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kmsordel |
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Malinows |
1. RE: Is it a picture perfect match?
Sep 17 2008, 7:20 PM EDT
This question is a kind of "what do you think" question. It does not necessarily have a right or wrong answer. It does:however, assume that intimate relationships will begin to change. It just askes the reader to think about how they will be different. This question forces the reader to think about how it was like for people dating in the past without the help of online dating sites versus dating on the web now. The question asks to contrast these two concepts and form an opinion on how dating has changed over the years. To answer this question, the reader can think about his or her own dating experiences. Have they or some one they know tried online dating? How did it work out? The reader can also look to the dating sites mentioned and things like Facebook or Myspace to see how the users, if any, let others know that they want to date or go out some time. The resources needed to research this answer would of course be the internet, possibly interviews, and maybe the television. Those dating sites advertise in television comercials constantly.I like the question. It is simple and too the point, but to ask it a different way, I would also ask the reader if he or she has ever or would ever try online dating and ask to explain their reasoning.
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bhatrack |
2. RE: Is it a picture perfect match?
Sep 19 2008, 3:49 PM EDT
This is a good question because it forces the reader to make connections to their own lives. It asks them to think about how their relationship can change due to the internet. It also asks the reader to make judgments on how they feel about dating sites. Are they real? Can you find true love? Do they make real dating obsolete? It brings about questions of the severity of judgment placed on those who use the sites. This question brings interesting possibilities for surveys and interviews for college students. Eharmony and match.com seem to be primarily adult dating sites (Are these sites last resorts for adults?) and it would be fun to delve into the options for students of our generation. Does our computer savvy generation need these dating sites in order to have feasible relationship? Are we capable of dating without the internet as a medium? As a question, it is just specific enough to light a spark under this generation’s viewpoints of e-dating and a virtual e-world. Do you find this valuable? |
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captnjak |
3. RE: Is it a picture perfect match?
Sep 23 2008, 5:14 AM EDT
This question is good because it allows the reader to think more intently about the question, due to its emotional nature. The question is succinct and direct, asking for an open ended answer and allowing for the reader to be thorough. I like this question because it is not answered with merely just research but with personal experiences as well. The question is posed to gain knowledge on the subject of internet dating or possibly to start up a negotiation on how real life dating will change. This question can be posed to anyone who is old enough to have started in the dating scene and/or people who have started using online dating services. Another way to form this question is to ask specifically how it will change personal relations that do not involve the internet for finding that 'significant other.' This question will take lots of research to ultimately prove the emotional change that internet dating has caused on the general populace.
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