Over its sixty-year lifetime, the B-52’s avionics, flight hardware, and weapons systems have been upgraded. In 2006, the fleet received a “mid-life” upgrade to its avionics, adding modern processors and navigation systems. In 2014, the Air Force gave the BUFFS their first new communications system since the 1960s, including full-color LCDs to replace the old cathode ray tube screens. <span>On the weapons front, the airplanes are due to receive weapons-bay upgrades, enabling them to hold more smart bombs, and radar enhancements, potentially including the Active Electronically Scanned Array Systems technology. Used by fighter jets like the F-22 Raptor, the digital radar system is vastly more precise and offers higher resolution than conventional radar dishes. </span>
In my opinion, it could create growth knowing they are all the same ability and may be able to help each other to an extent. But, on the other hand, keeping students with similar abilities doesn’t allow growth because they can’t learn anything to get better. That’s why you should always have a mix of ability levels because maybe one student could teach another student some helpful information.
I think that the answer it the wind.