Answer:
The independent variable is how many maps/charts are made by a student.
Explanation:
The independent variable refers to the variable the researcher will manipulate while the dependent variable is the variable that is affected by the manipulation of the independent variable.
This means that the <u>dependent variable outcome will depend on other variable which is the independent one.</u>
In this example, you predict that exam scores are higher for students who created more maps/charts. In other means, <u>the exam scores are being affected by the making of maps/charts to study</u> (if you make more maps/charts, THEN you get a higher score). <u>You can decide on how many maps/charts you will make but you cannot decide on what score you'll get on the exam</u>, since you can manipulate the amount of maps/charts you will make, this is the independent variable.
Therefore, <u>the independent variable is the making of maps/charts. </u>
Answer:
Abstract
Much of the literature about globalization exaggerates the degree of novelty. In this review, we concentrate on claims about what has changed about cities under late capitalism and globalization. Although we suggest that cities have long been influenced by global forces, we conclude that the roles of cities in the global system have changed considerably as a result of the time-space compression made possible by new transportation, communication, and organizational technologies. After discussing what the global perspective means within anthropology, and how it affects urban anthropological research, our review concentrates on three complex issues. First is whether the global factory and increasing knowledge-intensivity have decreased or increased the utility of the intermediary or brokerage roles that cities play. Second, we examine changes in how people live in globalizing cities. Third, we consider the implications of the construction and maintenance of relationships across borders for processes of citizenship, affiliation, and transnational social movements.
Publisher information
Annual Reviews was founded in 1932 as a nonprofit scientific publisher to help scientists cope with the ever-increasing volume of scientific research. Comprehensive, authoritative, and critical reviews written by the world's leading scientists are now published in twenty-six disciplines in the biological, physical, and social sciences. According to the "Impact Factor" rankings of the Institute for Scientific Information's Science Citation Index, each Annual Review ranks at or near the top of its respective subject category.
Answer: Louisiana
Explanation:
Before the arrival of the Europeans in the sixteenth century, Louisiana was an abode for the red indians/ native Americans.
People living in present day Louisiana are of different cultures and races. This is so, for instance in the eighteenth century, many Africans slaves were imported into Louisiana. Also, although it was not that long, Louisiana was a Spanish colony.
Louisiana is (mainy) compose of native Americans, Africans, French, and Haitians.
In the late seventeenth century, Louisiana was a colony of the French, in fact Robert Cavelier de la Salle, A French explorer who named Louisiana after King Louis XIV in the year 1682.
Louisiana has legal and social distinctions which were less sharp and increased the possibilities for a merging of culture.
Answer: hey I'm a Pakstaini just a fun fact I think it's b but if not try c also I'm so sorry if I got you this wrong answer I dearly aploizge
Answer:
social justice, improving human condition through government regulation, inclusive and equal communities, social protections, maintenance of public goods