Read the excerpt from "W.E.B. Du Bois: Social Justice Leader." The Niagara Movement was followed by the creation of the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). This organization, born partly out of the Springfield (Ill.) Race Riots of 1908, continues today. Du Bois joined the founders, who made him the editor of a monthly magazine, The Crisis. The magazine protested inequality and the mistreatment of African Americans. Dubois remained editor of The Crisis until 1934, when he began to differ from the NAACP on core beliefs. Which question would best help the reader understand Du Bois's separation from the NAACP? How would Du Bois feel about the current NAACP? How were Du Bois's views different from those of the NAACP? What role did Du Bois play in founding the NAACP? What articles did Du Bois work on for the NAACP's magazine?
1) the increase in the number of women in the workforce. 2) the increase in the number of people who work at home. 3) the increase in the share of people who work in service industries.
Stimulus generalizationis is when a subject responds to a stimulus or a group of stimuli similar but not identical to the original situation. For example the dog salivating at a slightly higher or lower pitch not only to the exact tone is a stimulus that is similar but not the original. The animal responds to the similar stimulus in the same way it would to the conditioned stimulus.