Generally, in psychiatry, men seek care less often than women…It's not 'manly' to seek help." And help seems to be exactly what the doctor ordered for any compulsive shopper, who is usually not made any happier by his or her relentless buying. Dr Koram warned: "It's always important to encourage people who have these types of disorders to seek treatment." Many find themselves laden with debt and filled with shame and suicidal tendencies as they attempt to hide their addiction.
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