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Leisure All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.
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Focal Questions Why do you think people in Britain today have more leisure time than ever before? (P99) Where and how do most British people choose to spend their spare time? Why? (P101) Can you give some reasons why the traditional working-class and established middle-class families take different attitudes toward their homes? (101) What, to your knowledge, are among the most popular leisure activities away from home among adults in Great Britain? (103) What factors affect people’s choice of different leisure activities in Britain today? (Pp100, 102)
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A 1 Introduction Definition Leisure – freely chosen activities pursued during non-working time, related to financial security provided by work Leisure -- free time during which somebody has no obligations or work responsibilities, and therefore is free to engage in enjoyable activities the time when you are free from work or other duties and can relax time when you are not working or studying and can relax and do things you enjoy
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A 1 More leisure time Shorter working week – 40 hrs per week, 38 hrs for non-manual workers Fewer weeks to work per year More paid holiday each year More money to spend since WWII
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Time spent on main activities: by sex, 2005, GB
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Selected activities performed in free time, by sex, 2006/07, England
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Households with access to the Internet, GB
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Proportion of adults who had participated in the arts in the 4 weeks before interview: GB, 2002
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A 2 Puzzle 3/4 of people in the UK Newspaper crosswords Coffee-break teasers Puzzles in magazines and even in TV shows
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A 2 Soap Operas The storylines of Coronation Street tend to concentrate on relationships within and between families rather than on topical or social issues Coronation Street is imbued with a definite feeling of community. Through its account of supposedly everyday life, the programme shows a high degree of social realism The Street, as it is affectionately known, has been at the top of the U.K. ratings for over thirty years. Coronation Street
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Greater gender & class differences Provision of leisure activities -- local government, private companies, voluntary organizations The Pub – public bar & lounge bar, dartboards, snookers, bar billiards, skittles, dominoes, electronic games, juke boxes, TV, live music entertainment, local jazz group or rock ’n’ roll band More money spent on drink in pubs, restaurants or wine bars Pubs: filling social vacuum, central to British life
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Meal in restaurants Library Cinema– still a staple part of British life & on rising trend Historic buildings Short break holiday Disco or night club Museum or art gallery Funfair Camping or caravanning Bingo Visiting betting shops Theatre, ballet, opera, minority pursuits yet giving Britain high cultural profile
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Bar
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Pub dominoes
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Dartboard Lounge bar
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Wine bar
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Bar Billiards Snookers
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Skittles Ten-pin bowling
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A 3 leisure outside the Home Jukebox Country bar
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Gambling Betting shop (Bookies) Bets placed at Bookies Popular forms of gambling in Britain Football pools Betting on horse racing practised by working rather than middle class
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A 3 Gambling First game: Saturday 19th November 1994 The National Lottery games: 90+% of the UK population—sometimes, 65%—on a regular basis £12 billion: 'good causes‘—helped deprived groups, saved buildings & national treasures, enabled more people to enjoy sports and the arts
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A3 Gambling Out of every £1 spent on a Lottery ticket 28 pence goes to the good causes. How's the money distributed : Where does the good causes money go?
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National Lottery partners The National Lottery is a partnership between Government, the Lottery Commission, the National Lottery Operator and the Distribution Bodies to raise money for the good causes in local communities. GOVERNMENT THE DEPARTMENT OF CULTURE MEDIA AND SPORT THE NATIONAL LOTTERY COMMISSION NLDBs The Arts Council National Lottery Charities Board The Heritage Lottery Fund The Millennium Commission The New Opportunities Fund Sports Council The THE NATIONAL LOTTERY OPERATOR CAMELOT CAMELOT NATIONAL LOTTERY DISTRIBUTION BODIES NLDBs GOOD CAUSES
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home The National Lottery Five groups of beneficiaries were designated by the Government to receive equal shares of funds from The National Lottery: The Arts Councils of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland The Sports Councils of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland The National Lottery Charities Board The National Heritage Memorial Fund The Millennium Fund (A fund to celebrate the year 2000 and the beginning of the third millennium. ) A sixth was added in 1998 The New Opportunities Fund — for projects covering education, health and the environment
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A 3 Gambling UK National Lottery Winning Cards by Week The first 20 winning cards...
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A 3 The National Lottery Tickets: newsagents and post offices On Saturday nights— the weekly programme : 12 million viewers
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Bingo hall
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A 3 Sport Sports and social class “class consciousness is fundamental to the British sense of national identity. Differences of accent, dress, taste and life style all serve as markers of class” (Raw and Walker, 1994, p. 5) fox hunting: upper-class; football: the working class; cricket
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A 3 Sport & the British Culture Main sports practised in winter: rugby, soccer Soccer – “a gentlemen’s game for roughs” Rugby -- “a roughs’ game for gentlemen” Paradox – most public schools play rugby but Eaton and Harrow have always played soccer
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A 3 Sport Soccer
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A 3 Sport Cricket
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A 3 Sport Cricket Horse racing
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A 3 Sport Netball
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A 3 Sport Aroebics
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A 3 Fox Hunting
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Language & Culture Terminology for people watching leisure entertainment Soccer -- crowds, suggesting “amorphous”, the mass Rugby -- spectators, “dispassionate onlookers” Cinema -- audiences, more sophisticated, listen TV -- viewers, denying passivity of TV ”couch potato” Theatre -- theatre- goers, some form of dynamism Opera -- opera buffs, uniform worn by smart regiments
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A 3 Leisure outside the Home Why participate? To know more people & understand them better To learn how to get along with others To get a feeling of excitement & a sense of success To have experience of wearing popular & fashionable sports clothes
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12-month and 4-week participation rates, GB 2002
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Selected sports, games and physical activities among adults, by sex, 2006/07, England
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Twelve month and four week participation rates, GB 2002
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Main reason for non-participation in an active sport, England 2005/06
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A 3 Leisure outside the home Youth organizations Boys’ scouts Boys brigade
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Conclusion The Defining Factors of Identity Education, work, and leisure ‘How do you do?’, ‘What do you do?’ ‘ Where did you go to school?’ Leisure activities: the exercise of individual choice
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http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=16 59&Pos=1&ColRank=2&Rank=528 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=16 59&Pos=1&ColRank=2&Rank=528 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=73 6&Pos=2&ColRank=2&Rank=480 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=73 6&Pos=2&ColRank=2&Rank=480 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=73 5&Pos=5&ColRank=2&Rank=352 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/CCI/nugget.asp?ID=73 5&Pos=5&ColRank=2&Rank=352 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=7 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=7 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=8 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=8 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=193 6 http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=193 6
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