Answer:
Multisystemic Treatment is the correct answer of this question.
Explanation:
The Multisystemic Treatment strategy developed by Scott Henggeler focuses on problem-solving and communication skills to concentrate attention on family, peer and psychological issues.Multisystemic treatment is a residence-based rehabilitation intervention found to be effective in preventing asocial adolescents and extended to adolescent people with serious anxiety disorders.
The two terms that were in the elements of fiction lecture are the conflict and setting.
The setting is described as the time and place where the story happens. While conflict in literature is defined as the competition between two opposing forces. As the story begins, Edgar Allen Poe describes the setting as “During the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low.” A sense of dullness of the area is established by Poe as the narrator is approaching and this dullness remained throughout the story and this is later changed into death. The conflict in “The Fall of the House of Usher” is when the narrator felt a creepy feeling when he approaches the house. The house’s scenery and appearance combined with the feelings of his past give him an uneasy feeling.
13.) Although crusading continued throughout the 14th Century, the (4th Crusade) is the last one we'll focus on because it is the Crazy One. The Venetians built (500 ships), but then only 11,000 Crusaders actually made it down to Venice.
... the Venetians made the Crusaders a deal: "Help us capture the rebellious city of Zara, and we'll ferry you to Anatolia.
.... Zara was a Christian City, but the Crusaders agreed to help, resulting in the Pope (excommunicating) both them and the Venetians.
14. Later, the excommunicated Crusaders fought for the (Byzantine) emperor who failed to pay them so the Crusaders decided to rob and destroy the Byzantine Empire.
Constantinople was conquered by the (Turkish) in 1453.
15. ... and with the coming of the (Ottomans) the region remained solidly Muslim, as it is mostly today.