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s2008m [1.1K]
3 years ago
10

SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO how are ya?

Social Studies
1 answer:
slava [35]3 years ago
3 0

Answer:

pretty good actually :) hope you're ok too

Explanation:

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True or false: The 5 themes of geography answer the what, why and where
meriva

Answer:

True

Explanation:

location, place, human-environment interaction, movement, and region

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3 years ago
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According to developmental psychologist K. Warner Schaie, the point reached by young adults in which intelligence is applied to
Dafna1 [17]

Answer:

a. achieving stage.  

Explanation:

Warner Schaie is a developmental German psychologist who has focused on the cognitive stages of people along their lifespan.

According to him, people go through different stages of cognitive development (since childhood and until they are old) along their life span.

The Achievement stage is the second stage of his theory and it takes place in young adulthood, according to Schaie during this stage the individual's primary cognitive tasks are to achieve personal goals in the long term future (starting a family, being successful in their careers, make contributions to society) by applying the intellectual skills that they learned when they were younger (adolescents).

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3 years ago
ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTION PLS WILL MARK BRAINLIEST
Galina-37 [17]

Answer:

Yes

Today’s grandparents may have fond memories of the “good old days,” but history tells us that adults have worried about their kids’ fascination with new-fangled entertainment and technology since the days of dime novels, radio, the first comic books and rock n’ roll.

“This whole idea that we even worry about what kids are doing is pretty much a 20th century thing,” said Katie Foss, a media studies professor at Middle Tennessee State University. But when it comes to screen time, she added, “all we are doing is reinventing the same concern we were having back in the ’50s.”

True, the anxieties these days seem particularly acute — as, of course, they always have. Smartphones have a highly customized, 24/7 presence in our lives that feeds parental fears of antisocial behavior and stranger danger.

What hasn’t changed, though, is a general parental dread of what kids are doing out of sight. In previous generations, this often meant kids wandering around on their own or sneaking out at night to drink. These days, it might mean hiding in their bedroom, chatting with strangers online.

Less than a century ago, the radio sparked similar fears.

“The radio seems to find parents more helpless than did the funnies, the automobile, the movies and other earlier invaders of the home, because it can not be locked out or the children locked in,” Sidonie Matsner Gruenberg, director of the Child Study Association of America, told The Washington Post in 1931. She added that the biggest worry radio gave parents was how it interfered with other interests — conversation, music practice, group games and reading.Explanation: In the early 1930s a group of mothers from Scarsdale, New York, pushed radio broadcasters to change programs they thought were too “overstimulating, frightening and emotionally overwhelming” for kids, said Margaret Cassidy, a media historian at Adelphi University in New York who authored a chronicle of American kids and media.

Called the Scarsdale Moms, their activism led the National Association of Broadcasters to come up with a code of ethics around children’s programming in which they pledged not to portray criminals as heroes and to refrain from glorifying greed, selfishness and disrespect for authority.

Then television burst into the public consciousness with unrivaled speed. By 1955, more than half of all U.S. homes had a black and white set, according to Mitchell Stephens, a media historian at New York University.

The hand-wringing started almost as quickly. A 1961 Stanford University study on 6,000 children, 2,000 parents and 100 teachers found that more than half of the kids studied watched “adult” programs such as Westerns, crime shows and shows that featured “emotional problems.” Researchers were aghast at the TV violence present even in children’s programming.

By the end of that decade, Congress had authorized $1 million (about $7 million today) to study the effects of TV violence, prompting “literally thousands of projects” in subsequent years, Cassidy said.

That eventually led the American Academy of Pediatrics to adopt, in 1984, its first recommendation that parents limit their kids’ exposure to technology. The medical association argued that television sent unrealistic messages around drugs and alcohol, could lead to obesity and might fuel violence. Fifteen years later, in 1999, it issued its now-infamous edict that kids under 2 should not watch any television at all.

6 0
3 years ago
A journey with a purpose is a(n)...
Finger [1]
The correct answer is letter D
5 0
3 years ago
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What was the central cause of the Cold War?
stiv31 [10]
Ultimately, the central cause of the Cold War between the United States and USSR, were what  made the <span>Soviet Union collapse due to the decline of communist ideology, thinking and politics, and the failure of the Soviet Soviet economy. The collapse or decline of the Soviet Russia would have happened even without the Prime Minister Mikeal Gorbachev. In the early </span>Cold War<span>, communism and the Soviet Union had a good deal of soft power and were a tru threat to the United States. but as time went on, their country became impoverished and could not grow economicall, politically or socially.</span>
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4 years ago
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