Answer:
Planner
Explanation:
The Principal Planner, also referred to as Planning Manager, participates and supervises advanced, highly-complex professional planning day to day actions. Depending on the organization, the Planner most of the time supervises and manages sections or divisions that is within the bigger planning department of an organization.
Their duties include but not limited to supervising business operations, managing teams, working on strategic plans based on forecasts, and recommending ways of improvements.
The answer is: When Kirsten turns over paper.
Recycling is the process of converting waste into material or products of potential utility bringing the reducing of the consumption as a consequence. In this scenario, Kirsten turns the paper to take advantage of the blank space. When she gets tired of one side of the painting, she can use the other painting. Kirsten then saved up the use of another paper, using the blank side of the same paper she had used before.
The answer is a Natural Experiment.
A natural experiment takes place in natural settings and are used when independent variables can't be manipulated directly for ethical/practical reasons, so in this case the toddlers playing. Any effect observed happens naturally. They aren't seen as true experiments as the independent variable (toddlers playing) hasn't been changed deliberately to see effect on dependent variable (aggressiveness).
Answer:
The answer is C progressive
The Progressive Era is defined by reform of all the following: political parties, big businesses, labor practices.
Explanation:
Answer:
neutral stimulus; conditioned stimulus
Explanation:
In Pavlov's classical conditioning, <em>before conditioning takes place, a neutral stimulus does not really elicit a response other than serving to secure attention</em>. The metronome, before conditioning, does not elicit salivation in dogs ordinary, except for focusing of attention. Food naturally elicits salivation in dog, and is referred to as an unconditioned stimulus.
Conditioning takes place when the ticking metronome is paired with an unconditioned stimulus such as food, in order to produce the same response of salivation that food produces. After conditioning, the presentation of the ticking metronome will elicit salivation. <em>After conditioning, we refer to the ticking metronome as a conditioned stimulus</em>.
The ticking metronome is the neutral stimulus before conditioning, and the conditioned stimulus after conditioning.