Answer:The answer is (c)
Simple yes/no question s is not a quality of a productive discussion.
Explanation:Productive discussion is one which motivates the students and create opportunities for them to participate ,practice and sharpen their various skills.Large number of factors are taken into consideration while planning a discussion .But simple yes/no question cannot make our discussion productive.We can start a discussion with yes/no questions only if any particular question has follow question that requires explanation.
Otherwise simple yes /no question will become discussion stopper.it will badly influence the discussion.It makes the discussion monotonous.Listeners loose their interest.
Discussion provides an opportunity to students to explore new things.A detailed discussion will enable students to clear their doubts and get answers for their queries ,but if we limit our discussion to simple yes/no question then it will limit the ability of students to learn anything new from that discussion.Their knowledge will remain stable and it will not enhance .There will be no benefit of that discussion.
Answer:
#5
Explanation:
The people may get to take over what the Apache tribe had or they could earn lots of money
German Jews were attacked, synagogues burnt, Jewish business men killed on the event popularly known as Keistalinacht. Following this, thousands of Jewish men were put in cocnentration camps.
Explanation:
Kristallnacht or the Night of the Broken Glass was the incident in Germany after which the Jews community were subjected to systemic oppression and torture in concentration camps and else-where.
The attack was a reprisal against the assassination of Nazi German Diplomat by Polish Jew. Following this, German Nazi party along with civilians conducted mass vandalization of Jewish homes, business establishments, schools, synagogues, a library which accounted for around 100 Jewish deaths. The incident was widely reported in global media.
Post the incident, Jews were isolated and the Nazi party went out of turn to tackle to what they thought was the “Jewish problem”. More than 30 thousand Jewish men and women perished in these camps.
This was a prelude to the ultimate attempt of exterminating remaining Jews called as a holocaust.