Answer:
According to Annalisa Rossi Del Corso research on Intergenerational relationships (1990), <em>the flow of support between parents and children is reverting with aging of both groups</em>.
Explanation:
Meaning that when children are young, parents provide more support to them. Meanwhile, when parents become older children start to provide support to their parents, and support coming from parents is decreasing. As a result of this process, parents turn from givers to receivers.
In the beginning of Intergenerational relationships, parents are 100% givers and children are 100% receivers. When children grow up, the <u>ratio between support received and support given changes</u>. For example, at the age of 25 child receives 60% of support from parents and provides 40% of support back.
I believe the answer is: <span> it is a strong predictor of later aggression in adolescence and adulthood
Children who display constant physical aggression toward others generally experience some sort of problem in their home (they are either being ignored by their parents or they witness their parents do it and imitate them).
If this left unhandled, the aggression would become a habit as they grow up and make it much harder to be changed.</span>
B. British Commonwealth of Nations
<span>The greatest example of Humanism was an individual - Erasmus of Rotterdam (c. 1466-1536). Humanism influenced the growth of learning by "abandoning medieval pieties in favour of a rich new vision of the individual's potential."</span>