-Its distance relative to the earth
-Its size
-its chemical makeup
First thing to do: Break up the long-term goal into short-term goals.
According to Katie Shives, writing for <em>Inside HigherEd, </em>the best way to achieve goals "is working backwards once your goal is identified." To do that, you first ask yourself what are the major components of the goal, and what sub-projects need to be completed in working toward the major project goal. Shives says, "This is very much a project management approach to setting goals and can help by allowing you to break big projects into minor components, accurately estimate the time to completion, set multiple realistic milestones, and to adjust timelines as you move forward."
So with that advice in mind, the list you've given here would go in the following order:
- Break up the long-term goal into short-term goals.
- Sequence all the tasks (to achieve those short-term goals).
- Write down a realistic period to accomplish the goal. (You can't estimate that until you've identified the short-term goals and associated tasks.)
- Break up the goal into daily tasks -- setting yourself a schedule to take your project from an idea to a completed reality.
To distinguish the nation from countries that restricted religious practices.
Malthus<span> wrote "Essay on the Principle of Population" (1798), which </span>Darwin<span> read and was inspired by. The central theme of </span>Malthus<span>' work was that population growth would always overpower food supply growth, creating perpetual states of hunger, disease, and struggle.</span>
Many of the conquistadores failed to establish colonies in the New World because they were combated by the land's natives, various diseases, and competitors from their own country called the Diego de Almagro.