Barney, an admissions officer, is interviewing a college applicant about whom he has very high positive expectations. Barney is
outgoing and cheerful during the interview, spends considerable time recruiting the applicant, and asks the applicant questions that solicit positive information. As a result, Barney is pleased with the applicant’s performance and admits her to the school. This interview process demonstrates an example of
Self-fulfilling prophecy is a prediction that causes itself to be true due to the behavior which involves the act of predicting it by the believer.
It is also based on the ability of a person usually an interviewer to make evaluation of an individual by pre-noticing and interpreting outcomes before actually relating with the individual.
Barney already had the original assumption about the applicant validated and the interview confirmed it.
Self-fulfilling prophecy or effects is a phenomena which is based on abiliry of a person usually an intervierwer to make evaluation of an individual by pre-noticing and interptreting outcomes before actually relating with the individual. Such evaluation tends to manifests in the individual's life because it has been thought. For example,Barney, the admissions officer assumes that a certain applicant will perform well Barney might give that student more attention by asking the applicant questions that solicit positive information, resulting in good performance by the student. Barney, in turn, will have the original assumption about the applicant validated.
filibustering is simply an a formal and public act or way of preventing a bill to be voted on in the senate debate. It usually entails an active serving senator taking the floor for debate and talks as long as he can, for, as long as a senator has the floor, the bill in question cannot be voted on.
It is only used in the senate due to the fact that the senate does not share a time limit on how long the bill can be debated on.
Scarcity dictates that economic decisions must be made regularly in order to manage the availability of resources to meet human needs. Some examples of scarcity include: The gasoline shortage in the 1970's. ... Coal is used to create energy; the limited amount of this resource that can be mined is an example of scarcity.