Thursday, 17 April 2014

OUR A2 DRAFT.


lallaaaaalaaa we've found the FINAL DESIGN!!! YUHUUU

Kids Design. 


MiniMidiMega !
We've found the name from the 3 sizes of the bags.
Mini is for the smallest size, which is the one for kids, and midi for the teenagers as well as for the Mega, its the biggest for adult and teenagers.


MiniMidiMega LOGO 

yaayy! we're almost done :D

Last view weeks, we were actually doing the things for the final presentation about the A2 size.
The basic ideas came from our chosen ideas and sketches, with all those pros and cons.

The bag with network 



The magic bag 



Friendship bag 



Those are little sketches from our 101 solutions that came from brainstorm and mind map. 
And these are the chosen ideas : 


Our 4 chosen ideas 


Its a Helium bag 



This is our final idea from the sketches. It made us think that this idea has the most-less cons. And it will really helps students to lighten their bags and stuffs. 






Wednesday, 12 March 2014

Still about our research report

The time is really in a rush!

there are 4 weeks left to go
hahaha
feeling so close with the assessment week.
Along "the journey", me and my lovely group , Gaby, Pauline, and Jing Xi were continuing the Prezi for our 101 ideas to solve our heavy bag's problem.


 Pardon us for the messy and blur photograph :D



And after the 101 ideas, the 5 combinations were continuing the process. We worked for this until 2 weeks and still counting.




And the Prezi is here.
Still in our process too.


Wednesday, 5 March 2014

Hai blog!! I'm backkk hhihihihii

I just got back from my not-very-long hibernation!! hahahaha
I went out of this country with my best buddies and girls.

But remembering our un-finished research report, me and my group still doing it and it's still in progress.


Here is our cover photo, Gaby found it.
Its so nice :D






Children’s Heavy School Bag
(How can we lift off their burdens?)



Name: Jessica Budiman (1F), Jing Xi (1F),
Pauline Teo (1D), Gabriella Berliany (1D)
Class: 1F & 1D
Module: Design process
3D Design Department
Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts
Lecturers in Charge: Marienne Yang & Ang Chiat
Date of Submission: 11th February 2014
Word Count:....  
























And then, from view weeks before it I did my own case study from my persona ofcourse.
But it's still in progress too, because i'm having trouble for not using I, You, They, She, He.

2.3 Case study 3: How is This Problem Handled in Other Countries
         The problem about heavy children school bags, the thoughts about what if the facilities of the country they are living in is quite enough for them to lessen their carriers from the distance? For the very obvious example is Singapore. It is a familiar thing that Singapore has so many public transportation for its people to reach their destination as fast and as cheap as it can be. So no matter how old or how young the people, it won’t matter their “super fast” journey by that public vehicles. But the unfortunate thing about it is we have to walk and walk. What a very significant contrast with its neighborhood’s country. Let say Indonesia. It works so different there. Based on our research, our own experience and investigation, this problem is not really bother the Indonesian kids. Before proving that, Indonesians mostly spoiling their kids, so it is affecting their lives. This is not for blaming the government, because Indonesia itself hasn’t been capable yet, for the public transportation. So usually the children’s bags are not to bothering them because they are mostly using their own vehicles. Their majority is using cars, or motorcycle to pick or to drop their children’s wherever they go. As we all know too, that Indonesia has lower currency that affect everything seems so easier than how it works in   Singapore. Asking for a hand to the maids or driver in Indonesia really not a big deal. After their class finished, they can ask for a pick up service too, so they will not carry their heavy schoolbags for a distance.
         This small theme is actually brought a very big involvement between Children, teachers, parents and government to its country. So the conclusion is, these two different countries are commonly affected their children’s obstruction growth by the heavy school bags with the different ways. Not only in Singapore, every country with the more advanced and more enough public transportations do. But the very good thing about it is government has the policy for the maximum weight of their children’s school bags. And at least It is supporting the prevention. Doesn’t seem like in Indonesia that the curriculum has been thick up by the education government, and automatically even the children don’t walk too much, their daily carriers will be maximized by their daily activities. So how it tackled in other countries? It affects certain similar negatives, in a very different reflection.   


Thursday, 6 February 2014

my FIFTH week is getting harderrrr aakk!

       Its true, its getting harder.
We were started to learn and write about entity, the things about empathising our problem, which is always Children's bags are too heavy, and we also shared about our individual persona experiences from seeing the parents, teachers, and children's point of view.




Source of the image   : www.google.com

        My personal experience of being the stakeholder that i chose was being parents. Its still in the case that nowadays the children's bags are too heavy. According to my schedule that last week was the Chinese new year holiday, i went back to my hometown, Bali to reunited with my family there. During that long weekend holiday i really couldn't resist that i got over  thought about my super duper abundantly home works in NAFA. One of them is the design process's. Gaby and I was really thinking about how to represent the rich parents and also the tight budgets parents with. Because we've never ever been a parents before haha a or maybe on the way soon to be. So i just asked some informal questions to my brother, my cousins and my dad also about this problem.
      Commonly the said their carriers are quite a lot as the years increase by. Before i continue, their ages are approximately between 13th. They said their parents recently said that its just a normal thing, they have provided good education for them, therefore they shouldn't worry about that little thing.


   Besides that, we learned some of the research methodologies. There are interview, forum, articles, bibliography, and case study.
What i just discussed with my team mates were about the case study, which in Indonesia we called it Studi lapangan. It comes form the frame questions that have been phrased before then formed into the questions that soon to be used as the chapters and research methods for our report.

4th week isssssssssssssss a Chinese New Year week!!!

No class for design process
we're waiting for the new schedule to replace it.
hahahaha
and anywayy.....








And here are the articles that i found, to support the things that will go on soon. 

Driving for the school run can add £52 to annual fuel bill

As a new school year begins parents are being reminded of the costs associated with driving their children to school.

Driving for the school run can add £52 to annual fuel bill
Using the car for the school run could cost more than you think Photo: ALAMY
The school run is already stressful enough for most parents, and it can add £52 to the average family's annual fuel bill.
A combination of congested roads, cold starts and short journeys that don't allow a car's engine to warm up all contributed to poor fuel economy in tests carried out by What Car? on four popular family cars.
It discovered that the Nissan Qashqai 1.6 diesel returned 29.8mpg from a cold start rather than its 51.4mpg official Urban figure. The petrol-powered Hyundai i20 and 2.0-litre diesel Seat Alhambra both managed 26.5mpg, rather than 46.3mpg and 38.7mpg respectively, while VW's Golf Bluemotion returned 41.5mpg - some way short of the 60.1mpg Urban figure it achieves in EU tests.
Chas Hallett, What Car? editor-in-chief, said: "Engines take at least 10 minutes to warm up, so on short, traffic-clogged runs to school they're running a lot less efficiently. On the majority of school runs, cars deliver on average 15 per cent fewer miles per gallon than their official urban figures suggest, and emit 20 per cent more CO2.
"When shopping for your next school run vehicle, go for a car that works best in town. That way it'll still deliver good economy even when it's running less efficiently."




School bags become back-breaking for children

M. Sai Gopal
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Doctors link them to spine problems, postural defects and back pain

Burdensome: Children are forced to slouch due to their heavy bags. - A file photo
Burdensome: Children are forced to slouch due to their heavy bags. - A file photo
School bags are a major source for injuries among children. And yet, on most occasions, parents tend to overlook this factor. Sometimes, parents justify by saying that they too had carried heavy school bags when they were young and nothing happened to them. Many parents also simply fail to notice the pain and fatigue, which are common among children who are burdened by heavy school bags.
In recent times, however, spine specialists and orthopaedic doctors have started linking heavy bags with problems of spine, postural defects and back pain among children. Many also maintain that parents should not allow children to carry bags that are heavier than 10 per cent of their body weight.
This means that if a child weighs 30 kilograms, then parents must make sure that the child does not carry a school bag weighing more than three kilograms. If the load is more, then children tend to devise their own methods to carry heavy bags.
“Children unintentionally arch their backs and lean forward to carry the heavy load. Unwittingly, this leads to poor posture like slouching when they grow up. When they reach their adolescent stage, many youngsters are unable to maintain the right posture,” says spine surgeon, Dr. G. P. V. Subbaiah of Global Hospitals.
Doctors also suggest that children, including teenagers, should avoid wearing heavy bag only on one shoulder. “Such a habit makes youngsters lean towards one side to compensate for the extra weight. This leads to asymmetrical spine, back pain and strained neck and shoulders,” doctors point out.
Sometimes, children tend to bend forward while carrying heavy backs. Doctors maintain that this posture will force children to work harder to breath and in turn put a lot of pressure on lungs. “Some back pains can be treated by medication. But it is always is better to take preventive measures,” Dr. Subbaiah said.