There are a couple different ways that you improve your memory
- Meditate before you start studying (calms your mind and helps relax muscles and relieves tension)
- Some studies show that eating berries help improve long-term memory.
- Exercise recalling events and facts (usually straight after you are told)
- Sleep more, gives you brain a rest.
- Don't multitask, it's quite complicated for your brain to put 100% into every task you do.
METHODS
- Try use acronyms
- Visual aids
- Rhymes or songs
Hopes this helps!
Answer:
d. secondary education
Explanation: Secondary education, commonly known as high school, typically includes grades 9-12.
Something is plagiarism if one takes material from another source and uses it without pointing toward that source, thus making it appear that it is originally written.
1. No, this is not plagiarism since she herself is the original writer, thus she is not stealing content from anybody else.<span>
2. According to Casey Berry of Sciences Ltd., "Only 6% of students wash their hands after class." This first choice is not plagiarism, since the student has cited the researcher Casey Berry, and has enclosed the directly copied statement in quotation marks. In contrast, the second choice mentions "a recent study" without any direct mention of who did the study, and it copies the conclusion verbatim without using quotation marks.
3. This is not plagiarism, since she places a hyperlink to the source, thus acknowledging that what she has written is not her own original material. However, this is considered bad practice, to simply link to a source without describing what it has done or which parts specifically you have taken from it. You would not probably be sued in court for plagiarism, but it is still advisable to describe what the source has done.
4. No, this is not plagiarism. He has used quotation marks for direct quotes. The paraphrased information does not need quotation marks. Hyperlinks and attributions have been provided for each, so there are no issues with this kind of writing.
5. Yes, this is plagiarism. The BlogMutt writer got information from another post (which may or may not have been original material, we do not know), and did not attribute that post. Furthermore, this write-up is for a customer, not merely for discussion in forums, so pretending that the information on the post is his own is not only plagiarism, but it is also business dishonesty as he is stealing someone's work and selling it to a customer as his own.</span>
'to patronise' someone means to pitty them and treat them like a younger person and to not respect there views on things. it's hard to explain really :D