📰 The Fleydo Times — Education, Equality & Generation Z
The Fleydo Times Issue 04 tackles ‘Education, Equality & Generation Z’ — themes that provoke strong opinions and personal connections among adult learners. Article 1 (‘Is University Still Worth It?’) examines the economics of higher education with US/UK debt data, the growing trend of companies dropping degree requirements, and alternatives like apprenticeships and Coursera/edX. Article 2 (‘The Gender Pay Gap: Still Real in 2025’) presents global pay gap data with a five-country comparison table (Iceland 9.4%, Rwanda 5.1%, South Korea 31.2%), EU transparency laws, and the need for cultural change beyond legislation. Article 3 (‘Generation Z: The Most Anxious Generation?’) reports on record anxiety and depression rates among 18–27-year-olds, the role of social media comparison culture, economic uncertainty, and Gen Z’s honesty about mental health. Article 4 (‘Should Children Have Homework?’) contrasts Finland’s minimal-homework success with South Korea’s pressure-cooker model, citing Duke University research showing homework has no benefit before age 12. All articles use B1-appropriate grammar. This issue introduces a new visual element: a country comparison table with styled rows. The issue features 20 highlighted vocabulary items, four interactive polls, and five multi-part discussion prompts designed for adult conversation practice.
Lesson Plan
- Professional broadsheet masthead with date, issue number, and edition tagline
Key Vocabulary
Grammar Points
- Present Perfect for current situations: 'Companies have dropped degree requirements'
- Passive Voice in reporting: 'Women are still more likely to work in lower-paid sectors'
- Comparatives with data: 'Graduates earn significantly more than non-graduates'
- First Conditional: 'If we don’t change gender roles, the gap will take 130 years to close'
- Reported Speech: 'A 22-year-old put it: We’re not weak'
- Gerunds as subjects: 'Working part-time reduces lifetime earnings'
- Modals for possibility and advice: 'could / should / might' in discussion of policies
- Contrast and concession: although, despite, however, on the other hand, even though
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