Multiple choice (longer text)
Read the text and then answer the questions. For each question, choose the correct answer (A, B, C or D).
The Day I Spoke to a Room Full of Strangers
Last spring my teacher asked me to represent our class at a local “Young Ideas” event. Students from different schools had to share a project that could improve life in our town. When she said my name, I smiled, but inside I felt my stomach turn. I had never spoken on a stage before, and the idea of making a mistake in front of strangers seemed terrible.
For two weeks I worked on my project after school. I chose a simple idea: turning an empty space near the bus station into a small community garden. My grandmother loves gardening, so she helped me think of useful plants and cheap materials. I practised my speech in my bedroom, reading it to my mirror and then to my little brother. He didn’t understand everything, but he listened carefully and told me when I spoke too fast.
On the day of the event I arrived early and saw the hall slowly filling up. Some students looked confident, laughing with their friends, while I sat alone with my notes. When it was nearly my turn, my hands felt cold. I almost wished the lights would suddenly go out so the event would stop. But then an older volunteer offered me a cup of water and said, “Everyone here wants you to do well.” It was a small sentence, but it changed the way I breathed.
When I finally walked onto the stage, I didn’t look at the whole audience at once. I focused on one person at a time, the way my teacher had advised. After the first minute my voice became steadier. I even heard a few people laugh at a joke I hadn’t planned. By the end, I could see several adults nodding, and I realised they were imagining the garden, not judging my pronunciation.
I didn’t win first prize, but I received a special mention for “practical ideas.” On the bus home I felt light, as if I had left a heavy bag somewhere in the hall. I still get nervous when I speak in public, but now I know nervousness doesn’t always mean you are doing badly. Sometimes it just means you care.
What was the purpose of the “Young Ideas” event?
What is the main idea of the second paragraph?
How did the writer feel just before speaking, and what changed that feeling?
What does the writer suggest about the audience during the speech?
In the final paragraph, what does the word “light” mean when the writer says, “I felt light”?