Food for Thought Reading Answers : IELTS Reading Practice Test

International English Language Testing System ( IELTS )

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Updated on Nov 19, 2024 12:34 IST

Practising IELTS Reading passages like "Food for Thought" is key to boosting your test performance. It helps you get comfortable with different question types and passage styles, making you quicker at spotting key details and understanding the main ideas. Regularly working through practice passages improves your reading speed and comprehension and builds the confidence needed to tackle the exam. It’s like training for a race— the more you practice, the more prepared and relaxed you'll feel on test day.

IELTS Reading Food for Thought Reading Answers 
This passage on "Food for Thought" is inspired by Reading Practice Tests. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 1-13, which are based on the reading passage 1 below.

Food for Thought Reading Passage

A
There needs to be more classrooms at the Msekeni primary school, so half the lessons take place in the shade of yellow-blossomed acacia trees. Given this shortage, it might seem odd that one of the school’s purpose-built classrooms has been emptied of pupils and turned into a storeroom for sacks of grain. But it makes sense. Food matters more than shelter.

B
Msekeni is in one of the poorer parts of Malawi, a landlocked southern African country of exceptional beauty and great poverty. No war lays waste to Malawi, nor is the land unusually crowded or infertile, but Malawians still have trouble finding enough to eat. Half of the children under five are underfed to the point of stunting. Hunger blights most aspects of Malawian life, so the country is as good a place as any to investigate how nutrition affects development and vice versa.

C
The headmaster at Msekeni, Bernard Kumanda, has strong views on the subject. He thinks food is a priceless teaching aid. Since 1999, his pupils have received free school lunches. Donors such as the World Food Programme (WFP) provide the food: those sacks of grain (mostly mixed maise and soya bean flour, enriched with vitamin A) in that converted classroom. Local volunteers do the cooking – turning the dry ingredients into a bland but nutritious slop and spooning it out onto plastic plates. The children line up in large crowds, cheerfully singing a song called “We Are Getting Porridge”.

D
When the school’s feeding programme was introduced, enrolment at Msekeni doubled. Some of the new pupils had switched from nearby schools that did not give out free porridge, but most were children whose families had previously kept them at home to work. These families were so poor that the long-term benefits of EDUCATION seemed unattractive when set against the short-term gain of sending children out to gather firewood or help in the fields. One plate of porridge a day completely altered the calculation. A child fed at school will not howl so plaintively for food at home. Girls, who are more likely than boys to be kept out of school, are given extra snacks to take home.

E
When a school takes in a horde of extra students from the poorest homes, you would expect standards to drop. Anywhere in the world, poor kids tend to perform worse than their better-off classmates. When the influx of new pupils is not accompanied by an increase in the number of teachers, as was the case at Msekeni, you would expect standards to fall even further. But they have not. Pass rates at Msekeni improved dramatically, from 30% to 85%. Although this was an exceptional example, the nationwide results of school feeding programmes were still pretty good. On average, after Malawian schools started handing out free food, 38% more girls and 24% more boys were attracted. The pass rate for boys stayed about the same, while for girls, it improved by 9.5%.

F
Better nutrition makes for brighter children. Most immediately, well-fed children find it easier to concentrate. It is hard to focus the mind on long division when your stomach is screaming for food. Mr Kumanda says that it used to be easy to spot the kids who were really undernourished. “They were the ones who stared into space and didn’t respond when you asked the question,” he says. More crucially, though, more and better food helps brains grow and develop. Like any other organ in the body, the brain needs nutrition and exercise. But if it is starved of the necessary calories, proteins and micronutrients, it is stunted, perhaps not as severely as a muscle would be, but stunted nonetheless. That is why feeding children at schools works so well. The fact that the effect of feeding was more pronounced in girls than in boys gives a clue to who eats first in rural Malawian households. It isn’t the girls.

G
On a global scale, the good news is that people are eating better than ever before. Homo sapiens has grown 50% bigger since the industrial revolution. Three centuries ago, chronic malnutrition was more or less universal. Now, it is extremely rare in rich countries. In developing countries, where most people live, plates and rice bowls are also fuller than ever before. The proportion of children under five in the developing world who are malnourished to the point of stunting fell from 39% in 1990 to 30% in 2000, says the World Health Organisation (WHO). In other places, the battle against hunger is steadily being won. Better nutrition is making people cleverer and more energetic, which will help them grow more prosperous. And when they eventually join the ranks of the well off, they can start fretting about growing too fast.

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Food for Thought Reading Questions & Answers

Questions 1-8
The Reading Passage has SEVEN sections, A-G.
Which section contains the following information?
Write the correct letter, A-G, in boxes 1-8 on your answer sheet.

1. Surprising use of school premises.

Answer: A

2. Global perspective.

Answer: G

3. None of the usual reasons.

Answer: B

4. How the food program affects school attendance.

Answer: D

5. Surprising academic outcome.

Answer: E

6. How the food program is operated.

Answer: G

7. Why better food helps students’ learning.

Answer: C

8. School feeding programs.

Answer: E








Food for Thought Reading Questions for Practice

Questions 9-13

Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 9-13 on your answer sheet, write
TRUE if the statement agrees with the information
FALSE if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this

9. More snacks are exclusively offered to girls in the feeding programme.

Answer: TRUE

10. Some children are taught in the open air.

Answer: TRUE

11. Girls enjoy a higher status than boys in the family.

Answer: FALSE

12. Boys and girls experience the same improvement in the pass rate.

Answer: FALSE

13. WHO has cooperated with WFP to provide grain to the school at Msekeni.

Answer: NOT GIVEN







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I am an associate professor in Physics and Awarded Ph.D. ( Tech) in Electronics and Communication Engineering (ECE). I am looking for Postdoctoral Position/ Course in Physics/Engineering on online /hybrid mode in prestigious universities abroad ( USA, UK, Singapore, Malaysia, Australia etc.) / Indi

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Tajkia Sultana

9 months ago

Hii, I want to complete my Bachelors in Malaysia from Bangladesh. But I am not understanding which books to choose for taking preparation as I want to take preparation at home.Pls help me to choose the best books and let me know if there is any free-student scholarship in Malaysia.

Reply to Tajkia Sultana

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Rahul Singha

9 months ago

Hello Tajkia. I would highly recommend that you opt for books/ study material that is available on the official website of IDP - the conducting body of the IELTS exam. The books would have the latest syllabus and cover everything you would need to know to ace your IELTS exam.

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TOM Titus

a year ago

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Reply to TOM Titus

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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Hello shiksha I just finish my B A in political science. I want to study abroad now? Can I complete MA here. And then what kind of work will I get. I would be very happy if you answer. Thank you

Reply to Mustafijur molla

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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Aditi

a year ago

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Reply to Aditi

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Rahul Singha

a year ago

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