The group ran a charity drive on their university campus to raise money for World Vision. They sold three food items - nasi lemak donated by a restaurant, tuna buns donated by a bakery, and tuna wraps they made themselves. Their goals were to earn a profit of RM2500, with at least 50% from sales. They analyzed competition from other groups, promoted their products through conversations and samples, and distributed the food from suppliers to their booth on campus. Through sales, donations, and sponsorships from families and individuals, they earned a total of RM1260 and learned lessons for improving future fundraising efforts.
This document describes a proposed final project for a social psychology class that focuses on prosocial behavior. The project involves creating a restaurant run entirely on donations where the homeless, orphanages, and elderly can eat for free. The layout includes separate dining areas for different groups and a donation box where customers can pay what they choose. The donations would support charity organizations and maintenance of the restaurant. The project aims to reduce discrimination and stereotyping by providing a welcoming space for all people in need.
This document summarizes a psychology journal entry analyzing how stereotypes, prejudice, and persuasion are reflected in a Covergirl cosmetics advertisement featuring Taylor Swift. The journal notes that the advertisement relies on stereotyping beauty as only attainable by famous models. It also argues that the advertisement could promote prejudice by making viewers feel insecure about not looking like Taylor Swift after using the products. Finally, the journal discusses how the advertisement uses persuasive quotes and imagery to boost self-esteem and compel people, especially those with low self-esteem, to purchase the products.
The group ran a charity drive on their university campus to raise money for World Vision. They sold three food items - nasi lemak donated by a restaurant, tuna buns donated by a bakery, and tuna wraps they made themselves. Their goals were to earn a profit of RM2500, with at least 50% from sales. They analyzed competition from other groups, promoted their products through conversations and samples, and distributed the food from suppliers to their booth on campus. Through sales, donations, and sponsorships from families and individuals, they earned a total of RM1260 and learned lessons for improving future fundraising efforts.
This document describes a proposed final project for a social psychology class that focuses on prosocial behavior. The project involves creating a restaurant run entirely on donations where the homeless, orphanages, and elderly can eat for free. The layout includes separate dining areas for different groups and a donation box where customers can pay what they choose. The donations would support charity organizations and maintenance of the restaurant. The project aims to reduce discrimination and stereotyping by providing a welcoming space for all people in need.
This document summarizes a psychology journal entry analyzing how stereotypes, prejudice, and persuasion are reflected in a Covergirl cosmetics advertisement featuring Taylor Swift. The journal notes that the advertisement relies on stereotyping beauty as only attainable by famous models. It also argues that the advertisement could promote prejudice by making viewers feel insecure about not looking like Taylor Swift after using the products. Finally, the journal discusses how the advertisement uses persuasive quotes and imagery to boost self-esteem and compel people, especially those with low self-esteem, to purchase the products.
This document summarizes a psychology journal entry about social behavior observed at a Starbucks coffee shop. It describes the schemas or sequences people follow when ordering coffee, such as looking at the menu, ordering, paying, and waiting for their drink. It also discusses the availability and representative heuristics, or mental shortcuts, people use to make judgments about others at Starbucks. Some believe only "rich" people go there or that it makes teenagers look cool, and others judge customers as wasting money on expensive drinks. The journal notes a girl observing a man in a yellow shirt, wondering about his background.
Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow, Russia was built in 1561 on Red Square. It has a distinctive multi-colored onion dome design. Over the centuries it was expanded, damaged by fires, and restored. It survived the 1812 Fire of Moscow. In the early 20th century it was converted to a museum to prevent its demolition under Stalin's urban development plans. The last restoration was completed in 2008 to preserve this iconic Russian Orthodox church.
This document provides information about mural paintings located in Laman Seni Seksyen 7, Shah Alam. It describes how the alley was previously dirty and quiet but has now been transformed into a commercial area through a painting competition with categories like 3D paintings, installations, street furniture, and on-site paintings related to community, tourism, and green concepts. The mural paintings are arranged along the back of 56 shop buildings attracting both local citizens and tourists. Different types of murals include bright 3D paintings using real umbrellas, machine-like 3D installations dragged onto tiles, creative street furniture adaptations stuck on walls, and a painting symbolizing parks connected to beaches seen through tree barks. One painting
The document is a research report on traditional Malaysian cuisine done by a group of students. It summarizes interviews conducted at two traditional restaurants - Woo Lan restaurant serving Chinese cuisine and JScoozi restaurant serving Malay cuisine. Key details from each restaurant are provided such as location, popular dishes, business details, and specialties. The report also includes tables comparing the similarities and differences between the two restaurants. Recommendations are made to both restaurants to help expand their businesses.
The document summarizes the architectural designs of 5 mosques in Malaysia - Masjid Tengkera, Masjid Kampung Kling, Masjid Ulu Branang, Masjid Negara, and Masjid Cina. It discusses the history and cultural influences on each mosque's design, particularly the entrance, roofline, minaret, pillars, minbar, and water features. The mosques show influences from Javanese, Indian, Sumatran, Malay, and Chinese designs. Vernacular architecture emphasizing function over aesthetics can be seen in the older mosques, while newer mosques after independence have a more modern design that incorporates cultural elements.
This document summarizes a psychology journal entry about social behavior observed at a Starbucks coffee shop. It describes the schemas or sequences people follow when ordering coffee, such as looking at the menu, ordering, paying, and waiting for their drink. It also discusses the availability and representative heuristics, or mental shortcuts, people use to make judgments about others at Starbucks. Some believe only "rich" people go there or that it makes teenagers look cool, and others judge customers as wasting money on expensive drinks. The journal notes a girl observing a man in a yellow shirt, wondering about his background.
Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow, Russia was built in 1561 on Red Square. It has a distinctive multi-colored onion dome design. Over the centuries it was expanded, damaged by fires, and restored. It survived the 1812 Fire of Moscow. In the early 20th century it was converted to a museum to prevent its demolition under Stalin's urban development plans. The last restoration was completed in 2008 to preserve this iconic Russian Orthodox church.
This document provides information about mural paintings located in Laman Seni Seksyen 7, Shah Alam. It describes how the alley was previously dirty and quiet but has now been transformed into a commercial area through a painting competition with categories like 3D paintings, installations, street furniture, and on-site paintings related to community, tourism, and green concepts. The mural paintings are arranged along the back of 56 shop buildings attracting both local citizens and tourists. Different types of murals include bright 3D paintings using real umbrellas, machine-like 3D installations dragged onto tiles, creative street furniture adaptations stuck on walls, and a painting symbolizing parks connected to beaches seen through tree barks. One painting
The document is a research report on traditional Malaysian cuisine done by a group of students. It summarizes interviews conducted at two traditional restaurants - Woo Lan restaurant serving Chinese cuisine and JScoozi restaurant serving Malay cuisine. Key details from each restaurant are provided such as location, popular dishes, business details, and specialties. The report also includes tables comparing the similarities and differences between the two restaurants. Recommendations are made to both restaurants to help expand their businesses.
The document summarizes the architectural designs of 5 mosques in Malaysia - Masjid Tengkera, Masjid Kampung Kling, Masjid Ulu Branang, Masjid Negara, and Masjid Cina. It discusses the history and cultural influences on each mosque's design, particularly the entrance, roofline, minaret, pillars, minbar, and water features. The mosques show influences from Javanese, Indian, Sumatran, Malay, and Chinese designs. Vernacular architecture emphasizing function over aesthetics can be seen in the older mosques, while newer mosques after independence have a more modern design that incorporates cultural elements.
2. Wat is web 2.0?
Web 2.0 verwijst naar de ontwikkeling van internet
tot een interactief medium waarbij ook
doorsneegebruikers informatie kunnen uploaden en
niet enkel downloaden.Internetgoeroe Tim O'Reilly
bedacht de term en situeert de omslag omstreeks
2001.