1. The A biological parent is a parent who has conceived biological mother or biological father rather than adopted a child and whose genes are therefore transmitted to the child. An adoptive parent a person assumes the parenting of another, usually a child, from that person's biological or legal parents and, in so doing, permanently transfers all rights and responsibilities, along with affiliation, from the biological parents or parents. A foster parent is basically once a child or sibling group is placed in your home, a new journey begins that can last anywhere from overnight to several months. After the immediate safety of the child has been addressed, the next priority is reunifying child with their birth family
2. . . . I think parents need to provide love, support, guidance, education and fun as well as the basic needs of a safe home, food, clothing and medical care. Until there of age to do all these thing for themselves.
3. Going on field trips hair nails etc., phone bill things like that
4. Nurturing children, building a loving and caring relationship is not always easy. With patience and love you can do it! Every child needs parents who can notice and appreciate their special qualities. When siblings are involved, trying to treat each equally usually backfires and undermines children's individuality. Critical thinking questions
1. Think a bad parent is someone that doesn’t teach their children anything, and that act like they make no mistakes. I mean by that if I don't teach my child or show my child love, kindness, caring compassion, responsivity, and ways to deal with anger or sadness, education, trust, honesty act. The parent that isn't there to share and teach right from wrong, because they are too busy to know what is going on in their child’s life. The parents that are greedy and run around in high dollar clothes while their kids are dressed in rags really bug me to. Good parenting basic role of a parent is someone who brings up their children
Review Questions What is physical evidence? Provide at least three examples in your answer. Physical evidence can be anything that establishes a crime had happened, and anything that links to the crime or criminal – it could be something as simple as a bloody knife, or something nearly as invisible as a mere fingerprint, and fibers. Describe three ways that a crime scene can be recorded. What is a benefit of each? Photography - before anything is moved the crime scene is photographed, they are…
Review Questions 1. Popular Music is referred to Music which is widely bewitching to the large audience. It is also referred to the music created since industrialization was in the mid-1800s. 2. One theme of pop music typically used in the lyrics is dancing or movements to the song. Themes like love and relationships are often used as the centre of the lyrics. Almost all pop music has to do with love or dancing. For example the song "can't help falling in love" by Elvis Presley, the theme…
REVIEW QUESTIONS 1. What are the differences between being a biological parent, an adoptive parent, and a foster parent? -The differences between a biological, adoptive, and foster parent are that a biological parent means you are the natural birth parents of the child. The father produced the sperm cell and the mother produced the egg cell. And adoptive parent means you signed papers to acquire a child not biologically yours. And a foster parents means you take care of a group of children until…
ANALYZING THE ENVIRONMENT / chapter 2 1. What different levels of planning can organizations utilize? corporate, business, and functional. The number of levels may vary. However, if a company has multiple planning levels, the plans must be consistent, and all must help achieve the overall goals of the corporation. 2. Why is competition important to maintain in an industry? Competition insures the consumer gets the best product at the best price 3. Name and explain the factors that are part of…
Chapter 3 REVIEW QUESTIONS 3-1 Balance Sheet: Provides a snapshot of the firm’s financial position at a specific point in time, presenting its asset holdings, liabilities, and owner-supplied capital Income Statement: Indicates the amount of profit generated by a firm over a given period of time, often 1 year. Statement of Cash Flows: A financial statement that shows how changes in balance sheet accounts and income affect cash and cash equivalents, and breaks the analysis down to operating…
Chapter 6 review questions-Abhinav Anand 1. Define and explain the process of Kerberos A: Kerberos is a network authentication protocol. It is designed to provide strong authentication for client/server applications by using secret-key cryptography. It has the following characteristics: It is secure; it never sends a password unless it is encrypted. 2. Identify two written password policies that you find to be the most important. Explain why you chose those two. A: Passwords should be unique and…
Arielle Leary Chapter 2 Review Questions. 1. It evaluates the risk factors and the health consequences for the individual and can be instrumental in helping to develop new choices and motivate individuals to alter their behaviors for a healthier life style. 2. Behavior Modification- educational programs and incentive directed at high risk populations to alter behaviors that may contribute to disease, disability or death. Cigarette smoking is an example of a needed behavior modification program…
Chapter 3 Review Questions: Business Ethics and Social Responsibility 1. Relative ethics is the idea that each person's ethical standard is unique to themselves as a result of: past experiences, family/peer groups, etc, while universal ethical standards are standards meant to apply to every single person in a wide range of circumstances. Yes, ethics should be a relative unique to persons within smaller everyday instances, but there should also be universal standards for ethics in place, i.e., the…
In addition to reading the chapter, pick ten people who were important in the chapter and write short definitions. In addition, answer the “Review Questions” at the end of the chapter. 1. Karl Marx (1818-1883): economist, sociologist and philosopher; founder of Marxism; author of Das Kapital (translation: Capital; vol. 1, 1867) co-author of The Communist Manifesto and other pro-socialist and pro-communist texts. 2. George Stephenson (1781-1848): inventor of the locomotive. 3. William Lovett (1800-1877):…
In addition to reading the chapter, pick ten people who were important in the chapter and write short definitions. In addition, answer the "Review Questions" at the end of the chapter. 1. Henry Bessemer (1830-1898): English inventor whose steelmaking process established the town of Sheffield as a major manufacturing centre. 2. Henry Ford (1863-1947): American industrialist; founder of the Ford Motor Company; sponsor of the development of the assembly line technique of mass production. 3. W. H. Smith…