Answer: A. Institutional
Explanation: Kegan proposed that five or more stages are passed through as children grow or transcend into adulthood, the stages include; The INCOPORATIVE, IMPULSIVE, IMPERIAL, INTERPERSONAL and INSTITUTIONAL STAGE. with the incorporate stage being the earliest and the institutional stage being the last stage discussed by Kegan. Kegan described the institutional stage as the point or time when a child starts to develop behavioral principles, values, ideas, make commitments and nurture principles guiding their actions. At this point an individual starts to define and commit personalized attributes, behavior and personal set standard. This is as pointed out in the scenario above where Zach is said to have be one too strident in his opinion. This means that Zach now has committed to his own personalized value and guiding principle.
Answer:True
Explanation:The theme in a story refers to the story's underlying message which isn't plainly stated but can be inferred as the reader get to understand the whole story as they read it . It refers to what the author wanted to convey in his or her writing, what beliefs or ideas the writer had in mind as they wrote the story or poem. This is usually a universally shared idea.
I believe the answer is material goods.
Material goods refers to the type of goods that have a physical form.
Example: Land, House, Jewelries, Cars, Clothes, Modern hardwares, etc. In wealthy countries, people use these material goods to show case their status within the society.
Karl Lashley was searching for the engram or the memory trace,
a theoretical vehicle by which our memories would be physically stored in the brain,
from 1929 to 1950. He believed that memory was stored in the particular area of
the brain but instead through his experiments concluded that the memories were
scatted, distributed across the brain. Today it is agreed that memories are
distributed across the brain but the actual method of their storage is still debated and unknown.
Hi,
The answer to your question is "Equity Theory"