Answer:
Carlos is attending a charter school.
Explanation:
Charter schools are a model of <u>public school</u> (in a way that it doesn’t charge tuition and it’s open to all students) that receives government fundding, but at the same time operates independently, which makes this model adopts the <u>logistics of private management</u>, like in longer work hours for teacher (labor issues), for example, and also have loose regulations regarding public accountability. So it's a combination of both styles.
Answer: Cannon-Bard
Explanation: Unlike some other theories that deal with the occurrence of emotions and physiological changes in the body, according to this theory, physiological changes in the body and the occurrence of emotions occur <em>at the same time</em>. So a physiological change, such as a pounding of the heart in this case, and a sense of excitement came at the same time due to an external event, in this case when Jim approached Alice.
The reason for this claim is that the physiological changes in the body and the feeling of emotion are separate, i.e independent from each other and located in different parts of the brain, so they can simultaneously react to a stimulus. Physiological changes do not have to occur first, and only then emotions, which would be the case if they were not separate, that is, they were not independent.
The correct answers are <span>delusion; despite clear contradictory evidence.
Answer 1: A delusion is an erroneous or unfounded belief that a person is convinced of. Delusions are beliefs that are usually fixed and firm in a person's mind. An example of a delusion is strongly believing and being convinced that someone is "out to get you" because of far-fetched scenarios and beliefs you have conjured up in your imagination (you arrived at this belief without any external evidence).
Answer 2: Another aspect of delusions is that they are firmly held despite </span><span>clear contradictory evidence. Let's consider the previous example again: You believe that someone is out to get you and you hold this belief with strong conviction even when there is no evidence supporting it. For instance the person you feel threatened by has not behaved or acted in any way to suggest that they might harm or hurt you.However, despite this, you still believe that he or she is out to get you.
In this way, </span><span>a delusion is an erroneous belief that is fixed and firmly held despite clear contradictory evidence. </span>
<span>Alfred Adler might have said that her striving for achievement resulted from her earlier feelings of inferiority (these feelings are the comments from her teacher).</span>
When presented with tasks like the pendulum problem, in contrast to adolescents, children in the <u>preadolescence stage</u> are not good at systematically testing all of the factors; they tend to report whatever answer seems to be correct after conduction only a few tests.
<u>Explanation: </u>
At the preadolescence stage or age group, whenever we assign any pendulum problem or any experiment to them, they won’t follow the proper procedure. As compared to the adolescents, children in the preadolescence stage are not that good to do the testing systematically.
Preadolescence the age of early adolescence and children at this age group are very young to do any test or activities systematically and properly. They don’t have much understanding of the depth concepts and won’t follow each and every guideline.