The article of Confederation... Hope this helps.
<span>Suggests that the brain is pre-wired to organize some categories. This is known as Neurogenesis, is the process that the human brain performs to reorganize itself after suffering damage. <span>This process has been observed in all ages, but it is more noticeable, with better results, when it occurs in childhood.</span></span>
Answer:
In this experiment, the intellectual ability of the students in the various classes was: a confounding extraneous variable.
Explanation:
- Just a quick reminder: a dependent variable is what is being studied or researched. An independent variable is the factor that is introduced or changed in order to affect the dependent variable.
- Extraneous variables are factors that may affect the results of a study. These variables may lead a researcher to think that there is indeed an association between the other variables in the study when, in fact, there is not. A type of extraneous variable is the confounding variable, which is connected to both, the dependent and the independent variable. A confounding variable affects the results of the study because it affects how the independent variable affects the dependent one.
- In the study described in the question, the confounding variable is the intellectual ability of the students. If the students in a class are smarter than the others, their results will be different. As we can see, because they did better, Dr. Johnson concluded that his method was effective. However, that may not be true. They might have done better because of the fact they their intellectual ability was already better.
The main idea of this passage is that "industrialization results in standardization and monotony".
This passage is from the novel Hard Times and it is the tenth novel by Charles Dickens, which was published in the year 1854. The book looks at the English society and ridicules the social and financial states of the period. It is the briefest of Dickens' novels, scarcely a fourth of the length of those composed by the author.