Q4 of 11 Page 1

You have made your annual payment for home garbage collection to the Residents Welfare Association. However, the collection is irregular and the collectors do not pick up all the garbage bags, leading to a further mess outside your house due to stray animals. The uncollected garbage is also a breeding ground for mosquitoes. Write a letter of complaint to the President of the Association, drawing his attention to this irregularity. Mention the inconvenience caused. You are Amrit/Amrita, 12-B Mall Apartments, Delhi. (120 - 150 words)

OR


Television today has reached every home, even in the remotest villages. The number of news channels is also increasing and the common man is aware of what is happening around him. Write a letter in 120 - 150 words to the Editor, National News, Delhi, expressing your views on the need for a responsible media that does not sensationalize news. You are Amrit/Amrita, 12-B Mall Apartments, Delhi.


Amrita


12-B Mall Apartments, Delhi


Date-02-03-2019


To,


The President


Resident Welfare Association


Delhi


Subject- “Irregularity of garbage collection”


Sir,


I am writing this letter to complain you about the irregular garbage collection of this neighborhood. The inconvenience faced by the people of our locality is very high due to the carelessness of the garbage collectors. Usually, the garbage truck is scheduled for 4 days in a week but for the past 15 days there is no presence of any garbage collection in our locality.


The local dustbins have been overflowing by the wastes and have become a source of breeding flies and mosquitoes which can give birth to many diseases in the coming period of time. Stray animals come and litter the rubbish all over the roads that even have blocked the flow of water in the drainage. Our locality has become a source of very foul smell which represents a very bad image of our area.


Sir, all the residents have already made their annual payment to the garbage collection fund and the irresponsibility of such collectors is now intolerable. I hope you will consider our problem seriously and will take some immediate actions for the welfare of our society.


Thanking you,


Yours sincerely,


Amrita


OR


Amrita


12-B Mall Apartments, Delhi


Date-02-03-2019


To,


The Editor


National News


Delhi


Subject- “Need for a responsible Media”


Sir,


I am writing to you to express my views on the functioning of the current media of our country. I am also concerned to bring a responsible media which can serve citizens better mass of information.


Today the power of media has been magnified but the actual responsibility of them remained unmarked. Indian media has become unethical and undemocratic. Earlier it is the voice of people against the injustice and proves to be advantageous to every individual but now it is either controlled by some political parties or just shows unrealistic and useless news that benefits their own propaganda. Media often goes off track by the actual concerns of any story and begins to influence the audiences according to their point of views. Rumours and pessimistic incidents are highly broadcasted through today’s media which should be banned as it affects the people and their opinions negatively which results in conflicts among them. People of India need an actual and truth spoken medium for better information which doesn’t sensationalize the incidents.


I hope you will give attention to this severe issue and think to improve the condition and provide a trustworthy and responsible media to the people of the nation.


Thanking you,


Yours sincerely,


Amrita

More from this chapter

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2

Read the passage given below:

Just as education can equalize or divide countries and people, information and communication technologies can also go either way. Right now - even though they have sometimes advanced surprisingly in developing countries - they are very unevenly distributed.


One consequence of the huge investment in the last few years is an unbelievable overcapacity of the world’s communication system. If the world’s 6 billion people were to talk non-stop on the phone for the next year, their words could be transmitted in a few hours through the currently available bandwidth - the capacity that connects homes and offices to each other and to providers of data all over the world.


Yet some 2 billion people have never made a phone call. Cities like Manhattan and Tokyo have more telephone lines than all of sub-Saharan Africa. Cellular networks cover only 20 per cent of the Earth, mostly in rich countries. The telephone density (phone lines per 100 inhabitants) is fifty to sixty in rich countries but less than two in the poorest developing countries. Among developing countries to the distribution of telecommunications is uneven.


Information technology is even more unequally distributed. The Internet traffic between the United States and Europe is 100 times of that reaching Africa and 30 times of that reaching Latin America. About 10 per cent of the world’s population understands English, the language of 75 per cent of all websites. Rich countries have 95 per cent of all Internet hosts, Africa has 0.25 per cent. This is because of low telephone density; with less than 5 telephones per hundred. It is next to impossible for an African country to quickly increase its countrywide Internet connectivity.


Why should we worry about this? Because these technologies offer tremendous possibilities to developing countries - in so many areas that it has become hard to imagine a country developing and reducing its poverty levels without them.


Cellular telephony can become a real business, and a lifeline. Over the Andes, satellites providing telephony in rural areas cut down communication costs dramatically compared to the slow postal system.


New technologies enable teacher training and networking that raise the quality of basic education. Kids learn elementary computer skills by trial and error through ‘computers in the wall’ in Indian slums. Business schools reach hundreds of remote sites through interactive distance education in South Africa.


The use of computers in government is spreading fast. It holds great promise of improving services to people, cutting down bureaucratic hassle, errors and fraud with massive gains in efficiency and transparency.


The applications of information technology cover a large range - patient information, training of nurses, hygiene instructions and even remote diagnostics.


With the help of Internet-based networking and satellite detection, best practice exchanges in environment management and ecologically balanced agriculture can rapidly progress. Through quick connectivity, small businesses in the developing countries can hook up to their markets and their larger partners in rich countries.


In short, new technologies have become one of the most potent ways to accelerate development and reduce poverty in ways no one could have even thought of 10 years ago. But from a global point of view, it’s also a matter of making sure that these technologies narrow the income and wealth gap.


This issue does not demand expensive solutions because addressing it does not mean showering poor countries with donated phones and PCs. It means helping them develop themselves into efficient users of new technologies.


(a) On the basis of your reading of the above passage, make notes on it using recognizable abbreviations, wherever necessary. Use a format you consider suitable. Give it a suitable title.


NOTE-MAKING


ABBREVATIONS


(b) Write a summary of the above passage in about 80 words.


3

MMR Eye Clinic is holding a free Eye Camp and Diabetes Checkup in your school. The camp will be held in the school auditorium from 8.00 am to 5.30 pm. Qualified and experienced doctors will be available for consultation through the day. Design a poster informing the students about the camp. Invent necessary details. You are Rahul/Rita, Secretary, Health Club. (50 – 60 words)

OR


Saarthi, an NGO, will be visiting your school to collect old books and stationery items. These books will be donated to the newly set up neighborhood slum school. Cartons for collection have been placed in various corners of the school. As In charge, Social Service Club, draft a notice motivating students to donate. Invent necessary details. You are Amrit/Amrita. (50-60 words)


5

Your school recently organized an Art and Craft Exhibition. The highlight of the exhibition was a section called ‘I-SPACE’ put up by students from classes sixth to twelfth. In addition, there was the sculpture section titled, ‘Best from Waste’ and a 10-foot high statue of the Buddha made by the Fine Arts Department. Renowned painter, Meera Menon, was the Chief Guest. As Chief Editor, write a report on the inauguration and exhibition in 150-200 words for the school magazine. You are Shaurya/Shirin.

OR


You recently attended a week-long Student Leadership Camp at Greenville School. 23 schools from India and abroad participated in the camp. The theme of the camp was ‘Be the Change’. The camp organized panel discussions followed by question and answer sessions. A workshop on leadership and need of community service was held followed by a cultural show. Based on your experience of participation, write a speech in 150-200 words on the importance of community service and the role of students in organizing it. You are Shaurya/Shirin.


6

Education today is no longer limited to academic excellence. There is an emphasis on mental, emotional and cultural development of our youth so that they become responsible and concerned citizens. Write an article in 150- 200 words titled - ‘Education: A New Perspective’. You are Manish/Meera.

You may use the following input:


need for personality development as an essential component of education


integral part of school curriculum


need to develop social awareness


programmes on life skills


flexible examination system


OR


India is standing at the threshold of joining the developed nations but that is not possible until we achieve complete literacy in the country. In order to do so, students can play a very significant role by volunteering a few hours a week to be part of the ‘Each One Teach One’ initiative. Write an article in 150- 200 words expressing your views on ‘Teaching the Masses- A Student’s Commitment’. You are Manish/Meera.