Meena is a fictional character in the Bangladeshi children's television show. Meena. The lead
character, Meena educates the children of Bangladesh in many issues like girl's education, gender, health, and social inequality.The other important characters of her stories is her brother Raju, and her
loving pet parrot Mithu..
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Thursday, June 14, 2012
Cartoon for alllllllllllllllllllll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
A cartoon is not a funny book or television demonstrate
formed for the purpose of amusing small kids – though it can be. Cartoons
in many societies have been limited to such mediums, and consequently have been
defined by that notion. But in other societies, cartoons have been and
are still being used in numerous diverse ways. It’s not exceptional in
Japan to find a business specialized reading a cartoon while roaming to work on
a bus. The Japanese also use cartoons in their edification systems to
help children learn. The shield education manuals you find in the seat
pockets on airplanes are cartoons. Step into a place of worship, and along
the walls you’ll stumble on chronological images telling devout stories –
cartoons! Even movies are fundamentally a series of metaphors and words
put together so swiftly that you forget you are watching cartoons. So, in
fact, we could construe that life is purely a series of images and words that
we take in and give suggestion too. We are hard-wired to see the world
this way! It’s how our brains process in sequence.
Initially , a cartoon suspends the viewer’s skepticism.
The best way to depict this is through an example. Take a photo of
yourself preference something up, and then take a photo of the Taj Mahal and
put it into your hands. Both you and the Taj Mahal are of equal size and
proportion. Would you believe it? Do you think you could pick up
the Taj Mahal with your own two hands? Of course not! It basically
isn’t possible. Your brain know that, and merely doesn’t consider what
it’s seeing. Now, imagine a drawing of a cartoon character picking up the
Empire State Building. What would your conclusions be about that
image? Would you be wondering about whether the action was possible or
what the action was proposed to correspond? That’s the influence of the
cartoon. You look ahead of the apparent for the not so apparent.
You’d have no problem compliant that the temperament is truly preference the Taj Mahal. Your mind is wide open to
the possibility. As far as you know, the character is Spiderman.
And we all know what that chap can do! What has happened is that your
mind and thoughts have been opened to other potential…your distrust has been balanced.
How many of you were sad or even cried when Sindarella lost her one shoe? I’d
say you were believing that cartoon.
Then, cartoons are an particularly effectual revenue
of communication. If done well, the viewer doesn’t even have to read a
cartoon to comprehend the story. In fact, some of the first forms of
communication are cartoons. Cartoons use images and words to tell
stories. Whether you learn best from the images or from the words or from
both, you’ll get the communication.
So, “Why a cartoon?” A cartoon suspends distrust,
defuses perceptive topics, and is an valuable means of communication.
What remnants is pure probable – the probable to learn, the potential to line
up, the probable modify, the probable to. This is the reason we use cartoons
and drawings to help recruits easily comprehend a policy, a souk circumstance,
a new proposal, and then bond their cover personage position to create that policy
of achievement.
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