Avleen KaurSr. Executive Training
Practicing passages like "Stress in the Workplace" helps IELTS preparation as it enhances vocabulary, critical thinking, and reading comprehension. This text highlights the negative effects of excessive workload on productivity and business, such as poor sleep and disregard for family. Regular practice boosts confidence, enabling better test performance. You should be consistent with these types of passages to build confidence and perform better in the IELTS Reading section.
The passage below, "Stress in the Workplace," is inspired by Reading Practice Test 31. You should spend about 20 minutes on Questions 14-27, based on the reading passage below. For Passage 1, you can practice - The History of Tortoise IELTS Passage
Stress in the Workplace
A
How busy is too busy? For some it means having to miss the occasional long lunch; for others it means missing lunch altogether. For a few, it is not being able to take a “sickie” once a month. Then there is a group of people for whom working every evening and weekend is normal, and frantic is the tempo of their lives. For most senior executives, workloads swing between extremely busy and frenzied. The vice-president of the management consultancy AT Kearney and its head of telecommunications for the Asia-Pacific region, Neil Plumridge, says his work weeks vary from a “manageable” 45 hours to 80 hours, but average 60 hours.
B
Three warning signs alert Plumridge about his workload: sleep, scheduling and family. He knows he has too much on when he gets less than six hours of sleep for three consecutive nights; when he is constantly having to reschedule appointments; “and the third one is on the family side”, says Plumridge, the father of a three-year-old daughter, and expecting a second child in October. “If I happen to miss a birthday or anniversary, I know things are out of control.” Being “too busy” is highly subjective. But for any individual, the perception of being too busy over a prolonged period can start showing up as stress: disturbed sleep, and declining mental and physical health. National workers’ compensation figures show stress causes the most lost time of any workplace injury. Employees suffering stress are off work an average of 16.6 weeks. The effects of stress are also expensive. Comcare, the Federal Government insurer, reports that in 2003-04, claims for psychological injury accounted for 7% of claims but almost 27% of claim costs. Experts say the key to dealing with stress is not to focus on relief – a game of golf or a massage – but to reassess workloads. Neil Plumridge says he makes it a priority to work out what has to change;that might mean allocating extra resources to a job, allowing more time or changing expectations. The decision may take several days. He also relies on the advice of colleagues, saying his peers coach each other with business problems. “Just a fresh pair of eyes over an issue can help,” he says.
C
Executive stress is not confined to big organisations. Vanessa Stoykov has been running her own advertising and public relations business for seven years, specialising in work for financial and professional services firms. Evolution Media has grown so fast that it debuted on the BRW Fast 100 list of fastest-growing small enterprises last year – just after Stoykov had her first child. Stoykov thrives on the mental stimulation of running her own business. “Like everyone, I have the occasional day when I think my head’s going to blow off,” she says. Because of the growth phase the business is in, Stoykov has to concentrate on short-term stress relief – weekends in the mountains, the occasional “mental health” day – rather than delegating more work. She says: “We’re hiring more people, but you need to train them, teach them about the culture and the clients, so it’s actually more work rather than less.”
D
Identify the causes: Jan Elsnera, Melbourne psychologist who specialises in executive coaching, says thriving on a demanding workload is typical of senior executives and other high-potential business people. She says there is no one-size-fits-all approach to stress: some people work best with high-adrenalin periods followed by quieter patches, while others thrive under sustained pressure. “We could take urine and blood hormonal measures and pass a judgment of whether someone’s physiologically stressed or not,” she says. “But that’s not going to give us an indicator of what their experience of stress is, and what the emotional and cognitive impacts of stress are going to be.”
E
Eisner’s practice is informed by a movement known as positive psychology, a school of thought that argues “positive” experiences – feeling engaged, challenged, and that one is making a contribution to something meaningful – do not balance out negative ones such as stress; instead, they help people increase their resilience over time. Good stress, or positive experiences of being challenged and rewarded, is thus cumulative in the same way as bad stress. Elsner says many of the senior business people she coaches are relying more on regulating bad stress through methods such as meditation and yoga. She points to research showing that meditation can alter the biochemistry of the brain and actually help people “retrain” the way their brains and bodies react to stress. “Meditation and yoga enable you to shift the way that your brain reacts, so if you get proficient at it you’re in control.”
F
The Australian vice-president of AT Kearney, Neil Plumridge, says: “Often stress is caused by our setting unrealistic expectations of ourselves. I’ll promise a client I’ll do something tomorrow, and then promise another client the same thing, when I really know it’s not going to happen. I’ve put stress on myself when I could have said to the clients: ‘Why don’t I give that to you in 48 hours?’ The client doesn’t care.” Over-committing is something people experience as an individual problem. We explain it as the result of procrastination or Parkinson’s law: that work expands to fill the time available. New research indicates that people may be hard-wired to do it.
G
A study in the February issue of the Journal of Experimental Psychology shows that people always believe they will be less busy in the future than now. This is a misapprehension, according to the authors of the report, Professor Gal Zauberman, of the University of North Carolina, and Professor John Lynch, of Duke University. “On average, an individual will be just as busy two weeks or a month from now as he or she is today. But that is not how it appears to be in everyday life,” they wrote. “People often make commitments long in advance that they would never make if the same commitments required immediate action. That is, they discount future time investments relatively steeply.” Why do we perceive a greater “surplus” of time in the future than in the present? The researchers suggest that people underestimate completion times for tasks stretching into the future and that they are bad at imagining future competition for their time.
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Stress in the Workplace Answers with locations
Questions 14-16
Complete the sentences below.
Write NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS AND/OR A NUMBER from the text for each answer.
14. Normally, Neil Plumridge works _____ hours a week.
15. Plumridge is made aware of his _______ by three alarming signs.
16. Stoykov flourishes on the ______ of running her own business.
Answer: MENTAL STIMULATION
Answer location: Paragraph C
Explanation: Stoykov thrives since running her own company stimulates her mentally. This suggests that she derives great drive and fulfillment from the mental and cognitive tasks involved in managing the company.
Stress in the Workplace IELTS Practice
Questions 17-21
Do the following statements agree with the information given in Reading Passage?
In boxes 17-21 on your answer sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the information
NO if the statement contradicts the information
NOT GIVEN if there is no information on this
17. Compared to other workplace conditions, stress at work can result in longer absences from work.
18. Since featuring on the BRW Fast 100 list, Vanessa Stoykov's company has experienced immense success.
19. Vanessa Stoykov's main way of stress relief is through meditation.
20.Plumridge argues that one indicator of occupational stress is difficulty concentrating on work.
Explanation: The text contains no mention of Plumridge or any particular symptoms of occupational stress that are associated with difficulties concentrating.
21. According to Elsner, positive experiences completely negate the negative impacts of stress.
Answer: NO
Answer location: Paragraph E
Explanation: Positive experiences, in Jan Elsner's opinion, do not entirely offset the negative impacts of stress. Rather, she points out that while good experiences contribute to resilience over time, they do not entirely overcome the harmful consequences of stress.
Stress in the Workplace Questions & Answers
Question 22- 26
The Reading Passage has sections A-G
Which section contains the following information?
Write the correct A-G letter in boxes 22- 26 on your answer sheet.
22. The effect of unrealistic goals on individual's stress levels.
23. The impact of favorable experiences in building stress resilience.
24. The diverse ways that different people react to and manage physiological stress.
25. A misconception that individuals will have more time in the future versus what they do now.
26. There are difficulties in maintaining a balance between a hard work schedule and personal time.
Answer: Paragraph C
Explanation: Vanessa Stoykov shares her experiences juggling the demands of her private life and business growth and how this has impacted her work-life balance.
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