Evidence suggests that contextual intelligence is the most useful measure for comparing and predicting adult success. The term contextual intelligence is used in psychology to denote the ability to understand the limits of our knowledge and to adapt that knowledge to an environment and situations. It defines <span>how skilled an individual is at using what he/she knows and what is making out of it. </span>
Answer:
True
Explanation:
Wealth, power and prestige are unequally distributed among people around the world. As a result, individuals in societies around the world can be easily grouped according to how much wealth, power and prestige that they possess.
Such grouping known as Global Stratification classifies individuals around the world according to their different lifestyle and life chances due to unequal distribution of wealth, power and prestige. Such classification draws attention to the inequalities between people in different countries of the world.
In middle adulthood, a person is most likely to lose an inch in height.
This happens because as we grow older, our bone density lessens (in the spinal column) which results to a collapsed vertebra. Another reason that people lose around an inch in height during middle adulthood is because joint cartilage in adults get exhausted.
Truth or dare is a game that 2 or more people play.