scholarly journals School chair design and key criteria from the users’ point of view

2020 ◽  
pp. 43-61
Author(s):  
Nataša Rizman Herga ◽  
Samo Fošnarič ◽  
Andreja Kolar

People are becoming increasingly sedentary, including students attending the upper level of primary education. Due to school, young people spend a lot of time sitting in class and at home, which has a negative effect on their health, especially if their work environment, including school furniture, does not meet all the criteria in terms of physiological, psychological, and sociological guidelines for healthy furniture design. Chairs, as school furniture, have been designed according to standards that take into account ergonomic compliance with the body height of pupils. Slovenian classrooms are equipped with standard conventional chairs. In our student-oriented research, we were interested in whether chairs designed according to the standard are suitable for adolescents and what, if any, additional criteria must be met from the users’ point of view. The study included 192 upper level pupils (56.3 % girls and 43.7 % boys), age of 12.4 ± 1.7 years. The research is based on quantitative and qualitative methodology. The descriptive causal non-experimental method was supported by the observation method. The results of the survey show that older students (81.6 %) are of the opinion that they spend more time at school than at home. Due to prolonged sitting, older students (55.3 %) report problems more often than younger ones (28.4 %). Nearly two-thirds of younger students (63.8 %) also believe they sit more in school than at home. The results show that prolonged sitting negatively affects their health or general well-being. Differences between the responses of older and younger pupils are statistically significant both in the opinion expressed regarding the location of sitting (p = 0.010) and in the reporting of problems due to prolonged sitting (p = 0.001). There are no statistically significant differences between the sexes in both groups of older and younger pupils. Pupils sit on hard, uncomfortable, conventional chairs that are not tailored to their needs. They want to use comfortable, soft, swivel chairs with backrests and armrests. The study has shown that, in addition to comfort, school chairs must provide dynamic or active sitting. The present study confirms that static and rigidly shaped school chairs do not offer support for active and restless youth. Therefore, chair design must change to meet the physical, ergonomic, cognitive, and social needs of their users.

Author(s):  
Evi Zohar

Continuing the workshop I've given in the WPC Paris (2017), this article elaborates my discussion of the way I interlace Focusing with Differentiation Based Couples Therapy (Megged, 2017) under the systemic view, in order to facilitate processes of change and healing in working with intimate couples. This article presents the theory and rationale of integrating Differentiation (Bowen, 1978; Schnarch, 2009; Megged, 2017) and Focusing (Gendlin, 1981) approaches, and its therapeutic potential in couple's therapy. It is written from the point of view of a practicing professional in order to illustrate the experiential nature and dynamics of the suggested therapeutic path. Differentiation is a key to mutuality. It offers a solution to the central struggle of any long term intimate relationship: balancing two basic life forces - the drive for individuality and the drive for togetherness (Schnarch, 2009). Focusing is a body-oriented process of self-awareness and emotional healing, in which one learns to pay attention to the body and the ‘Felt Sense’, in order to unfold the implicit, keep it in motion at the precise pace it needs for carrying the next step forward (Gendlin, 1996). Combining Focusing and Differentiation perspectives can cultivate the kind of relationship where a conflict can be constructively and successfully held in the inner world of each partner, while taking into consideration the others' well-being. This creates the possibility for two people to build a mutual emotional field, open to changes, permeable and resilient.


2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (1) ◽  
pp. 101-108
Author(s):  
A.F. Jităreanu ◽  
Elena Leonte ◽  
A. Chiran ◽  
Benedicta Drobotă

Abstract Advertising helps to establish a set of assumptions that the consumer will bring to all other aspects of their engagement with a given brand. Advertising provides tangible evidence of the financial credibility and competitive presence of an organization. Persuasion is becoming more important in advertising. In marketing, persuasive advertising acts to establish wants/motivations and beliefs/attitudes by helping to formulate a conception of the brand as being one which people like those in the target audience would or should prefer. Considering the changes in lifestyle and eating habits of a significant part of the population in urban areas in Romania, the paper aims to analyse how brands manage to differentiate themselves from competitors, to reposition themselves on the market and influence consumers, meeting their increasingly varied needs. Food brands on the Romanian market are trying, lately, to identify new methods of differentiation and new benefits for their buyers. Given that more and more consumers are becoming increasingly concerned about what they eat and the products’ health effects, brands struggle to highlight the fact that their products offer real benefits for the body. The advertisements have become more diversified and underline the positive effects, from the health and well - being point of view, that those foods offer (no additives and preservatives, use of natural ingredients, various vitamins and minerals or the fact that they are dietary). Advertising messages’ diversification is obvious on the Romanian market, in the context of an increasing concern of the population for the growing level of information of some major consumer segments.


Author(s):  
Halyna Hrebeniuk ◽  
Larysa Martseniuk

The article is devoted to the study of the remote form of employment of workers as one of the forms of employment at a distance. The main problems of remote work development in Ukraine and ways of their solution on the legislative basis are given. The bases of transition of the worker to the remote form of work are considered. All positive and negative aspects of remote employment for both employees and enterprises are analyzed. Developed effective tips for employees who work remotely. It is concluded that the COVID-19 pandemic and the dynamic development of information and communication networks are a confirmation of the urgency of improving social and labor relations of remote employment. Remote work at home is more conducive to procrastination than in the office, so it is worth taking measures against this phenomenon. Namely, remove everything that can distract from work, turn off all voice messages. The opposite extreme of procrastination is also possible, especially for those who live at home alone. This is when you do not have to go anywhere during the day and in the evening, a person can easily immerse himself entirely in work, rework a lot, and eventually burn out. Working from home, especially when you live alone, you can easily start yourself. This applies not only to hygiene, but also to an attractive appearance, and socialization and basic needs of the body may also suffer. Having healthy freshly prepared food, the required amount of movement and sleep directly affect the health and well-being of the employee, which in turn affects his efficiency. Another disadvantage of working at home, which must be compensated for somehow, is informal conversations with colleagues. Such communication benefits each individual employee and the company as a whole. They are important for generating new ideas, inspiration; is a source of information about what is happening in others; help to feel part of a large team and not feel isolated. It is difficult to compensate for all this in the remote form of work, but it is necessary to try. You can create working group chats, video calls, virtual extracurricular meetings and in general it is very important not to lose contact with the team and the world around you.


1949 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 16-34
Author(s):  
Magnus Stevns

Grundtvig and Kingo's Hymns. By Magnus Stevns When Grundtvig began writing hymns he definitely took Thomas Kingo, the greatest Danish hymn-writer of the 17th century, as his model. From childhood Grundtvig had loved “ Kingos Salmebog” (“ Kingo’s Hymn-book” , 1699) and the living interpretation of Bible history which its hymns contained. He was therefore in dire distress when as a clergyman he was obliged to use the new so-called “ Evangelisk christelig Psalmebog” (“ Evangelical Christian Hymnbook”, 1798), a book of extremely poor quality from both the Christian and the poetic point of view. Kingo’s hymns on the Passion, describing the sufferings and death of Jesus with intense feeling, and his genuinely Lutheran hymns about the battle against the Devil, the world and our flesh which the child of God has to fight, were replaced by insipid moral verses about the Christian virtues. Lifeless abstract terminology was universally substituted for the concrete, personal phraseology of the Bible, e. g., “evil” instead of “ the Evil one” or “ the Devil” , “ the Lord God” instead of the personal “ thy Saviour”. Grundtvig wished to renew Danish hymn-writing with the support of what was best in the past; but in spite of his love for Kingo’s hymns, with their historical stamp and evangelical imagery, he found it necessary, partly to shorten most of them, and partly to alter those things in them which did not agree with his own conception of Christianity. In Grundtvig’s adaptations of Kingo’s hymns one notices how he tones down or omits Kingo’s forceful descriptions of the humiliation and mocking of Jesus; while Kingo dwells chiefly on the sufferings of Good Friday, and pictures the agony of Jesus as He drank the cup of God’s anger to the dregs, for Grundtvig the central point is the victory over death which Jesus won for us, and His rising again to life for us. In Grundtvig’s opinion, Kingo’s hymns overstress the distance between God and man; Grundtvig stresses the view that in baptism the Christian comes into fellowship with God and thereby has received grace and has shared in the Atonement. Nor can Grundtvig share Kingo’s conception of the death of the body as a release which helps the soul out of the body’s wretched “worm-bag”. In Grundtvig’s view death is the last enemy which we shall overcome with God’s help, and therefore the Christian hope attaches itself first and foremost to the risen Saviour. In his revision of Kingo Grundtvig usually preserves his intonation and many words and images, but in other respects permits himself such extensive alterations that the poet Ingemann, with good reason, was obliged to say of i t : “ However closely akin to Kingo’s your spirit may be, I find that your strongly-marked characteristics will not blend together with his sufficiently to prevent me from hearing now the voice of one, now that of the other” . All the same Grundtvig often shows himself as the remodeller with a touch of genius, who not only remodels the hymn, but makes a new creation of it (this is the case with Grundtvig’s “ I Nasareth, i trange Kaar”, “ In Nasareth, in needy state” ). In many cases Grundtvig’s relation to Kingo’s hymns is one of reaction rather than of imitation, as may be seen from a comparison between Kingo’s “ Kommer, I som vil ledsage” (“Come, ye who will accompany. . . ” ) and Grundtvig’s “Tag det sorte Kors fra Graven!” (“ Take the black cross from the grave!” . . . ). Here Grundtvig “sings against” Kingo almost line by line. In one of his best known poems, “ Jeg kender et Land” (“ I know a land” — later rewritten as the hymn “ O Kristelighed”, “ O Christian faith!”), Grundtvig uses the metre which Kingo employed in his great hymn “ Far Verden Farvel” (“ Farewell to the world” ), but for Kingo’s renunciation of the life of the world Grundtvig substitutes his positive confession of faith in God’s kingdom of love. The relation between the two hymn-writers may be summed up thus: both constantly seek for union with the Deity through an imitation which — though feebly — makes the way of man resemble that of the Deity. But for Kingo the Deity Himself, Who is God and man, is most human (and therefore capable of being imitated) before Golgotha, and most divine (far removed from man) after the Resurrection, while the opposite is the case with Grundtvig, for whom the Risen One is “ flesh in heaven, spirit on earth”. For Grundtvig it would be unreasonable to believe that man’s powers were equal to imitating the Deity, “ Christ, Who died upon the cross”, before he could imitate the man, “ Jesus, Who rose from the grave”. Kingo reaches the following conclusion: “ Only when by death I truly bid the world farewell, then only shall I be at home with God,” while Grundtvig arrives at another, namely: “ Only when God is at home in me, then only can I truly bid the world farewell.” When Kingo has first learnt to know the power of Jesus’ Passion, he will afterwards learn to know the community and fellowship of His Resurrection. But Grundtvig says, “The Lord wishes all who believe in Him to learn to know the power of His Resurrection before they feel themselves called to the community and fellowship of His sufferings.” (Cp. Philipp, ch. 3, v. 10.) Therefore it is the first task of Grundtvig’s hymns to renew the song of praise to the risen Saviour, who through the Holy Spirit is present in the Church; in Grundtvig’s hymns it is Whitsun before it is Easter. But Grundtvig (as he himself stresses) has not “ concealed the fact that Our Lord Jesus Christ in His Passion and death must stand for us both as our Saviour and as our example”. In Grundtvig’s poetic activity this gives rise to “a song of the secret chamber”, which sounds more subdued, but in purity & depth of tone excels both the festal hymns of “ Sangværket” (“The Hymn-Book” ) and Kingo’s “ trumpet songs” .


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 1037-1043
Author(s):  
Geetha Kumar ◽  
Indusree C Suseelan

Introduction: The recent incidences of oligoamnios according to the prospective case control study 23 % prevalence among the three hundred eight antenatal ladies with singleton pregnancy between 34 and 41 weeks of gestation included in the study. Aim and Objective: To understand the condition of Oligoamnios under the Ayurvedic perspective and to r eview the Ayurvedic classics and critically analyses the same. Materials & Methods: All Ayurvedic classic text authored by Brihatrayees and Laghutrayees, related journals, modern biomedical text and web were referred for r eview of literature. Literature Review: Oligoamniosis is characterized by less volume of liquor amnii (less than 2 00ml at 20-41st weeks of gestation), affecting the well-being and maturity of the growing fetus. The lubricating ac tion of liquor amnii is reduced, the free movements of the fetus affected and cause adhesion between the body part s and with the amniotic sac can be seen as complications. Discussion: Ayurvedic point of view oligo-hydramnios can be considered under the broad spectrum of jarayu dosha mentioned in Sarangadhara Samhitha. According to Acharya Sarangadhara, jarayu is the membranous covering of the fetus in its intra-uterine life while the liquor amnii secreted from amnion as ambu/ garbhodaka. Conclusion: From an Ayurveda viewpoint, oligoamnios can b e considered under the broad spectrum of ambupoornavyadhi or ulbakaroga characterized by hridroga (cardiac di sorder), akshepaka (convulsions), swasa (dysnoea), kasa (cough), chardi (vomiting) and jwara (fever) etc., disord ers and also all abnormalities of amnion such as unusual friability, amnionitis, cyst, amnion nodosum, amniotic ad hesions along with poly-hydramnios and oligo-hydramnios.


Author(s):  
Maya Andini ◽  
Ova Candra Dewi ◽  
Annisa Marwati

This study aims to see the effect of practicing urban farming in limited space in landed houses, especially during this pandemic. Pandemic forces us to stay at home at all times while continuing to do our daily activities of working and studying. This results in a shifting of time consumption we used to spend time commuting to work for other activities, including urban farming at home. Urban farming is the activity of growing and producing food in the city, as food is one of the basic needs of humans to survive. In addition to supporting food security within the area, it gives benefits also to the people’s health and well-being, as well as the surrounding environment. The methods used in this study are exercising and observing the availability of space and its effect on people and living space (environment) from the literature review point of view and case studies. This study eventually finds that performing urban farming as a choice of activity is proven to be beneficial in maintaining people’s health and wellbeing.


2008 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 231-238 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christina Melin-Johansson ◽  
Gunvor Ödling ◽  
Bertil Axelsson ◽  
Ella Danielson

ABSTRACTObjective:The objective of this qualitative study was to elucidate the meaning of quality of life as narrated by patients with incurable cancer approaching death in palliative home care in Sweden.Methods:To gain a deeper understanding of what quality of life means for dying patients, data were collected from narrative interviews with eight patients in their homes in 2004–2006. Qualitative content analysis was used to interpret the meaning regarding quality of life.Results:Three main themes were found: being in intense suffering, having breathing space in suffering, and being at home. Living with incurable cancer at the end of life was experienced as living in physical distress as the body became incapacitated by unexpected physical complications. This incapacity had consequences on patients’ psychological, social, and existential well-being. As the complication phase abated, the patients experienced that they regained hopefulness and had time to reflect on existential issues. Patients were provided affirmative care at home from family caregivers and the palliative home care team.Significance of results:This study shows that it is feasible to perform individual interviews with patients approaching death and elucidate the meaning of patients’ quality of life in palliative home care. Patients oscillate between being in intense suffering and having breathing space in this suffering, which somewhat opposes the traditional picture of a continuous linear deterioration. Being cared for at home by family caregivers and health care professionals provided a sense of independency and security. Being at home safeguards patients’ entire life situation and increases quality of life.


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