2008年10月13日 星期一

Introduction 61112

Title: The Undertaker

Team members: 61112.61123

Introduction:
Undertaker, it's a job that have to make up the people who was dead, in order to cremated with perfect figure. Many years ago, nobody wants to be engaged in undermaker's occupation. Because they think it was too blood-curdling for people to be equal it. But, nowadays, follows the economy not to be booming, more and more people wants to deal in the job, and wants to conquer this horror job.
First, we will interview passers to de questionnaires for us. Second, we will find few undermakers to gather material them, and prepare some questions to ask them.
The aim of the thesis is that I want everybody knows what is undertaker, and not to afraid of this occupation. They are very important for dead people.
I hope that every undermakers can attend the wedding ceremony, and more and more people can identify this job.

61112 吳鈴淯

2 則留言:

Chris' Wonderland 提到...

I expect to see your findings.

Chris' Wonderland 提到...

Here is a piece of information about how people love to be beautiful. You may take a look at it and hope it can help your thesis.

http://www.infoniac.com/offbeat-news/77-percent-of-girls-consider-themselves-ugly.html

77 Percent of Girls Consider Themselves Ugly
Most young American and British girls are not feeling happy with their body image. The latest research showed that most of them are negatively influenced by advertisements.

According to international study commissioned by Dove, by the age 12 most girls have seen around 77,500 ads. Researchers questioned 2,000 girls from the UK and the US aged between 10 and 14 and found out that as much as 77 percent of them described themselves in negative terms. Many said they consider themselves ugly, fat and upset when comparing themselves with attractive images shown in advertisements.

The study found the link between the prevalence of beautiful images in media and increasing number of teenagers having low self-esteem. One 14-year-old girl wrote that images in magazines make her feel upset because she knows she could never be that beautiful.

Dr Susie Orbach, a psychotherapist and the author of Time to Talk says that the effect of media images can be crucial to vulnerable psychic of young girls who are "bombarded by millions of images of digitally manipulated, airbrushed beauty every day".

During a study girls were asked to keep a diary were they recorded all the beauty images seen over three days and write down their thoughts.

The low-self-esteem is closely connected to mental health problems. And the fact that almost 90 percent of all girls were feeling depressed about their appearance and 76 percent of them having eating disorders as a way to handle negative emotions towards themselves is alarming.