Young women in the 1950s and early 1960s were __________.
A. under great pressure to find a husband
B. under severe pressure to go to college
C. under significant pressure to decide on a career
D. under pressure to stay in school
Answer: A
You might also like to view...
Which of the following uses a quasi-experimental design? a. A researcher compares the effects of caffeine on sleep by assigning subjects randomly into one of 3 treatment groups (5, 10 or 20 mg. doses of caffeine) and recording EEGs of each subjectthroughout the night
b. To see whether the effectiveness of a new method of reading instruction is different for bilingual children vs. children who speak only English, 40 Bilingual and 40 English-Speaking children aretaught using the bilingual method for one semester and reading scores for the 2 groups arecompared. c. A clinical psychologist tests the relative effectiveness of two forms of therapy for treatment of panic attacks by recruiting 20 people diagnosed with panic attacks and treating half with one formof therapy and half with the other form of therapy for the same amount of time. d. In a study of picture memory, 40 subjects are shown 1000 photographs under standard viewing conditions and recognition of the pictures is tested 1 week, 2 weeks, 4 weeks, and 8 weeks later.
A barefoot child steps on a bee, then jerks his or her foot back in response to the sting. This response has likely involved all parts of the nervous system EXCEPT
a. the brain. b. the spinal cord. c. motor neurons. d. connector neurons.
The participants selected to take part in an experiment are called the __________ and must represent those to whom the results will be generalized
Fill in the blank(s) with correct word
One type of mental representation is the concept. How do concepts allow us to relate to the world around us in a manageable way?
Create an example to show what a person's experience in a novel situation could be like if humans didn't organize the world based on concepts. What will be an ideal response?