I have been asking you lots of
questions around giving me more details either when answering questions in
reading, or when writing your setting and character descriptions. To practise finding
details, look at the picture below and answer these three questions.
What
is going on in this picture?
What
do you see that makes you say that?
What more can you find?
Write your answers in the comments, write in
full sentences, think about Who, What, Where, Why, How details and tell me as much as possible. You can also respectfully
comment on, or refer to, other people’s answers. You might agree with them and
add more detail to support their answers or you might have another opinion that
you can support with other reasons.
Who is in the picture? What are they doing? What are they feeling? Where are they going? Where have they been? Why are they going there? Why had they been there? Why are they feeling that way? How did this happen? Don't forget your conjunction "BECAUSE". I think they are going away from the beach because ... (including evidence from the picture).
For example, Bob might say he thinks these people are happy to be here because they appear to be walking casually, Sarah might say she thinks they are unhappy because they are all bowing their heads, looking at the ground. As long as you can justify your comments, there are no wrong answers. This is a details finding exercise.
The actual caption was:
Swimmers walked across a beach covered by seaweed in Qingdao, in eastern China. Beaches in Qingdao have been plagued by seaweed from the Yellow Sea the last several summers.
The Times reports about the algae bloom in
this article, writing:
In what has become an annual summer scourge, the coastal Chinese city of Qingdao has been hit by a near-record algae bloom that has left its popular beaches fouled with a green, stringy muck.
The State Oceanic Administration said an area larger than Connecticut had been affected by the mat of “sea lettuce,” as it is known in Chinese, which is generally harmless to humans but chokes off marine life and invariably chases away tourists as it begins to rot.
Some beachgoers appeared to be amused by the outbreak, at least according to the Chinese news media, which in recent days have featured images of swimmers lounging on bright green beds of algae, tossing it around with glee or piling it atop of one another as if it were sand.
Local officials, however, are less enthusiastic.