iTHINK - Issue 5
iTHINK - Issue 5
Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD
Read {{magName}} along with {{magCount}}+ other magazines & newspapers with just one subscription View catalog
1 Month $9.99
1 Year$99.99 $49.99
$4/month
Subscribe only to iTHINK
Buy this issue $7.99
Subscription plans are currently unavailable for this magazine. If you are a Magzter GOLD user, you can read all the back issues with your subscription. If you are not a Magzter GOLD user, you can purchase the back issues and read them.
In this issue
You snap your fingers and your favourite music fills the living room. You sit at the dining table, and Cherry, your humanoid (robot) domestic helper, chirps, “Please enjoy your meal, champ!” as ‘she’ serves your food. You say, “Start work” and your dining table transforms into a touchscreen. Your aunt walks in, saying, “Your uncle and I have just informed our gynaecologist that we want our baby to have brown eyes like me, but be athletic like your uncle.” You smile, and yawn, and your dining chair instantly becomes a massage chair, giving you a deep and point-focused massage as you close your eyes in bliss.
What a life, you say? This could be the future we may be looking at, in 30 to 40 years (or even earlier). From the commercialisation of the Internet some 18 years ago, to smart mobile phones and social networks like Facebook, Twitter and Ask.fm to the most recent Google Glass, technology has transmuted the lives of humans. Andnew technologies are constantly being invented, even as you read this, challenging the human boundaries. In fact, the scientific technology for creating domesticated humanoids and the medical technology to pre-select the characteristics of an unborn baby have already been developed. What remains, really, is the commercialisation of these technologies.
Therein lies the controversy. Each new technology that is introduced can be both beneficial and detrimental to us, at the same time. With social networks, come not only ease of communication but also cyber-bullying. Super-intelligent robots in our homes, schools and work places provide us with great comfort and efficiency, but creativity and the ‘human touch’ could be in great danger of becoming extinct in the human race, not to mention the domination of sloth.
Selecting the kind of baby we want may seem rather progressive and fascinating, but would that be an act of playing God?
Enjoy the journey, and go back to the future with this issue.
iTHINK Magazine Description:
Publisher: ilovereading.sg pte ltd
Category: Education
Language: English
Frequency: Quarterly
The iThink magazine is a most interesting read to boost the language and critical thinking skills of the upper- secondary students (and high-ability lower-secondary students). With an engaging mix of thought-provoking articles and lighter stimulating reads, iThink is the one-stop solution to making reading both a leisure and an intellectual pleasure to students.
Content in each issue is organised according to a theme, which could range from a Food Issue to that of Science and Technology, and History and Art. We provide an in-depth exploration of issues that relate to the theme, accompanied by thought-provoking questions, word banks and sources for further reading or viewing (YouTube video links). In each issue, you will also find regular articles on travel (Wanderlust) by our ever-wandering travel writer, a life story of at least one inspirational person (Inspire-Aspire), a discussion on common language errors (Ask GRAMMAr), student essays with comments by the editor (Model Me & Tweak Me) as well as a smattering of trivia and pictorial idioms, making for a more enriching reading experience. Student worksheets at the end of the magazine serve as a good workout for the students.
Any student who appreciates an engaging take on language education and critical thinking would love an issue of iThink.
- Cancel Anytime [ No Commitments ]
- Digital Only