ENGLISH LANGUAGE UNIT 3 Reading and Writing: Argumentation, Persuasion and Instructional

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GCSE NEW 3700U30-1A S17-3700U30-1A ENGLISH LANGUAGE UNIT 3 Reading and Writing: Argumentation, Persuasion and Instructional MONDAY, 12 JUNE 2017 MORNING Resource Material For use with Section A 3700U301A 01 JD*(S17-3700U30-1A)

2 BLANK PAGE

3 Text A gives a range of facts and figures about the Fairtrade process. Ever wondered how many farmers and workers participate in Fairtrade? How Fairtrade sales are doing globally? Or how the Fairtrade Premium is used? OVER 1.5 MILLION FARMERS AND WORKERS IN FAIRTRADE CERTIFIED PRODUCER ORGANISATIONS 1,210 FAIRTRADE CERTIFIED PRODUCER ORGANISATIONS OVER 23M FAIRTRADE PREMIUM IN 74 COUNTRIES GENERATED FROM FAIRTRADE SALES IN THE UK 3700U301A 03 COCOA PRODUCERS INVEST 46% OF FAIRTRADE PREMIUM IN IMPROVING PRODUCTIVITY AND QUALITY 25% OF ALL FARMERS AND WORKERS IN FAIRTRADE ARE WOMEN 46% ON PLANTATIONS 22% IN SMALL FARMER ORGANISATIONS Turn over.

4 Text B gives a series of steps a person can take to support Fairtrade. If you would like to make a substantial contribution you can sign up to the Fairtrade campaign and help your local area to become a Fairtrade town or village. The first step is to find out which shops stock Fairtrade or ethical products. When you have found a stockist then you can shop responsibly. Always look out for the Fairtrade logo. Once you are shopping responsibly you can encourage your friends and family to do the same.

5 Text C is taken from a webpage written to promote Fairtrade Fortnight. Sit down for breakfast, stand up for farmers! Fairtrade is not just about making sure food is ethically produced and safe to eat. It s about standing up for the people who produce our food. As Martin Luther King said, Before you finish eating breakfast in the morning, you ve depended on more than half the world. Even though farmers and workers produce the foods, drinks and products that we love, they are amongst the 795 million people who are undernourished globally. It s a scandal that the people who grow the food we take for granted can t always feed their own families. By changing to a Fairtrade breakfast, we can help farmers and workers to put food on the table for their own families. When people are paid a fairer price, they can have more control over their lives when times are hard, and worry less about how they will feed their families. Whether it s the extra cash in their pockets or being able to expand their farms to grow more food to eat, Fairtrade means many farmers and workers are able to fulfil a basic human need to put enough food on the table for the people they care about, all year round. Fairtrade products give us better tasting, environmentally-friendly food. Will you help us get as many people as possible to eat a Fairtrade breakfast in your community during Fairtrade Fortnight? Turn over.

6 Text D is taken from The Guardian newspaper. The story of a coffee farmer Gerardo Arias Camacho is a coffee farmer in Costa Rica. He is a board member on his village co-operative, which is a member of the Fairtrade consortium COOCAFE. He is married with three children. In the 1980s, the price of coffee was so low that it didn t cover the cost of production. Many farmers abandoned their land and some even left the country to find work. In the mid-90s, I went to America to make money and support my family. After eight years, I had earned enough to buy the family farm so that my parents could retire. But coffee prices were still so low that I was forced to return to America for another two years. Then the coffee business was unstable. We did not have a local school, good roads or bridges. Now that we are Fairtrade-certified, prices are stable and we receive a guaranteed amount for our coffee. We spend the money on education, environmental protection, roads and bridges, and improving the processing plant. We have a scholarship programme so that our kids can stay in school. I believe that my farm would be out of business if it wasn t for Fairtrade. Free trade is not responsible trade. When prices go down, farmers produce more and prices drop further. Fairtrade is the way trade should be: fair, responsible and sustainable. My oldest son is in college, my ten-year-old has already had as much education as me, and my little girl is in her second year at school. With the help of Fairtrade, they might all be able to go to university and get a degree. They won t have to jump the border from Mexico to America, like me. They can decide what they want in life. Since Fairtrade, our farms have become more environmentally-friendly. Our coffee is now produced in a sustainable way. We plant trees and have reduced the use of pesticides by 80% in 10 years. We used to cut 50 acres of forest down every year to fuel the ovens at our processing plant. Now we have a new oven which is fuelled by coffee waste products and the skins of macadamia nuts that we buy from farmers on the other side of Costa Rica. It is a win-win business. Fairtrade is not a closed system. It is open to everyone but we need more and more people to buy Fairtrade so other farmers can become certified. We already educate other producers around us about market prices so that buyers have to offer them a competitive rate and this benefits the wider community. When there was a hurricane, the main road became blocked and the bridge came down. We could afford to open the road and fix the bridge. When you are shopping, look for the Fairtrade label you can be sure that the money is going straight to the producers. It will help us, and it will help people around the world, because the benefits of protecting the environment are for everyone. It is a matter of helping each other. As a Fairtrade farmer, I finally feel competitive. It has given me knowledge so that I am more able to defend myself and my people. I feel there is a future in front of us because we can stay in our own country and make a living growing coffee. Fairtrade is not charity. Just by going shopping, you can make a difference.

7 Text E explains why some people now choose to buy products that are not Fairtrade. Why are coffee lovers turning their backs on Fairtrade? At Workshop Coffee, customers savour their 4 Colombian coffees. It looks like caffeine heaven, but head of production Richard Shannon says some people think something is missing, If it doesn t have a Fairtrade logo then we must be holding the farmer down and standing on his neck whilst we steal his coffee. Workshop is one of a number of specialist coffee companies that says it is committed to fair trade, but doesn t have the certificate to prove it. Companies like this, which boast about their ethical sourcing of coffee, are choosing not to join the Fairtrade labelling scheme. This is bad news for Fairtrade, which saw UK sales fall for the first time ever last year, by 4%. This has largely been blamed on discount retailers such as Aldi and Lidl carrying far fewer Fairtrade lines than supermarkets like Sainsbury s. But Fairtrade is also being affected at the top of the market by high-end companies like Workshop who complain that Fairtrade doesn t pay enough for quality coffee. Many suppliers believe their trade is already fairer than Fairtrade. Last year, Workshop paid on average 6.50 per kilo, nearly twice as much for coffee as Fairtrade did. And, as they point out, Fairtrade doesn t provide farmers with any greater guarantee of future income. Growers for the speciality market are able to call the shots. As the premium coffee market expands, producers get more power to choose who they sell to and for how much. The growth of the market also creates opportunities for more producers to benefit. Each year new farmers join as they see their neighbours being highly rewarded for producing high quality coffee. There are doubts about the effectiveness of Fairtrade in getting a good deal for workers. The system guarantees prices for producers and money for social projects, but it can t ensure that those who receive these payments spread the benefits. Many Fairtrade co-operatives employ people whose wages are lower and who work in worse conditions than those non-fairtrade areas. One poor use of the Fairtrade payment was in a tea farm where the modern toilets (funded with Fairtrade money) were only used by senior managers. Some people are now beginning to question the fairness of Fairtrade and to ask, Is it Fairtrade? Or is it fairly traded?