I believe the answer is: 30 to 40<span>
The view was made after considering several factors that might influence the intellectual performance of the test takers. Including, anxiety that they face during the exam, the mistakes that they made from being timed, the luck that have when they're just guessing the answer, etc.
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Answer:
National Benchmark Tests
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B. Road
Reason: it’s kinda common sense
When the primary caregiver is inconsistent and has personal problems that impede her or his ability to be a good parent, a child is likely to end up with an <u>anxious-ambivalent </u>attachment style.
Early childhood is when anxious attachment, also known as ambivalent attachment in children, develops. Most frequently, poor and inconsistent parenting is to blame for nervous attachment. Common symptoms of this attachment type include low self-esteem, intense fear of rejection or abandonment, and clinginess in relationships.
A child with an ambivalent attachment style could "up-regulate" their behavior in an effort to maintain their closeness to their parent. When a child is removed from their caretaker, this could result in them acting upset, irate, and even throwing a temper tantrum.
To learn more about anxious-ambivalent attachment style, click
brainly.com/question/15012227
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Histrionic personality trait
this is a cluster B personality disorder that makes a person develop emotional liability, submissive thus easily influenced by others, and moderate hostility emanating from shallow and rapid emotional changes.