The Value of Small Steps
Preface
Many people dream of achieving great things in life. They want to learn a language, build a successful career, improve their health, or master a new skill. However, large goals often seem difficult and distant. Successful people understand an important secret: great achievements usually begin with small daily actions. The following text illustrates how persistence and patience can lead to remarkable results.
Main Text
The Value of Small Steps
When people look at a tall tree, they rarely think about its beginning. Yet every giant tree once started as a tiny seed hidden beneath the soil.
A young man named Adrian learned this lesson when he decided to improve his English. At first, he was enthusiastic and spent several hours studying every day. However, after a few weeks, he became tired and discouraged. He felt that his progress was too slow.
One evening, while walking through a nearby park, Adrian noticed an elderly gardener watering young plants. Curious, he stopped and asked the man how long it would take for the small trees to become large and strong.
The gardener smiled and replied, "Many years. Growth is slow, but every day matters."
The answer stayed in Adrian's mind. He realized that he had been focusing too much on immediate results instead of consistent effort. From that day forward, he changed his approach. Rather than studying for several hours occasionally, he studied for thirty minutes every day.
Months passed. His vocabulary expanded, his pronunciation improved, and he became more confident when speaking English. Although the daily improvement was often difficult to notice, the overall progress was remarkable.
Several years later, Adrian looked back and understood what the gardener had meant. Success is rarely the result of one extraordinary effort. More often, it is the result of many small steps repeated consistently over time.
Today, whenever Adrian faces a difficult challenge, he remembers the young trees in the park and the lesson they taught him: small steps, taken every day, can eventually lead to extraordinary destinations.
Comprehension Questions
A. Answer the Questions
What comparison is made in the first paragraph?
What did Adrian want to improve?
Why did he become discouraged?
Whom did Adrian meet in the park?
What was the gardener doing?
What advice did the gardener give?
How did Adrian change his study habits?
What improvements did Adrian notice?
What lesson did he learn about success?
What does he remember when facing challenges today?
B. True or False
Adrian wanted to improve his mathematics.
He was satisfied with his progress at the beginning.
The gardener was planting flowers.
Adrian later studied a little every day.
The story suggests that success often comes from consistency.
Vocabulary Practice
Match the words with their meanings.
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1. discouraged | a. unusual and impressive |
| 2. consistent | b. losing confidence or hope |
| 3. remarkable | c. regular and dependable |
| 4. approach | d. a method or way of doing something |
| 5. eventually | e. after a period of time |
Grammar Practice
Present Perfect vs. Simple Past
Choose the correct answer.
Adrian ______ English for several years.
(studied / has studied)He ______ the gardener in the park one evening.
(met / has met)His vocabulary ______ greatly since then.
(improved / has improved)The gardener ______ him valuable advice.
(gave / has given)Adrian ______ more confident recently.
(became / has become)
Relative Clauses
Combine the sentences using who, which, or that.
Adrian met a gardener. The gardener gave him advice.
The trees were small. The trees would become strong.
He followed a method. The method improved his English.
The lesson was valuable. The lesson changed his attitude.
He met a man. The man worked in the park.
Discussion
Discuss the following questions with a partner:
Do you agree that small daily actions are important?
What skill would you like to improve?
Have you ever achieved something through patience and persistence?
Why do people sometimes give up too quickly?
What is one small step you can take today toward a future goal?
Writing Task
A Goal I Achieved Through Persistence
Write 150–180 words about a goal that you achieved or hope to achieve.
Include:
What the goal was or is.
Why it is important to you.
The difficulties you faced.
The small steps you took or plan to take.
What you learned from the experience.
Use clear paragraphs and appropriate linking words such as:
first, however, therefore, because, although, finally, and as a result.
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