Question
What should participants do as a group to prepare for a formal discussion? Check all that apply. find evidence establish rules set clear goals develop opinions make digital notes select a secretary
Answer:
Imagine that you have a rare weekend without any professional responsibilities: no papers to grade, no lessons to plan, no activities to cover. To take advantage of this unexpected free time, you and three friends decide to go on a fishing excursion to a lake known as one of the best largemouth bass habitats in the eastern United States. Through e-mail messages, telephone conversations, and brief get-togethers, the four of you coordinate transportation, lodging, the time of departure, and other details.
It would seem reasonable to assume that you were all going with ambitions to catch largemouth bass. However, what would happen to the trip's camaraderie and outcome if each person's vision of the weekend differed from that assumption? What if one person plans to spot eagles, another is looking for lakefront property, and a third hopes to catch anything that will pull on the line, while you are there for sun and leisure?
Hope this helps!
Number 1 is c
number two i have no idea
number 3 is c
Ahh, the 1920's. This is when the US started to rise to the top. The assembly line is what had everyone building things in large amounts. Here's an example.
ok there are 5 people, each of us has a letter .
Person 1: A - He gives a to person 2
Person 2: p - puts Ap together and passes it to person 3.
Person 3: p - Puts it together and gets App passes it to person 4
Person 4: l - Adds it to the App to get Appl, then gives to person 5.
Person 5: e - Puts the finishing touch on the project and there finale thing is...
Apple!!! Do you get it now?
Hope I helped. :)