Questions
POLITICS- What are the stages, which together allow Congress to remove a President from office? For...

POLITICS- What are the stages, which together allow Congress to remove a President from office? For which offenses may this process be initiated and how do the roles of the two houses of Congress differ? YOU MUST PROVIDE EXAMPLES TO SUPPORT YOUR ANSWER

In: Psychology

How was Frey and Rez' control theory (loss of control, cognitive patterns and ways to regain...

How was Frey and Rez' control theory (loss of control, cognitive patterns and ways to regain control) used as an explanation for the conditions necessary lead to the Holo-caust? Explain and provide examples.

In: Psychology

Write a short story where an anthropologist displayed cultural relativism. Feel free to be creative. Your...

Write a short story where an anthropologist displayed cultural relativism. Feel free to be creative. Your post must be at least 3 sentences. and also Write a short story where an anthropologist displayed ethnocentrism. Feel free to be creative

In: Psychology

IS THE INCOMPETENCY TO STAND TRIAL A VALID ARGUMENT FOR THE DEFENSE TO PRODUCE? EXPLAIN YOUR...

IS THE INCOMPETENCY TO STAND TRIAL A VALID ARGUMENT FOR THE DEFENSE TO PRODUCE? EXPLAIN YOUR POSITION.

In: Psychology

The Baroque period gave rise to 2 new large scale vocal genres which many consider to...

The Baroque period gave rise to 2 new large scale vocal genres which many consider to be polar reflections of each other: Opera (based on a mythological or historical story) and Oratorio (based on a sacred story or scripture text). We will be discussing these at the beginning of class on Thursday and I'll want you to weigh in on the similarities and differences of each genre.

Watch these excerpts and try to determine what kinds of things the two genres have in common and what things are different. Consider setting, topic, musical aspects such as texture, instrumentation, and voice types as well as other performing considerations such as acting, costumes, dancing, use of musical scores or not, performance locations, etc...

Opera Ensemble or Chorus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tf16_lGs7Ss

Oratorio Ensemble or Chorus

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IUZEtVbJT5c

In: Psychology

Murder rates are going up in some major cities , while New York City and Oakland...

Murder rates are going up in some major cities , while New York City and Oakland are dropping. To what attribute the rise in violent crime and reason why others are falling?

In: Psychology

I need more than just one question answered, please... 1. Which component of speech acts is...

I need more than just one question answered, please...

1.

Which component of speech acts is the most difficult to determine?

a. the linguistic form
b. the context of the message
c. the effect on the listener
d. the intent of the message

2.

If you tell a friend about a movie you watched the previous night, you would be engaging in a

a. speech act.
b. social register.
c. narrative.
d. conversation.

3.

According to Bates, if a child cries and reaches for an object but never looks at her mother during this process, then it would be classified as an example of the ________ phase of speech acts.

a. perlocutionary
b. paralocutionary
c. locutionary
d. illocutionary

4.

What is the relationship between a child's single word utterances and the ability to convey intent?

a. Up to nine meaningful functions have been reported with the aid of extralinguistic behavior.
b. Communication function that appear here, later disappear until they are able to use linguistic forms to produce them.
c. In this stage the child's communication functions are conveyed by the words selected.
d. No meaningful communication functions are possible until the two-word stage.

5.

You believe that preschool children have problems conversing because they lack the requisite cognitive abilities to be able to take the point of view of another. This view fits within the framework of

a. developmental language.
b. Piaget's collective monologue.
c. language play.
d. private speech.

6.

A child is able to put together a model with the aid of an adult. Later he is able to do it alone by having internalized the direction given by the adult. This is a view of private speech that fits with

a. Piaget.
b. Bandura.
c. Skinner.
d. Vygosky.

7.

A child's earliest attempts to repair miscommunication

a. involve the preverbal repetition or revision of signals or gestures.
b. involves the revision of the verbal message.
c. involves the repetition of the verbal message.
d. are seen in the form of repeated babbles.

8.

What have researchers found when study the development of children's ability to sustain conversations?

a. most of their early conversational utterances are contingent
b. that staying on topic is easier than starting a new topic
c. most children's speech was adjacent (occurring after an adult utterance)
d. most of their early utterances are nonadjacent (without a prior adult utterance)

9.

If a child is asked about a birthday party she attended and tells about it by including things that did occur but other things that are typically part of a birthday party but did not happen in this case, then this

a. illustrates she is in the first phase of narrative development.
b. means she is using general event knowledge to produce it.
c. indicates she is not following the typical course of narrative development.

10.

Which statement about narrative development is true?

a. young children are better at fictional than personal narratives.
b. 5 year olds are still dependent on adults for aid in telling narratives.
c. Narratives improve during school years due to development of linguistic devices that improve temporal order.
d. Narrative development is essentially complete by 4 to 5 years of age.

11.

Researchers studying the development of request forms have found that children in the telegraphic speech stage

a. can only produce more than one form if they combine speech with gestures.
b. can form a request in more than one way.
c. require a parental scaffold to make a request.
d. are unable to use different request forms due to a lack of referential communication skills.

12.

How does the child-directed speech of children differ from that of adult's child-directed speech?

a. children ask less questions than adults
b. children are generally more attuned to the younger child
c. children use less attention-getting devices
d. children talk more to the child than adults

13.

You are examining the speech of a preschooler and find it to be very assertive and demanding in it conversation style. Furthermore, the child tends to interrupt others often and uses lots of imperatives. From this information you would guess the child

a. is a middle or last born child in the family.
b. is from a broken home.
c. is a boy.
d. is from a higher SES.

14.

Which statement regarding influences on communicative function is accurate?

a. Culturally-based differences play a large role in the style of language use.
b. The differences in functions can be accounted by biological factors and differences.
c. Lower SES children ask more questions than higher SES children.
d. It is assumed to have little to do with biologically based factors.

15.

How are Piaget's views of the communicative abilities of preschoolers supported by research on communicative development?

a. His concept of egocentric speech provides an accurate description of the behavior found throughout preschool development of communication.
b. His views are not supported by research in this area throughout the preschool period.
c. His emphasis on the role of experience on communicative development is not supported by the research.
d. His views are supported up until about the age of three.

In: Psychology

Marcella spoke of how her grandmother described her. “According to my grandmother, I was a difficult...

Marcella spoke of how her grandmother described her. “According to my grandmother, I was a difficult baby. I never could make up my mind. When she would hold me I would fight her and when she left me alone I would scream and cry. Grandma said that’s why my mother gave me up. Because I was too clingy and fussy and hard to deal with.”

Based on this statement please respond to the following:

What does this information tell you about the Marcella’s socioemotional development? What do her infant behaviors tell you about her attachment style? What inferences might you make about Marcella’s grandmother’s and perhaps her mother’s caregiving style?

In: Psychology

I have this research question: What facts influence foreign student feelings of well being and anxiety...

I have this research question: What facts influence foreign student feelings of well being and anxiety about themselves and their families?

I need to identify the subject, dependent and independent variable.

What research method I should use?

In: Psychology

The risk-benefit calculation for any drug assumes a correct diagnosis of the disorder. Many investigators and...

The risk-benefit calculation for any drug assumes a correct diagnosis of the disorder. Many investigators and clinicians feel the current epidemic of child psychiatric disorders is largely due to inappropriate diagnosis. Evaluate the risk and benefits of using psychoactive drugs in children correctly diagnosed with a disorder versus those incorrectly diagnosed with a disorder. Consider the risks and benefits of not treating (drug treatment) a child because he or she is not correctly diagnosed with a disorder. In your evaluation summarize the natural course of the disorder, the drug action on the neurotransmitter systems in question, and the likelihood of short-term, long-term, and permanent positive and negative effects of drug treatment. Make sure to take into account the ethical dimension of this risk-benefit calculation.

In: Psychology

How many words for pain can you think of? What are they? What is the best...

How many words for pain can you think of? What are they? What is the best way to word a question about pain that doesn’t require just a “yes/no” response? Would you use different terminology based on a person’s culture and background, why?

In: Psychology

In 150 words describe what are some of today's cultural trends that inform our views of...

In 150 words describe what are some of today's cultural trends that inform our views of sexuality?

In: Psychology

What is the future of religious or faith-based terrorism? Do you believe religion will continue to...

What is the future of religious or faith-based terrorism? Do you believe religion will continue to be a driving force in other parts of the world resulting in terrorist attacks against the West? What other factors are at play with these terrorist groups who claim religion as their cause?

In: Psychology

What is reasoning by analogy? How are analogies evaluated? Please provide an example.

What is reasoning by analogy? How are analogies evaluated? Please provide an example.

In: Psychology

- It is often easier to see manifestations of women’s oppression in cultures other than our...

- It is often easier to see manifestations of women’s oppression in cultures other than our own, since they don’t seem “natural” to us. However, as we have seen in class, for every issue we have located in “other cultures” we can find an analogous manifestation in the culture(s) of the United States that reveals a shared rootedness in patriarchal society. Offer and explain U.S. analogues to three of the following: stark division of gender roles, son preference, child marriage, and control of women’s sexuality.

-Discuss the origins of human rights discourse and the extent to which it has been applied (or not) to women’s issues we have discussed in class. Provide examples of how women’s lives (stories, issues, voices, ideas) continue to be "silenced" around the world.

- Family has been described as a “mythical haven.” Even though many of us find love and support among and within our families, statistically, it can be a dangerous place for women around the globe and in the U.S. How exactly is it “dangerous” in the context of women’s human rights? Why is it difficult to make motherhood, marriage and family “safe spaces” for women?

In: Psychology