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slavikrds [6]
3 years ago
12

Why did Congress call for the Philadelphia Convention? View keyboard shortcuts Edit View Insert Format Tools Table 12pt Paragrap

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Social Studies
1 answer:
Mumz [18]3 years ago
3 0
Stimulated by severe economic troubles, which produced radical political movements such as Shays's Rebellion, and urged on by a demand for a stronger central government, the convention met in the Pennsylvania State
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1. What is an example of Bronfenbrenner's theory and how it operates in your own life?
Rina8888 [55]

Answer:

Bronfenbrenner's theory describes<u> an ecosystem on which every human being develops and grows</u>.  

As a child, a person is involved with his/her family, school, friends, teammates, etc.  But also, there is a certain relationship with those elements affecting his/her parents, teachers, friend's families.  Those elements help a child to grow, but also, those relationships change in time.  And that evolution also affects a child.  

Explanation:

Elements of the ecosystem:

The ecological system is composed of the following elements:

  1. <em>Child</em>:  It is the central point of the system.
  2. The <em>Microsystem</em> is everything close to daily life.  This includes family, school, teammates, sports.
  3. The <em>Mesosystem</em> describes how each one of the elements of the Microsystem interacts between them.  For example, home and school, school and friends, friends and sports teams.
  4. The <em>Exosystem</em> refers to all those elements not directly related to the child, but have an impact on them.   For example, how is the situation on the teacher's home and family?  How is the mother's job situation?
  5. The <em>Chronosystem</em> describes how all the elements on the previous stages change through time, and how this affects a child's development.

Example:

A child was born in a single-parent home, receives lots of love, but the child is under the care of a grandmother. The parent is under an unstable work environment, the teacher is going through a divorce, and the extended family is in another country.  

Eventually, in time, the parent gets married, the grandmother dies, the teacher was able to save the marriage, but also the parent's job situation improves and now can spend more time at home.  One uncle moves to the same country bringing the child's cousins with him.    

All those present situations, but also their future evolution, mark a child and help to his/her development, socially and emotionally speaking.

3 0
3 years ago
What are a few good things Francisco Pizarro did?
Sophie [7]
-Colonize the Incan Empire
-Bring Spanish culture to South America
-Help speed up the colonization process in South America
-created the first viceroy in South America, the viceroy of New Castile

That is if you consider this good of course
3 0
3 years ago
Chapter 3: How Cah We<br> How does Central Provident Funds (CPF) benefit society?
GrogVix [38]

In recent years, policymakers around the world have been attracted to the concept of integrating a consideration of assets into policy efforts aimed at securing and enhancing social welfare. The theory behind asset-based welfare policy suggests that while income facilitates immediate consumption, social development over the long-term occurs primarily through asset accumulation and investment (Sherraden, 1988, 1991). Assets may not only provide individuals with the ability to exert control over resources that can increase their financial security, they might also orient owners to future aspirations and be linked with positive economic, psychological, and social effects. To explore policy efforts consistent with this theory, Sherraden (1991) proposed the establishment of life-long asset accounts for each individual, preferably for newborns, as a vehicle to implement asset-based welfare policies. He further suggests that asset-based policy should be inclusive, progressive, and built around a single integrative and coherent framework (2003a).The experience of Singapore provides an instructive case study for the potential of this approach. This affluent city-state in Southeast Asia has developed an innovative and comprehensive set of policies that employs an asset-based approach to social welfare (Asher & Nandy, 2006). At the center of these efforts is Singapore's Central Provident Fund (CPF). The CPF has gained international recognition as a particular model for meeting social policy objectives (Hateley & Tan, 2003). As one of the key pillars of Singapore's social safety net (Central Provident Fund Board, 2007b), the CPF seeks to facilitate retirement security while minimizing welfare transfer payments in a manner consistent with a national philosophy of self reliance (Central Provident Fund Board, n.d.-e).

While Singapore became independent in 1965, the CPF was originally established by the British colonial government in 1955 as a compulsory defined-contribution savings scheme. It was designed to provide financial security for workers after retirement or when they were no longer able to work (Asher, 1991). However, over the years, the CPF has been used to accelerate national economic growth (Central Provident Fund Board, n.d.-e) and has since evolved into a comprehensive social security savings plan with various pre-retirement uses such as financing healthcare, post-secondary education, home ownership, and other asset enhancement investments. Furthermore, the CPF is an integral part of the continuum of asset-based policies in Singapore that extend throughout the life course (Loke & Sherraden, 2009). Policies such as the Children Development Accounts (CDAs) that target children from birth to age six, the Edusave Scheme that benefits school-going children, and the Post-Secondary Education Accounts (PSEAs) are fully integrated with the infrastructure of the CPF. Unused balances in the CDAs and the Edusave Accounts are rolled-over to the PSEAs, which in turn transfers its unused balances to the CPF. With a portfolio of continuous managed investment, the CPF has become a life-long provision (Aw & Low, 1996).

There is much to be learned from the Singapore and CPF experience. Especially for other countries considering how to organize social policy efforts to support savings, promote asset-based welfare, and design a lifelong and multi-purpose yet coherent system. This paper will present an overview of CPF, describe how distributions from the fund support a range of policy objectives throughout the life course, and then discuss implications of these findings for national policy efforts in other countries, such as the United States.

7 0
3 years ago
While watching television, Jason comes across an advertisement on a new soft drink brand. This advertisement reminds him that he
andreev551 [17]

This question is missing the options. I've found the complete question online. It is a follows:

While watching television, Jason comes across an advertisement on a new soft drink brand. This advertisement  reminds him that he is thirsty and wants to buy a beverage. In the context of reinforcement theory, the advertisement

serves as a(n) _____.

a. orienting reflex

b. stimulus

c. heuristic

d. cognitive map

Answer:

In the context of reinforcement theory, the advertisement  serves as a(n) b. stimulus .

Explanation:

In reinforcement theory, a stimulus is any external event that leads to a change in behavior, a response. Stimuli can actually be used to condition certain desired behaviors in animals and people by being paired up in ways that lead to specific responses. In the case described in the passage, Jason was led to feel the urge to buy a beverage because of the ad. Jason's behavior was a response to the ad, which means the ad itself is a stimulus.

3 0
3 years ago
According to Marx what are the main characteristics of communism
Licemer1 [7]
According to Karl Marx, the founder of communism, here are its main or defining characteristics (there are four of them):

Class Struggle,
Ending the Private Ownership of Property and means of Production,
Communism through Socialism, and
Marxist-Leninist Communism.

Hopefully my answer has come to your help.


4 0
3 years ago
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