Changes for page Exercises argumentative writing
Last modified by Holger Engels on 2026/04/28 14:03
From version 67.1
edited by Martina Wagner
on 2026/04/26 13:46
on 2026/04/26 13:46
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To version 70.1
edited by Martina Wagner
on 2026/04/26 19:37
on 2026/04/26 19:37
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... ... @@ -25,6 +25,16 @@ 25 25 (% class="border slim" %) 26 26 ||right|wrong 27 27 |1. **The question arises** whether mobile phones should be allowed in schools at all.|| 28 -|1. **Firstly**, mobile phones give students quick access to information. **Another significant benefit** is that they can be used as learning tools.|| 28 +|2. **Firstly**, mobile phones give students quick access to information.**Another significant benefit** is that they can be used as learning tools.|| 29 +|3. Mobile phones can distract students during lessons. **For instance**, this is a very serious problem that schools must solve immediately.|| 30 +|4. Students use their phones to look up words and check grammar. **Consequently**, their writing skills can improve significantly.|| 31 +|5. **In conclusion**, one major issue is that phones make it easy to cheat during tests.|| 32 +|6. Some schools have banned phones completely. **To illustrate this point**, studies show that banning phones can raise average test scores by up to 6%.|| 33 +|7. Phones help students stay in touch with their parents. In addition, they can be useful in emergencies.|| 34 +|8. Many students spend too much time on their phones during breaks. Therefore, looking at the positive side, there are clear benefits too.|| 35 +|9. A significant disadvantage of mobile phones in school is the risk of cyberbullying.|| 36 +|10. Phones cause distraction and enable cheating. In a nutshell, schools need clear rules about when and how phones may be used.|| 37 + 38 + 29 29 {{/exercise}} 30 30