Answer:
Option B = a conflict between an individual role and group goals.
Explanation:
In the question above we can see that one out of the group members( Bert) make fun of almost everything and at first the other members in the group look at Bert as a someone that is so funny but later they are do not love his CONSTANT jokes and unseriousness anymore.
The reason the other group members became unhappy with Bert is because Bert is not abiding with the group goals. Bert role in the group was never to be unserious but that is what he is doing so there will surely be a Conflict between Bert roles in the group and the group goals. Work is work, there is no harm in little fun though, but work is always work that is the reason they brought the group together in the first place.
I believe the answer is: c. stereotypes
Stereotypes refers to the act of Generalizing all members of a social group with a certain characteristics ( example : Asians are bad at driving, women can't do math, etc) .
To avoid stereotyping, we had to develop the awareness that human beings are unique regardless the physical and cultural similarties that may exist in a certain social group.
Answer:
We have to find the author, time, intended audience, main idea, context, bias, and accuracy of the text.
Author - a candidate for government office.
Time - government election campaign.
Intended audience - potential voters.
Main idea - the candidate is the only one who can be trusted with taxpayer money, and this is crucial because taxpayer money is being wasted.
Context - Government intervention does more harm than good: raising taxes on successful businesses to fund failing public schools only has the effect of both reducing wealth creation, and educating children poorly.
Bias - the candidate has anti-goverment bias.
Accuracy - the candidate does not provide evidence to back his claims in the speech, thus, the accuracy of it cannot be properly gauged.
Answer:
Explanation:
En geografía, un huso horario es cada una de las 24 áreas en que se divide la Tierra, por un meridiano y en las que rige por convención el mismo horario.1 Se llaman así porque el área demarcada tiene la forma de un huso de hilar, centrado en el meridiano de una longitud que es un múltiplo de 15°. Anteriormente, se usaba el meridiano tiempo solar verdadero, con lo que la diferencia entre una ciudad y otra era de unas pocas horas, en el caso de que las ciudades comparadas no se encontraran sobre un mismo meridiano. El empleo de los husos horarios corrigió el problema parcialmente, cuando los relojes de una región suenan al mismo tiempo solar medio.
Todos los husos horarios se definen en relación con el denominado tiempo universal coordinado (UTC), huso horario centrado sobre el meridiano de Greenwich (también conocido como meridiano cero), que recibe ese nombre por pasar por el Real Observatorio de Greenwich, en el Gran Londres.[cita requerida]
Puesto que la Tierra gira de oeste a este, al pasar de un huso horario a otro en dirección este, hay que sumar una hora. Por el contrario, al pasar de este a oeste hay que restar una hora. El meridiano de 180°, conocido como línea internacional de cambio de fecha, marca el cambio de día