Occupational therapy
do you want to become? That is all up to you.If you never to want. . .What is important that you must dare to think, dare to want . . .
It is 11am in a large boarding house in Shenzhen migrants bunk six to a room.The balconies are suddenly with young men and womentheir uniforms off washing lines as they get ready for work, Unusually, however, theare not the coveralls of factory workers but the waistcoats and jackets of restaurant workers.
Theline is a banner of sorts heralding the of jobs in the service sectoryoung Chinese migrant workers who factories that dominate the manufacturing China.
Two men, , say that when they arrived a few months earlier they did not even look for factory jobs.“Our friends told us working in factories is repetitive.The working hours are very long,” says the older one.
pay that was 20-25 per cent le thanoffered by factories.Most of the residents of the have made the same choice, which explains the queue for toilets at 11am.
1.A staffB personC peoplesD man
2 .A dareB daredC haveD need
3.Asucceed with B succeed atC succeed inD succeed
4 A wasB isC proveD shows
5.AwhereB whatC how D which
6.A fullB filledC crowdedD loaded
7.A pullB pulledC pullingD to pull
8.A asBthe wayCeven ifD as if
9.A coatsB uniformsC coversD clothes
10.A clothingB clothesC clothD washing
11.A increasingB increase C increased D /
12.AforB withC amongD between
13.A staffB employC staffedD employed
14.AsouthB southernC the southD the southern
15 .A agedB agingC /Dthe age of
16.A /B inC onD with
17 .A HoweverB SoC InsteadD But
18.A in spiteB insteadC thoughD despite
19.A /B thatC the payD it
20 .A lodgingBput-upC putting-upD boarding