From the view point of the Tortoise
Well every body knows that us the tortoise are slow so one day a hare and let me just say he is a fast creature wanted to race me but alot of folks dont know that tortoises are smart. So I came up with a plan and got some help from my friends and family. So while the hare that he had won the race and was ahead of me he took a nap but he was not aware of my plan.I won that race I guess that teaches that prideful little hare lesson.
Answer:
The answer is independent
Explanation:
im pretty sure its that.
Answer:
In my opinion, the largest difference the current generation of children has as compared to past generations is the influence of the internet. No generation has ever before been bombarded with information and social pressures as they are today. No generation of children has ever before carried phones in their pockets, constantly attached to.
Children and adolescents have much less free, unstructured, unsupervised time than their predecessors did. Parents are putting their kids much more into adult-structured, adult-supervised activities than they did in the past. The geographical range of childhood and youth has contracted over time.
"It is a sin to kill a mockingbird" in other words, picking on people who are helpless and don't do harm is a terrible thing. In the novel it is referencing, Boo Radely and Tom Robinson. Also represents the racial injustice in the South.
With kids ages 8 to 18 spending on average 44.5 hours per week in front of screens, parents are increasingly concerned that compulsive internet usage is robbing them of real world experiences. Nearly 23% of youth report that they feel "addicted to video games" (31% of males, 13% of females.) These are the results of a study of 1,178 U.S. children and teens (ages 8 to 18) conducted by Harris Interactive (2007) that documents a national prevalence rate of pathological video game use.
Dr. Douglas Gentile, Director of the Media Research Lab at Iowa State University reports, "Almost one out of every ten youth gamers shows enough symptoms of damage to their school, family, and psychological functioning to merit serious concern."