1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Bingel [31]
3 years ago
9

Why is ergonomics important for students to understand?

English
1 answer:
stepladder [879]3 years ago
5 0

Answer:

Ergonomics is important because when you're doing a job and your body is stressed by an awkward posture, extreme temperature, or repeated movement your musculoskeletal system is affected.

You might be interested in
1. Story ends , questions are answered, and the theme is clear
AfilCa [17]

Answer:

1. is only one ik

Explanation:

In my interactions with writers, the topic of the story question has come up at least half a dozen times in the last few months. It’s a topic I haven’t addressed here at the blog, so this is obviously the time for a discussion of the subject.

The story question and story problem are major components of the foundation of your story. They get a story started, they give it focus, they guide characters and readers through story events, and they even declare when the story’s end has arrived.

The story problem is what gets your protagonist involved in the events that make up your book. A problem may be a murder or the kidnapping of the president’s daughter or the meeting of a new lover who may prove to be more than just a fling.

To solve the story problem, the protagonist has to fix something, find something, prevent something, do something.

The story question arises out of the problem. Will our character—let’s call her Abigail—find the murderer or the kidnapped child? Will Abigail fall in love with Donnell? Will Abigail prevent the overthrow of the government, find the treasure, find herself?

The story problem is the impetus behind story events; it drives your main character’s actions. Needing the answer to the story question is what keeps readers turning pages.

Story events and character thoughts and dialogue should be all about solving the story problem—from the characters’ point of view—and answering the story question—from the readers’ point of view. All the elements of the story should serve the story problem and question.

There’s little time for incidentals and rabbit trails.

Absent some direct connection, a chapter about slavery in Peru has no place in a science fiction novel about time travel to the twenty-fourth century. A treatise on the making of leather shoes doesn’t belong in a lighthearted romance.

Yes, some story events serve to reveal character and increase tension or conflict and may only tangentially seem to be “about” the plot, yet you’ll find that you can’t continually serve tangents to your readers. They’ll wonder what such events and details have to do with the story, with this story.

You’ve likely run into the problem yourself. You’re reading and suddenly wonder why the main character has stopped for a vacation in Greece. If nothing from the vacation has to do with the character resolving the story problem, you lose interest. The story has lost its focus and no matter how interesting the digression, if it doesn’t lead toward solving the story problem and answering the story question, it doesn’t have a place in the story.

This doesn’t mean that a story can’t have multiple story threads and a secondary plot. It does mean that the story as a whole needs to be cohesive and that each scene should be part of the mechanism that moves the main character closer to solving the story problem.

We need secondary characters to add comic relief or to help flesh out our main characters. And we certainly need to show our characters doing more than making a beeline toward solving the problem—major characters are not one-dimensional, with only one thought on their minds at all times. And yet stories don’t wander all over the map. Characters don’t—can’t—involve themselves in every issue under the sun. Major characters focus on solving the story problem, and readers focus on seeing how the story question is answered.

And writers have to make sure that both characters are readers are satisfied.

4 0
3 years ago
. What does it mean to have a coherent essay? The essay is clearly focused and organized. The essay contains a main idea that is
uranmaximum [27]

Answer:

The essay is clearly focused and organized

Explanation:

7 0
3 years ago
Can somebody help!!
REY [17]

Answer:

1) The land is in a constant state of birth,

Giving life to all who live on Earth.

Our carelessness and fears

Have taken a toll over the years.

Her land is parched and scorched

As man continues to light the torch.

We continue a want of speed and ease,

All while our pesticides kill off our bees.

It's time to wake up and see Mother Earth's pain.

Humanity's selfishness is becoming insane.

Soon her cries will turn to gloom,

And man will cause its own doom.

The sands of time have rendered fear

Blue skies on high no longer clear

Stars were bright whence they came

Now dimmed, obscured, pollution's haze

2)Crystal clear our waters gleamed

Fish abundant, rivers streamed

Ocean floors sandy white

Now littered, brown, pollution's plight

Trees towered high above

Trunks baring professed love

Birds chirping from sites unseen

Gone, paper joined pollution's team

One can't blame pollution alone

As they say, you reap what you've sown

So let us plant a better seed

Tear out old roots, cultivate, weed

Protect what has been given for free

Our waters, skies, wildlife and trees

For once they're gone, don't you say

Consider yourself warned of that fatal day

Explanation:

5 0
2 years ago
Which sentence is a run-on sentence? A. Sally Ride was the first American woman in space, she was a member of a shuttle crew. B.
Lesechka [4]
C I think is the answer
3 0
3 years ago
Source: Dr. Seuss. The Lorax. New York: Random House, 1971. Google Books. Web. 18 May 2011.
vovikov84 [41]
The correct answer of the questions listed above is D.<span>The noun “rippulous” helps the reader “hear” the pond.</span>
7 0
4 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Other questions:
  • The first book written in America was John Smith's A True Relation. <br> 1)True<br> 2)False
    10·1 answer
  • When a composer sets a single syllable of a word to several notes of music, he or she is using _______ style.
    11·1 answer
  • A search for moon yields the following results: boon, croon, dune, goon, loon, noon, prune, rune, soon, swoon, tune. What kind o
    14·1 answer
  • U CAN HAVE 100 POINTS IF U ANSWER!!!!<br><br><br> what is more vicious a bear or a gorilla
    15·2 answers
  • During the Age of Discovery, what was a common reason explorers set out for unknown lands?
    8·2 answers
  • What's a moral for books
    15·2 answers
  • Hiii please help i’ll give brainliest if you give a correct answer :)
    9·2 answers
  • 1.Michael was rewriting the answers. (Change into passive voice.)
    14·1 answer
  • Read the passage below and complete the instruction that follows.
    14·1 answer
  • Can you think of any other instances in which conformity would be a good thing
    9·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!