logo
#

Latest news with #dissertation

AssignmenthelpSingapore.sg Launches Premium Dissertation Writing Services for Students in Singapore
AssignmenthelpSingapore.sg Launches Premium Dissertation Writing Services for Students in Singapore

Associated Press

time03-07-2025

  • Business
  • Associated Press

AssignmenthelpSingapore.sg Launches Premium Dissertation Writing Services for Students in Singapore

is pleased to announce the launch of its dissertation writing services in Singapore. SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE, July 3, 2025 / / -- Singapore is known for having world's best class universities including SUSS, SMU, NTU, SIT, INSEAD and many more, and the expectations from students are very high. To successfully complete their graduation and post-graduation, students are required to complete their dissertation, but with increasing expectations of universities, it has become a massive challenge for many of the students. They often struggle to cope up with their professor's expectations not only because of complex requirements, but also because of work, family or other academic responsibilities. is a reliable academic partner for all to those struggling students, as the company offers personalised, plagiarism and AI-free, and well researched dissertations across a wide range of disciplines including business, management, marketing, social sciences, medicine, law, and many more. 'Our mission has been to provide students with adequate support with their dissertation without compromising on quality or ethics, said Jonathan Wong, founder of We are not only providing documents, rather we are providing one to one interaction with experts to allow students to clarify all their doubts across each and every stage of writing a dissertation starting from selecting the topic for their dissertation, writing abstract, introduction, literature review, research methodology, data analysis and findings, conclusion and recommendations, editing, formatting and proofreading dissertation, and all dissertation related aspects. Our guidance is aimed at helping students to successfully complete the most critical academic journeys of their life. Key Features of the Service PhD level experts: The dissertation writers are all PhD level experts and they have successfully completed their dissertation with flying colours. They are well aware of requirements in Singaporean universities, and they can therefore help you with complying with local university guidelines. Customised assistance: The experts are specialised in providing customised solutions according to the requirements. So even if there is a need for assistance with any of the chapters of dissertation, the experts are always available to contribute their 100% efforts. Step by step assistance: Step by step assistance is available as dissertation writing is a long process involving many chapters. Get personalized support for topic selection, introduction, literature analysis, methodology, findings and discussion to finally summarise and conclude the dissertation. Strict confidentiality and academic integrity policies: Rest assured about protection of your data, as we offer 100% privacy and confidentiality to make sure that your data is safe. The academic integrity policies are adequate while providing dissertation writing services in Singapore. 24/7 support: The support is available on 24 * 7 basis, as the experts are available all the time to make sure that none of the students is left out from the assistance. Direct interaction with the expert is allowed and ongoing communication is positively supported to ensure none of the information is missed out. Whether students need assistance with their complete dissertation or help with any individual chapters, is committed to providing high quality academic support that ensures the achievement of real results. About is the leading provider of dissertation writing services in Singapore with its high quality subject specific experts, always available to offer assistance with custom dissertation writing across a wide range of subjects. With a focus on quality, originality and students' satisfaction, the company has successfully satisfied thousands of students requiring assistance with their dissertation, and it has therefore achieved a reputation of being the most reliable provider of custom dissertation assistance at affordable prices. Jonathan Wong +65 87435321 email us here Visit us on social media: Facebook YouTube X Legal Disclaimer: EIN Presswire provides this news content 'as is' without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.

Why You Shouldn't Have Kids—And Why You Should Anyway
Why You Shouldn't Have Kids—And Why You Should Anyway

Yahoo

time17-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Why You Shouldn't Have Kids—And Why You Should Anyway

One night in 2017, Andy Samberg was joking around on Jimmy Kimmel Live. 'When your wife is pregnant, when you're expecting, everyone is like 'it's incredible. Get ready. It's magic. It's the most life changing experience you'll ever have. Brace yourself for heaven,'' he said. 'And then, the second the baby comes, everyone is like 'WELCOME TO HELL! YOU FOOL!'' My wife Isabel gave birth to our first child this past July. And while Samberg's bit is not without some truth, my experience was something closer to the opposite: I was expecting hell. But I got heaven instead. You might not think this from the messy snapshots of my fatherhood experience. 'How has it been?' ask my friends, none of whom have kids yet. What should I say? That waking up in the middle of the night for months on end changes a person? That despite being a relaxed person for my entire life, I'm now angry and frustrated all the time, for reasons I can't explain? That something always, always needs to be done: cleaning bottles, making formula, feeding the kid, changing the kid, waking up with the kid, singing to the kid, making dinner, doing the daily laundry load of bibs and burp cloths. That to go anywhere with him takes 30 minutes of prep work and a bag stuffed to the brim? Should I tell them that I may not finish my dissertation, a product of five years of labor? That every time I work on it I feel guilty for missing out on precious time with our son and leaving Isabel to do all the caregiving? That I get so cooped up at home that taking the dog out to pee can feel like international travel? Do I tell them that every time my son has gone to sleep for the last ten months I've worried he won't wake up, that he'll suffocate in his crib or choke on his own vomit? All of that is true, making the whole endeavor sound like a sordid mistake: an exercise in the absurd and futile. Like consciously lighting your life on fire, and watching your freedom evaporate in the smoke. I could tell them all that. I could welcome them to hell, or, more likely, scare them off the whole idea, because it's terrifying to imagine yourself waking up at 3 a.m. night after night, or cleaning up human sh-t, or giving up your hobbies, or never leaving the house. What I've found in fatherhood is that having kids is difficult in ways easy to talk about and great in ways difficult to talk about. Hell is, after all, rather uncomplicated. Heaven is opaque. How do you describe the miracle of watching God's holy sinless child grow and develop from a clump of cells to a potato into a human being in your own image? How do you explain the first time they look you right in the eye, laugh, clap their hands, crawl, or roll over? Or when they develop their own personality and preferences? How can I articulate that winsome smile I get first thing in the morning when I go in his room, or his wild laughter when I gasp and point at him like he's been caught in the act? Or how he grins ear to ear every time I smile at him—even through his tears? Or his bewildered face each time he eats solid food, followed by the piranha chomp next bite? Do I share that sometimes I look at him and cry, for no reason? How do I communicate that primordial responsibility, that nearly physical pressure to care for this helpless, innocent child? That feeling that this is right, that it matters, that whatever I was doing before was so banal I hardly remember it. How do I say anything at all to childless people without sounding condescending? 'One day you'll know,' and the like. How can we describe parenthood to those without children, when the usual ways of communication fall flat? My parents have said that no one told them how difficult it would be at first, so they felt unprepared: They had the Samberg Experience, as have other family members and many other people I know. Maybe that's why the difficulties of parenting go so viral, and why, in response, there's a cult of domesticity on Instagram and other apps that frames motherhood as unmitigated bliss such that hardship or struggle of any kind are a tragic defeat. I don't know what the proper middle ground is. But I do wonder whether radical transparency, valuable as it can be, always serves us well when it comes to something as mysterious and consuming as parenthood. Now that we've had one, Isabel and I both say we would've started earlier had we not been so afraid of our lives ending. But how early is not clear. At 30, two-thirds of the way through a doctoral program, I'm beyond grateful we didn't start at 23. The degree never could've happened. Isabel never could have become a history teacher, nor a dean or a vice principal, at least not while fulfilling her dream of being a stay-at-home mom. We built a stable life together before introducing chaos, and I regret none of that. But my fear is that many will choose to forgo children altogether, or wait until there's only time to have one or two because they've swum too long in the overly transparent waters of parenting pessimism. That we're too honest about hell and not honest enough about heaven. Don't abandon hope, ye who enter here. Parenthood is not, or at least not only, the inferno people make it out to be. Should you have kids? I can tell you why you shouldn't. I can't tell you why you should. But you probably should nonetheless.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store