Answer:
c. high degree of self-efficacy.
Explanation:
According to a different source, the options that come with this question are:
a. low degree of self-efficacy
b. strong id
c. high degree of self-efficacy
d. strong ego
e. strong super ego
Self-efficacy refers to a measure of how well a person can act when faced with prospective situations. This is strongly related to how strongly people value their personal strengths, and how much confidence they have on their abilities. People who have a high degree of self-efficacy usually also display the qualities of determination and perseverance.
Because people were
back then and they did not like laws very much hope dis helped :)
Georgia was willing to comply and work with the federal government.
P.S. I'm surprised teachers still don't know about this.
<span>Attribution errors fall into four main classes i.e
i. Fundamental attribution error where we explain the behavior of another person by emphasizing the role of dispositional factors and minimize the role of situational factors e.g. assuming that a football team loses a match because they are useless and not because they are jetlagged and tired from a long flight .
ii) Actor-observor bias. Here we maximize the effect of dispositional factors in others' behavior whilst minimizing the effect of situational factors. We also go on to minimize the effect of dispositional factors on our own behavior while maximizing the effect of situational factors. e.g when one says a coworker fails to complete a task because they are lazy but when that same individual fails to complete an assingment they attrubute it to unrealistic deadlines.
iii) Self-serving bias. Here a person tends to take responsibility for success and blames failure on external factors e.g you win at poker because you are a good player but when you lose it is because the deck is stacked.
iv) Hostile attribution bias. When we interpret the actions of others as hostile even without evidence to dispute the benignity of the same. e.g. when you assume that two whispering strangers are talking ill about you ignoring the fact that in all likelihood they are simply having a private conversation.
In the given example winning at poker and explaining that you are good at cards and have good luck is self-serving bias. The results of the success at the card game is attributed to the victor's playing prowess as well as possession of good fortune. When losing this individual would likely blame it on "bad luck" and not on the skills of the competitors.</span>
<span>Garrett Morgan blazed a trail for African-American inventors with his many patents, including those for a hair-straightening product, a breathing device, a revamped sewing machine and an improved traffic signal.</span>