Übung Englisch: Is the future going to be full of robots?

Technologie

Is the future going to be full of robots?

Grammatik

Future (will)

Lesen / Hören

Robotics

Sprechen

Neue Technologien

Schwierigkeit

★ ★ ★ ★ ☆

Robots in the Future – Reading & Exercises

How Robots May Be Used in the Future

In the coming decades, robots will move from specialized labs into everyday life. They will not replace all humans, but they will extend our abilities, making complex tasks faster, safer, and more reliable. Many will collaborate with people through natural interfaces, learning preferences and predicting needs.

In healthcare, robots could assist surgeons with ultra-steady instruments, deliver medicine in busy hospitals, and support elderly patients at home. Tiny robotic tools may help with earlier diagnosis, while companion devices encourage exercise and monitor vital signs. These systems will be designed to protect privacy and respect patient choices.

In factories and supply chains, robots will handle repetitive work and dangerous environments. They will inspect infrastructure, manage inventory, and adapt to new products in hours rather than weeks. This shift could raise overall productivity while creating new roles for human creativity and oversight.

Classrooms will use robotic assistants to personalize lessons, translate in real time, and include students with special needs. In the city, fleets of service robots could clean streets, repair utilities at night, and deliver goods with minimal traffic. In the household, multifunctional devices will tidy, cook simple meals, and keep an eye on safety without constant supervision.

Agriculture will benefit from precise harvest robots that reduce waste and use less water. Environmental units will track air and water quality, supporting more sustainable practices. Out at sea and in the sky, autonomous vehicles will map ecosystems and respond quickly to disasters.

Beyond Earth, robotic exploration will prepare human missions, build habitats, and mine resources in harsh environments. Swarms can scout planets, while maintenance bots keep spacecraft operating for years. These advances will expand our scientific knowledge and economic opportunities.

As capabilities grow, society will set rules for ethics, safety, and autonomy. Transparent standards, careful testing, and inclusive design will be essential. If we guide development wisely, robots will become trustworthy partners that amplify human dignity and well-being.


Exercises

Tip: Hover over underlined words in the text to see German definitions.

1) Vocabulary Matching – Choose the correct definition

Pick the best definition for each word.

a) autonomy


b) diagnosis


c) infrastructure


d) sustainable


e) exploration


2) True or False

  1. Robots will only work in factories.
  2. Some robots may help elderly patients at home.
  3. Swarms of robots could scout planets before people arrive.
  4. Sustainability is not mentioned in the text.
  5. Setting rules for ethics and safety will be important.

3) Fill in the blanks – Future forms

Use will, won’t, might, is/are going to, or will be able to.

  1. Hospitals rely on robots to deliver medicine at busy times.
  2. Some households have multifunctional robots next decade.
  3. Swarm robots scout planets before human landing.
  4. With better batteries, drones fly farther without charging.
  5. Responsible design means robots ignore privacy rules. (negative)

4) Answer the questions (free style)

Type short answers. Click “Check” to see if you included key ideas from the text.

  1. How might robots support elderly people?
  2. What could robots do in cities at night?
  3. How will robots help in agriculture?
  4. Why are ethics and safety important?
  5. How could robots prepare space missions?

5) Write a short text using all five words

assist diagnosis sustainable autonomy exploration

Why Overthinking Isn’t the Best Way to Solve a Problem

Many people fall into the trap of control through overthinking because it feels like a form of preparation. When faced with a problem, analyzing every possible outcome may seem productive. However, overthinking often creates a false sense of clarity while delaying action. It becomes a cycle of mental repetition rather than a process of resolution. Instead of gaining insight, people get stuck in doubt and hesitation.

Overthinking can evolve into a deeply ingrained habit. Like any habit, it may begin with a purpose—such as being careful—but it soon becomes automatic and excessive. The brain begins to associate problem-solving with prolonged thinking. This leads to self-doubt, procrastination, and stress. Over time, it stops being helpful and becomes a mental block. What seemed like a method for better results actually causes stagnation.

One of the most damaging effects of overthinking is mental exhaustion. Constantly cycling through thoughts uses emotional and cognitive energy. This drains your focus, reduces creativity, and can even impact your mood. You may become too tired to act on anything, even if the solution is clear. Prolonged overthinking also affects your problem-solving ability in everyday situations.

It’s essential to recognize the difference between healthy reflection and harmful overthinking. Positive reflection has a purpose—it involves reviewing and leads to insight. It is time-bound and goal-oriented. In contrast, overthinking is repetitive and often driven by fear. It doesn’t bring answers but increases restlessness. A helpful signal is whether you are arriving at decisions—or just circling back to the same questions.

Overthinking is often fueled by perfectionism and a fear of making mistakes. People hope to find the perfect solution if they just think long enough. But life rarely offers perfect options, and waiting for perfection often results in missed opportunities. Letting go of the need to control every outcome can free you to make progress, even in uncertain conditions. Embracing the possibility of failure is a key to healthy decision-making.

One way to move forward is to replace overthinking with constructive habits. Set time limits for thinking, or write down your thoughts to clear your mind. Practicing mindfulness helps bring your focus to the present. Even small actions can break the cycle of paralysis. Action builds confidence, while endless thought builds fear. Starting small can lead to a more active and fulfilling approach to challenges.

Overcoming overthinking doesn’t mean acting without thinking—it means acting at the right time. It means trusting your judgment and recognizing when enough analysis has been done. By noticing your thought patterns, accepting imperfection, and staying grounded, you develop a better relationship with your decision process. Solutions come not from thinking more, but from acting with purpose. In many cases, clarity emerges when the mind is calm—not when it is overloaded.

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