Answer:
B. External validity
Explanation:
External validity- It refers to the extent through which a conclusion made from the research study can be generalized to the person outside the study.
Generalization is of three types: environmental, temporal, and population.
Threats to external validity:
1. History effects & maturation.
2. Selection biases.
3. Constructs, confounding, and methods.
4. The 'experimental world' versus the 'real world'.
Answer:
signing into law the Emergency Banking Relief Act
Explanation:
it was important because it would have addressed banking panic and the overall banking crisis of the early 1930s
Democracy (Greek: δημοκρατία, dēmokratiā, from dēmos 'people' and kratos 'rule')[1] is a form of government in which the people have the authority to choose their governing legislators. The decisions on who is considered part of the people and how authority is shared among or delegated by the people have changed over time and at different speeds in different countries, but they have included more and more of the inhabitants of all countries. Cornerstones include freedom of assembly and speech, inclusiveness and equality, membership, consent, voting, right to life and minority rights.
The average goals for any research project is for the person doing the project to further their knowledge and to present information proven by others before them.