STUDENT A's QUESTIONS (Do not show these to Student B.)
(1) | Are you sometimes rude? |
(2) | What do you think about rudeness? |
(3) | What acts of rudeness bother you most? |
(4) | Is rudeness a problem in your country? |
(5) | What did your parents tell you about being rude? |
(6) | Blowing your nose in public is OK in England but rude in Japan. Slurping noodles is OK in Japan but rude in England. Who decides what’s rude and what’s not? |
(7) | Who is the rudest person you know? |
(8) | What rude behaviour do you see in public every day? |
(9) | What do you do when sales staff in shops or waiting staff in restaurants are very rude? |
(10) | If someone is rude to you, are you generally rude back? |
STUDENT B's QUESTIONS (Do not show these to Student A.)
(1) | What springs to mind when you hear the word ‘rudeness’? |
(2) | Is your society becoming ruder or more polite? |
(3) | Which nationalities do you think are overly rude? |
(4) | Do cars make people rude? |
(5) | Are there many rude words in your language? |
(6) | How do you deal with someone who is very rude to you? |
(7) | Do you think it’s rude to correct someone’s grammar mistakes in a conversation? |
(8) | Should being rude be made a crime? |
(9) | Do you like watching one person being very rude to another person? |
(10) | Why is it rude to ask someone’s age? |