Answer:
Indigenous knowledge is the basis for local level decision-making in food security, human and animal health, education, NRM, and other vital economic and social activities. ... IK is based on empirical experience and is embedded in both biophysical and social contexts, and cannot easily be removed from them.
The answer would be: Shackled to their <span>seats
This allegory derives from Plato's opinion on how most people think about their intelligence.
According to plato, most people love to secluded themselves from other people on how we think our actual enlightment is, but the shackles indicates that we actually follow the same pattern like other people when we're believing that we're more enlighted than them</span>
Answer:
The correct answer is D. focus on the interaction between an individual and components of society
Explanation:
Social workers focus on the interaction between an individual and components of society
I think the answer is B because it says it in the passage on PLATO
Answer: (A)
Dr. Pulaski is likely to find that approximately three-quarters (76 percent) of the subjects will conform to the group's judgment on at least one critical trial.
Explanation:
Solomon Asch conducted an experiment to find out to what extent people conform to group pressure.
He set up the experiment to include a single participant and seven confederates in a group. (A confederate is an accomplice of a researcher who is placed intentionally within an experiment by the researcher, so he can manipulate the experiment in his favor).
Each confederate was to give the same wrong answer to a certain question asked, while the participant was to provide his answer last.
Asch then observed if the single participant would tailor his answer according to the wrong answers provided by the confederates, or would provide the accurate answer.
Asch found out that from 12 trials conducted, "75% (three-quarters) of participants conformed to wrong answers provided at least once", while 25% did not conform at all.
He also discovered that on average of the trials carried out, one-third of the participants went along with the incorrect answer provided by the confederates.
Asch had also set up a control experiment with only a single participant and no confederates.
From the control experiment, he realized that less than 1% provided the wrong answer to the question asked.