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| Home > DEP Home > DEPweb > Learning Modules > Access to Safe Water | |||
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| Complete these exercises with information from Chart 2. | |||||||
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Chart 2 Exercises with Answers
1. Read the definition of life expectancy. From your own experience, list at least five factors that can affect life expectancy. [Possible answers: illness, violence, natural disasters, poor nutrition, access to and quality of medical care, smoking, drinking, hazardous work.] 2. Study Chart 2 which suggests a relationship between life expectancy and improvements in water supply and sanitation in three French cities from 18201900.
3. In the social sciences, researchers usually use current data to explore conditions and issues. Why would water supply, sanitation, and life expectancy information from 19th century France be helpful for people learning about these issues today? [Possible answers: In the 19th century, medicine was not as advanced as it is today, so it is easier to show a cause and effect relationship between improvements in one area and its direct effect on the population. Also, in the past, France and other industrial countries faced water and sanitation problems similar to those some developing countries face today, so perhaps countries today can learn from past successes and failures.] 4. Use the Text, Chart 2, and your own knowledge, to argue for or against this statement: Access to safe water and sanitation are not luxuries that can wait for a stronger economy; rather, they are necessary in order to build a stronger economy. 5. You are a government official in a middle-income country. A crisis exists in your country because an epidemic of cholera has broken out and is spreading rapidly. You are holding an emergency meeting with other officials to decide what to do. As you plan your course of action, consider the following:
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| Explore Chart 2: | |||||||
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