The answer is "unknown self".
The Johari Windows is made of four parts:
Open Self – What others think about you and you know as well.
Blind Self – What others think about you, however you don't.
Hidden Self – What others don't think about you, however you do. It's your insider facts.
Unknown Self – What others don't think about you and you don't either.
At the present time (mid-2014), the Vice President of the US
is Joseph Robinette "Joe" Biden of Delaware.
Answer:
After reading the excerpt from "On the Gull's Road." The word acrimony means:
Explanation:
- "On the Gull's Road" is a short story that is written by Willa Cather. The theme of this story is undying love even death is near.
- In the given excerpt the words "I told him curtly that he was mistaken, but my acrimony made no impression upon his blandness. I felt that I should certainly strike the fellow if he stood there much longer, running his blue ring up and down his beard. I should probably have hated any man who was Mrs. Ebbling's husband, but Ebbling made me sick." These words show that narrator is very angry with Mrs. Ebbling's husband.
Answer:
What are the 3 ways of cultural change?
Image result for explain three ways of cultural change in Ghana
A recent study conducted by Korn Ferry Institute revealed that there are 6 major catalysts for culture change:
A new CEO.
A merger or acquisition.
A spin-off from a parent company.
Changing customer requirements.
A disruptive change in the market the company serves.
Globalization.
Explanation:
The three types of intelligence that constitute sternberg's triarchic theory are: the analytical, this one allows people to recognize problems and find possible hidden, or non easy to see by everyone solutions; Creative theory: and practical theory, this is about how an activity is developed, how capable is a person to face new or old situations and uses creativity to give the best solution, and the practical or contextual theory refers to adapting the analytical and creative to real situations, put into practice in real world, Robert J. Sternberg believed that a intelligent person should gather all three theories to be more successful in life.