Question options:
A. Across subjects multiple-baseline design
B. Across situations multiple-baseline design
C. Across behaviors multiple-baseline design
D. Across subjects ABA design
Answer:
A. Across subjects multiple-baseline design
Explanation:
In the multiple-baseline design, behavior is measured across either multiple individuals, behaviors, or settings.
For the multiple-baseline-across-subjects design, the same behavior is observed and studied for multiple individuals as is lllustrated above.
By gathering data from many or more than one subject or instances inferences can be more informed and be made about the likeliness that the measured trait generalizes to a greater population.
Hamlet’s advice to the Player is the right answer
The correct chronological sequence is:
2- Declaration of Independence
4- Articles of Confederation
1- US Constitution
3- Bill of Rights
In 1776, the United States declared itself as an independent nation, breaking out of the Kingdom of Great Britain's power.
After that, in 1781, the 13 original states of the United States came up with the Articles of Confederation, that served as their first constitution.
In 1787, during the Philadelphia Convention, the United States constitution was written and in 1789 ratified, replacing the Articles of Confederation.
The Bill of Rights was created in 1789, and ratified in 1791, and composes the ten first amendments to the US Constitution.
We did this in school recently too!
Here's what I wrote<span>"This explains how Islam spread so quickly because these are rules people would rather live by. It is much more safe than other religions."Hope this helped ;)<span>
</span></span>
Answer:
A nation state is a state in which the great majority shares the same culture and is conscious of it. The nation state is an ideal in which cultural boundaries match up with political ones.[1] According to one definition, "a nation state is a sovereign state of which most of its subjects are united also by factors which defined a nation such as language or common descent."[2] It is a more precise concept than "country", since a country does not need to have a predominant ethnic group.
A nation, in the sense of a common ethnicity, may include a diaspora or refugees who live outside the nation-state; some nations of this sense do not have a state where that ethnicity predominates