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However, in June 1963, the curriculum was revised to improve areas of social, physical, and biological sciences. Students were grouped into 3 sections (Bookkeeping, Salesmanship, Stenography) which take respective classes since then. [2] A 1990s photo of PUPLHS which serves as the training grounds for students taking up Business Education
As time went on and technology evolved, social media has been an integral part of people's lives, including students, scholars, and teachers. [3] However, social media are controversial because, in addition to providing new means of connection, critics claim that they damage self-esteem, shortens attention spans, and increase mental health issues.
Wellness in School is offered as a unit in some K-8 elementary schools in the United States. It is defined as the quality or state of being in good health, especially as an actively sought goal. [1] Wellness is taught in 6 or 7 dimensions: physical, social, intellectual, emotional, occupational, spiritual and environmental.
The impact has been so well-documented that CVS Health banned photo manipulation in its store-brand makeup marketing and promotional displays in 2018, a decision that was made to help erase ...
A high schooler's tweet has gone viral after he posed for and posted some incredibly inappropriate senior photos. Where as students normally pose dressed, smiling for the camera in their caps and ...
Social media users, especially younger people, are thus exposed to an extreme amount of manipulated imagery presenting unrealistic, unachievable body ideals. [56] [57] For example, social media platforms such as TikTok have include filters that create an illusion of physical attributes, such as the "skinny filter" and the "perfect skin filter ...
23-year-old influencer, Josephine Livin, shows how she heavily edits photos of herself before posting them to social media.
Hoping to illustrate its diverse enrollment, the University of Wisconsin at Madison doctored a photograph on a brochure cover by digitally inserting a black student in a crowd of white football fans. The original photograph of white fans was taken in 1993. The additional black student, senior Diallo Shabazz, was taken in 1994.