<span>The statement that a speaker who argues that the world's monarch butterfly population is in danger because their numbers have decreased in several locations is reasoning from specific instances is true.
</span><span>In this informative speech, the speaker acts as a teacher. </span>
The answer to this depends on what sources you are using, but some sources state that people identify lies only 55% of the time!
That's very little, considering that 50% is the chance level - this number would be the one used if we could never really use our intuition to guess correctly. For example if we guessed that every second person randomly lies that would give us the "chance level" of 50 %. (if exactly half of the people lied).
And in real life, we can tell 55% of the time if people are lying - this means we are slightly better than chance.
We can conclude from this that we should never trust our intuition about whether people lie or not!
Answer:
The view of aging and the treatment of people in late adulthood in Asian cultures tends to be more positive than in Western cultures.
Explanation:
Asian cultures tend to <em>value their elders</em> more than Western cultures. Western cultures tend to be more ageist, meaning they tend to be more discriminative towards its elders.
Asian cultures have <em>more respect </em>and they view this as one of the <em>highest virtues</em>, mainly deriving from Confucian tradition.
On the other hand, Western cultures tend to only <em>focus on its youth</em>, putting the elders aside and <em>devaluating it. </em>
According to Vygotsky, the level at which a child cannot fully perform a task independently, but can do so with the assistance of someone more competent would be the zone of proximal development or ZPD. It would refer to the difference of a learner's capability of performing a task without any assistance and one with assistance. <span />