Sensations English
Reading

Comprehension

Answer questions about the news report. Select the correct answer from 4 options. There are 5 questions.

  • Check your understanding of the news report
  • Practise answering exam-style multiple choice questions
  • Practise thinking about details to avoid wrong answers
  • Practise using reading sub-skills to answer

What do I learn? +

How does this game work?

Select level
A2Elementary
B1Pre-intermediate
B1+Intermediate
B2Upper Intermediate
C1Advanced
B1 Pre-intermediate
Fetching... Play Game at B1
Start Again
You are correct!

Congrats - you are smashing this

Incorrect. The answer is:

Not quite right, try the next question.

close
transcript
No kids zones - 2nd August 2023
South Korea has the world's lowest birth rate. The government’s offering money to support families with babies. But the birth rate is still decreasing.
Yong Hye-in had a baby while working for the government. She says the government wants more people but they don’t want babies in public places.
Yong Hye-in: "(The male-dominated government) wants to boost birth rates and are scared the low birth rate will lead to a disappearing South Korea. But they also prefer it if the noisy, difficult and painful process of raising a child be done separately, somewhere out of sight, on a remote island."
In Seoul, 'No Kids Zones' are becoming common. The idea that children should stay hidden and quiet is creating this problem. Yong Hye-in couldn't visit her favourite places with her new born baby, which made her sad. This is worrying because it’s unfair to families.
Yong Hye-in: "I had now become this person who could be so easily rejected — at places like restaurants, cafes, bars and movie theatres. I felt like I had been expelled from society. I remember crying so much on my way home."
In Seoul, more and more 'No Kids Zones' have appeared. There are various reasons for this, from children being noisy to their parents being irresponsible. Yong Hye-in, who works at the National Assembly, has this problem too. Her workplace doesn’t give her time off as a new mother. She leads the Basic Income Party. She believes in creating equal opportunities, giving equal pay to men and women and changing social attitudes towards parenting. She thinks this is the key to stopping South Korea's low birth rate.
Scroll to view more options
GAME COMPLETE

You scored

Brilliant, you’re really proficient! You’ll find the C1 level really helpful to maintain your high standard of English.

Replay game

More games

Next
Previous
REGISTER NOW

Get videos, articles, games and study tools all at 5 levels!

Or sign up with your Email
By clicking “Sign Up” above you are accepting our Terms of Service & Privacy Policy.
Already have an account? Sign in

Sign up with email

Enter the following information to create your account.
All sign up options

Log in Or create an account

log in via email
or

Forgot password?

all sign up options

reset password or login

Crop Image

Add to homescreen