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C2Reading and Use of EnglishBahagian 7

Multiple matching

You are going to read an extract. For questions 1-10, choose from the sections (A-E). The sections may be chosen more than once.

Beyond the Ping: Rethinking Work in an Always-Connected World

The hidden costs and benefits of the ‘always-on’ digital workplace

The Mirage of Productivity

The modern workplace has become a theatre of constant availability: email before breakfast, messages during meetings, and a furtive glance at notifications at traffic lights. On paper, this looks like efficiency—queries resolved instantly, decisions expedited, projects inching forward at all hours. Yet the supposed gains are often illusory. A day fragmented into micro-interruptions can feel industrious while producing little that is coherent or strategically valuable. I’ve seen teams celebrate ‘responsiveness’ as a virtue, even when the speed merely compensates for poor planning upstream. What surprises many managers is that the most measurable outputs can be the least meaningful. A dashboard may show a flurry of tickets closed, but not whether the underlying problem was understood. The always-on culture also encourages performative busyness: people broadcast activity to signal commitment, while deep work—quiet, slow, unglamorous—gets squeezed into evenings. Ironically, companies then pay for ‘focus apps’ and retreats to restore the concentration they themselves have eroded. The real question is not how quickly we can reply, but what kinds of thinking our systems make almost impossible.

Questions
Select section:
ABCDE
1.

Which section describes an environment where people appear busy because their day is chopped into constant minor disruptions, even though little substantial progress is made?

2.

In which section does the writer criticise organisations for praising rapid replies as a virtue when this speed is really compensating for earlier organisational failings?

3.

Which section expresses doubt about wellbeing schemes because they treat stress as something employees should manage personally, rather than changing the workplace incentives that create it?

4.

Which section mentions that the most effective attempts to protect employees’ time are often practical, unglamorous rules (rather than inspirational programmes), and that senior staff may resist them?

5.

Which section points out that a policy presented as ‘flexible’ can end up disadvantaging people with caring duties because it quietly becomes a demand for permanent reachability?

6.

Which section argues that delaying responses can actually improve the quality of communication and create a lasting organisational record, rather than a stream of disposable messages?

7.

Which section contrasts common stereotypes about a particular approach (seen as a niche obsession of certain advocates) with the claim that it can work well even for teams sharing the same office?

8.

In which section does the writer acknowledge drawbacks of the proposed alternative—such as social isolation and the need for strong writing—while still favouring it over constant interruptions?

9.

Which section suggests that monitoring tools can backfire by undermining trust and pushing people to optimise for whatever is easiest to count rather than what actually matters?

10.

Which section describes how constant availability can become tied to personal identity—especially early in a career—leading people to mistake exhaustion for significance and later regret the trade-off?

0 of 10 answered

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