theory of the firm Crossword Puzzles
AP Bio Review 2021-06-01
Across
- movement of individuals between populations causing an exchange of alleles
- the amount of a population that a given environment can sustain
- substance that reduces the activity of an enzyme
- diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane
- a coding error in DNA
- When there is a higher water potential outside of then cell than inside
- When a cell has too much water inside and bursts
- species that has no natural predators in a population and whose population grows rapidly
- scientist that worked with pea plants
Down
- theory that mitochondria and chloroplasts originated as prokaryotic cells
- structure containing genetic material; humans have 46 of these
- proteins that promote RNA polymerase binding
- set of genes that are all regulated as a single unit
- scientist who discovered the theory of natural selection
- the process of cell growth and division
- one allele isn't dominant over the other; found in snapdragons
- Reaction that absorbs free energy
17 Clues: a coding error in DNA • Reaction that absorbs free energy • scientist that worked with pea plants • the process of cell growth and division • proteins that promote RNA polymerase binding • substance that reduces the activity of an enzyme • When a cell has too much water inside and bursts • set of genes that are all regulated as a single unit • ...
ECON 101 2022-08-04
Across
- A partnership that provides professional services
- A state of limited competition
- out money
- The quantity or amount needed or available
- Measure of the change in the aggregate quantity demanded of a good in relation to the price of the good
- Maximum legal price to be paid for a good
- Resources use to create goods or services
- Desire to acquire a good
- A valuable return
- The income a firm receives from the sale of a good
- The rate in increase of prices over a given period of time
- The study of individuals, households and firms
Down
- Minimum legal price to be paid on a good
- Type of short-term unemployment
- market structure characterized by a single seller
- When the quantity demanded is greater than the quantity supplied
- Goods produced in a country and sold to another
- A state in which market supply and demand balance each other
- Tax put on a class of imports or exports
- Bring goods into a country from abroad
- Unemployment from economic upturn and downturn
- Unemployment due to shifts in an economy
- Amount of money a lender receives for
- Amount that remains when a use or need is satisfied
- Part of economics concerned on a large scale
25 Clues: out money • A valuable return • Desire to acquire a good • A state of limited competition • Type of short-term unemployment • Amount of money a lender receives for • Bring goods into a country from abroad • Minimum legal price to be paid on a good • Tax put on a class of imports or exports • Unemployment due to shifts in an economy • Maximum legal price to be paid for a good • ...
Economics Crosswrod 2019-05-28
Across
- Demand / A decrease in government spending results in a decrease in _____.
- / general increase in prices over time
- / models strategic interactions of firms in oligopoly markets
- / tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes rises as income rises
- / excess burden caused from not being at the competitive market equilibrium
- / competition that has only one firm that sets prices
- / factor market in which there is a sole firm that has market power
- / an increase in money supply increases the quantity of investment demanded because of a decrease in ____.
- / a grant or contribution used to increase the supply of goods with positive externalities
Down
- / the period of time in which state of the economy declines
- / costs that are not affected by changes in output
- / when the interest rates in a country rise, the value of their ______ increases.
- / loss of funds for private investment caused by government borrowing
- / recurring fluctuations in economic activity consisting of recession and recovery and growth and decline
- / the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed
- / indirect costs included in economic profit
- / minimum price below which the product cannot be sold
- / when actions of a person have an impact on others
- / curve that shows increasing opportunity costs
- / C I G (X – M)
20 Clues: / C I G (X – M) • / general increase in prices over time • / indirect costs included in economic profit • / curve that shows increasing opportunity costs • / costs that are not affected by changes in output • / the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed • / when actions of a person have an impact on others • ...
Unit 3: Memory and Motivation 2026-01-12
Across
- theory: ...of needs; basic needs must be met before a person can experience personal growth.
- inattentive or shallow encoding of events
- misremember the time, place, person, or circumstance involved with a memory.
- changing of memories over time to be consistent with current beliefs or attitudes
- refers to factors of differing strength that energize, direct, or sustain behaviour.
- ...memory; manipulating information to keep it ready for use (ex: chunking)
- unwanted memories recur when they are not desired
- ...memories; a recollection of something (memory) that did not happen or recalling a distorted version of it.
- maintaining information
- transformation of sensory inout into neural code
- misleading information can affect memory of an event.
- anything that helps you access a memory
- accessing encoded info when needed
Down
- vivid memories like a “flash photo” capturing the moment you first learned surprising news.
- LT motivation: belief in one’s ability to succeed.
- theory:...arousal; the amount if excitement, stimulation, fright (arousal) depends on the individual.
- learning aids to help retrieval; (usually to help remember a list)
- inaccurate portrayal of past events
- LT motivation: the need or desire to do well relative to standards of excellence.
- theory:...principle; seek pleasure, avoid pain
- theory:...reduction; motivation is the process of satisfying needs (reducing drives) to maintain homeostasis.
- inability to access memory from long-term storage
- ...attention; ability to direct mental resources to relevant information in order to process that information further, while also ignoring irrelevant information
- ...memory; information organized and indexed
- LT motivation: should be challenging, encouraging effort, persistence, and concentration.
- “blanking” tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon: temporarily unable to retrieve a memory
26 Clues: maintaining information • accessing encoded info when needed • inaccurate portrayal of past events • anything that helps you access a memory • inattentive or shallow encoding of events • ...memory; information organized and indexed • theory:...principle; seek pleasure, avoid pain • transformation of sensory inout into neural code • ...
Famous Biologists 2019-12-09
Across
- all plants are made of cells
- named cells, looked at cork
- named the double helix,(DNA)
- all animals are made of cells
- same idea as Darwin, let him publish first
- disproved theory of spontaneous generation with meat,jars, and flies
- germ theory of disease,swan necked flask experiment, cooking kills microbes
- evolution by natural selection
Down
- every cell comes from another cell (Cell Theory)
- Xray crystalography of DNA helix shape
- DNA from one bacteria transforms another, killing mice
- observed single-celled organisms, bacteria-first to use microscope, father of microbiology
- modern system of classification,binomial nomenclature
- organisms produce more organisms than can survive
- father of genetics, dominant and recessive traits
- one of the first theories of evolution, inheritance of acquired characteristics
16 Clues: named cells, looked at cork • all plants are made of cells • named the double helix,(DNA) • all animals are made of cells • evolution by natural selection • Xray crystalography of DNA helix shape • same idea as Darwin, let him publish first • every cell comes from another cell (Cell Theory) • organisms produce more organisms than can survive • ...
theory 2025-09-01
Across
- when two sets have the same elements.
- Difference objects that belong to A or B but not both.
- objects that belong to set A or set B.
- all objects that do not belong to a given set.
- a collection of elements.
- Superset a superset that is not equal to the smaller set.
- Subset a subset that is not equal to the larger set.
Down
- objects that belong to both set A and set B.
- Complement objects that belong to set A but not to set B.
- a set contained within another set.
- membership of an item in a set.
- Superset when set A is not a superset of set B.
- a set that contains another set.
- Subset when set A is not a subset of set B.
- the set of all subsets of a given set.
15 Clues: a collection of elements. • membership of an item in a set. • a set that contains another set. • a set contained within another set. • when two sets have the same elements. • objects that belong to set A or set B. • the set of all subsets of a given set. • objects that belong to both set A and set B. • Subset when set A is not a subset of set B. • ...
KEY VOCABULARY: The Scientific Revolution 2026-03-18
Across
- A major sect of the Christain faith based in the Vatican
- Testing a prediction or theory using a scientific procedure.
- The systematic observation and identification of stars, planets and galaxies
- The theory that the sun was at the centre of the universe.
- The science concerned with explaining the functions of the natural world
Down
- A device invented by Galileo Galilei that enables one to view distance objects
- The force that pulls something to objects with great mass (for example, humans are pulled to the centre of the earth)
- The science of using numbers to quantify things
- Looking at or viewing something to understand it's function or purpose
- An idea or prediction about how something functions based upon limited evidence
- The theory that the earth was at the centre of the universe.
- A system of ideas designed to explain a pattern
12 Clues: The science of using numbers to quantify things • A system of ideas designed to explain a pattern • A major sect of the Christain faith based in the Vatican • The theory that the sun was at the centre of the universe. • Testing a prediction or theory using a scientific procedure. • The theory that the earth was at the centre of the universe. • ...
Leadership Module II 2023-01-27
Across
- Type of workplace violence that can be expressed or experienced with verbal attacks, hostility, withholding support to do a job, talking behind someone's back, negative client outcomes, public criticism of others leading to breakdown in communication and disruptive conduct.
- The Board Rule 214 covers Vocational Nursing ____.
- Third and final phase of change theory; stabilizing and integrating the change so that it becomes a part of the regular work of the unit, team, hospital, or agency
- Reveals the scope of practice for nursing and the legal duties and functions of the nurse within state legislation.
- Best current evidence with clinical expertise and patient/family preferences and values for delivery of optimal health care.
- Number of practice hours nurses need to complete every 2 years to meet licensure renewal requirements
- Threat of unlawful touching of another, the willful attempt to harm another
- Second phase in change theory; when change is presented and discussed
- First phase in change theory; allows people to know what is goin on and what is being considered; knowledge is shared and understood
- Grandfather of change theory
- Negligence committed by a professional with a license
Down
- Preventing movement or making a person stay in a place without obtaining consent; can be by physical or non-physical means
- This type of change is accidental or unplanned
- An individual who acts as a catalyst for change through a methodical process that includes identifying needs, planning, and implementing the change and evaluating the effectiveness of the change
- This occurs when the graduate vocational nurse's NCLEX-PN examination is reported.
- Deliberate deception for the purpose of personal gain
- Realities that tell you not to participate in the behavior you are considering; making a pro and con list can be helpful in identifying this.
- Unlawful touching of another without consent, justification, or excuse
- Altering the flow of events in any situation
- Understanding that conflict is ______ is important concept to acknowledge and accept.
20 Clues: Grandfather of change theory • Altering the flow of events in any situation • This type of change is accidental or unplanned • The Board Rule 214 covers Vocational Nursing ____. • Deliberate deception for the purpose of personal gain • Negligence committed by a professional with a license • Second phase in change theory; when change is presented and discussed • ...
Unit 12 2022-12-25
Across
- a panel of keys that operate a computer or typewriter
- without conscious thought or attention
- approach or enter (a place)
- control the functioning of machine or system
- associate or relate in some respect
- a device used for observing, checking, or keeping a continuous record of something
- do or be better than ever before
- the faculty or state of being able to see
- almost or nearly as described, but not completely or according to strict definition
- the application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes
- facts and statistics collected together for reference or analysis
- a quantity or supply of something kept for use as needed
- contemplate or conceive of as a possibility
Down
- using radio, microwaves, etc. (as opposed to wires or cables) to transmit signals
- a performance, show, or event staged for public entertainment
- a small mechanical or electronic device or tool
- the adaptation of a system, device, etc. to be operated by computer
- a quantity or supply of something kept for use as needed
- an activity that is natural to or the purpose of a person or thing
- something remembered from the past
- communication over a distance by cable, telegraph, telephone
- a small, portable personal computer
- a relationship in which a person or thing is linked or associated with something else
- a thing made or adapted for a particular purpose
- closely and neatly packed together
- old-fashioned
- a first or preliminary version of a device
- working by the methods or principles of electronics
- form a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence
- a roll of parchment or paper for writing on
30 Clues: old-fashioned • approach or enter (a place) • do or be better than ever before • something remembered from the past • closely and neatly packed together • a small, portable personal computer • associate or relate in some respect • without conscious thought or attention • the faculty or state of being able to see • a first or preliminary version of a device • ...
3.4 - The Ethical Responsibilities Required of You as a Manager 2022-09-14
Across
- supervisors repeatedly display verbal/nonverbal hostility toward subordinates.
- illegal trading of company's stock by people using confidential company information
- the fundamental rights of human beings.
- When the potential for personal benefit makes it difficult for you to make the best decisions for the organization.
- by people doing terrible things.
- Standards about right and wrong with a company.
- Approach-
- the greatest good
- A situation in which you have to decide whether to pursue a course of action that may benefit you and your organization, but that is unethical or even illegal.
- of people.
- breaking rules that could cause health issues.
- a formal written set of ethical standards
- pattern of values in an organization.
- using power to get a personal belief approved
Down
- Level 1 of Kohlberg theory - follows rules
- an employee, or even an outside consultant, who reports organizational misconduct
- unethical behaviors that lead to employees getting more than they deserve.
- Level 3 of Kohlberg theory - guided by internal values
- Level 2 of Kohlberg theory - follows expectations of others
- by respect
- guided by what
- the greatest number of people.
- making employment decisions based on the other gender.
- in the greatest
- respecting impartial standards of fairness
- threaten or intimidating others - hostile work environment.
- result
- guided by what
28 Clues: result • Approach- • by respect • of people. • guided by what • guided by what • in the greatest • the greatest good • the greatest number of people. • by people doing terrible things. • pattern of values in an organization. • the fundamental rights of human beings. • a formal written set of ethical standards • Level 1 of Kohlberg theory - follows rules • ...
3.4 - The Ethical Responsibilities Required of You as a Manager 2022-09-14
Across
- supervisors repeatedly display verbal/nonverbal hostility toward subordinates.
- illegal trading of company's stock by people using confidential company information
- the fundamental rights of human beings.
- When the potential for personal benefit makes it difficult for you to make the best decisions for the organization.
- by people doing terrible things.
- Standards about right and wrong with a company.
- Approach-
- the greatest good
- A situation in which you have to decide whether to pursue a course of action that may benefit you and your organization, but that is unethical or even illegal.
- of people.
- breaking rules that could cause health issues.
- a formal written set of ethical standards
- pattern of values in an organization.
- using power to get a personal belief approved
Down
- Level 1 of Kohlberg theory - follows rules
- an employee, or even an outside consultant, who reports organizational misconduct
- unethical behaviors that lead to employees getting more than they deserve.
- Level 3 of Kohlberg theory - guided by internal values
- Level 2 of Kohlberg theory - follows expectations of others
- by respect
- guided by what
- the greatest number of people.
- making employment decisions based on the other gender.
- in the greatest
- respecting impartial standards of fairness
- threaten or intimidating others - hostile work environment.
- result
- guided by what
28 Clues: result • Approach- • by respect • of people. • guided by what • guided by what • in the greatest • the greatest good • the greatest number of people. • by people doing terrible things. • pattern of values in an organization. • the fundamental rights of human beings. • a formal written set of ethical standards • Level 1 of Kohlberg theory - follows rules • ...
trust 2024-03-21
Across
- firm conviction that something is the case.
- the quality of being honest.
- on or trust in someone or something.
- a positive declaration intended to give confidence; a promise.
Down
- the quality of protecting.
- the quality of loving.
- the ability to be relied on as honest or truthful.
- the quality of being sure.
- giving or showing firm and constant support or allegiance to a person or institution.
- the quality of caring.
10 Clues: the quality of loving. • the quality of caring. • the quality of protecting. • the quality of being sure. • the quality of being honest. • on or trust in someone or something. • firm conviction that something is the case. • the ability to be relied on as honest or truthful. • a positive declaration intended to give confidence; a promise. • ...
Chapter 15: Globalism 2021-04-21
Across
- First online encyclopedia
- Director of "Do the Right Thing"
- Theory says nature is vibrating strings
- Epic Novel by Frank Herbert
- Theory says universal patterns always repeat
- What Ghandhi's followers called him
- Writer of the Docufiction literary genre
- Famous poet during Harlem Renaissance
- Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome
- Famous American Pop artist
- Artist known for appropriating Old Masters
Down
- Dr. MLK wrote a letter from this jail
- movement advocating equal rights of women
- The human genome project mapped and ordered
- Leading proponent of existentialism
- Wrote "Go Tell in on the Mountain"
- Famous female architect born in Baghdad
- Japanese director of The Seven Samurai
- Type of expressive art born in New York City
- Best known Abstract Expressionists
20 Clues: First online encyclopedia • Famous American Pop artist • Epic Novel by Frank Herbert • Director of "Do the Right Thing" • Wrote "Go Tell in on the Mountain" • Best known Abstract Expressionists • Leading proponent of existentialism • What Ghandhi's followers called him • Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome • Dr. MLK wrote a letter from this jail • ...
Intro Psych: Exam 1 Definitions 2019-01-21
Across
- Study A type of study where one person is studied in depth.
- The scientific study of behaviour and mental process.
- Prediction that can be tested.
- Observe behaviour in a natural setting.
- I knew it all along.
- The variable being manipulated.
- A definition that objectively describes a variable.
- Most frequent score.
- A negative correlation states: as one variable increases the other?
Down
- Seeks to explain why something happened.
- A correlational _ measures the relationship between two variables.
- Believing we know more than we do.
- Confidence in a theory is _____, if the results supports the theory.
- Anything that can change.
- A survey allows many people to answer questions about their?
- Middle score in a rank-order distribution.
16 Clues: I knew it all along. • Most frequent score. • Anything that can change. • Prediction that can be tested. • The variable being manipulated. • Believing we know more than we do. • Observe behaviour in a natural setting. • Seeks to explain why something happened. • Middle score in a rank-order distribution. • A definition that objectively describes a variable. • ...
sociology unit 3 2023-05-17
Across
- the idea that two control systems—inner controls and outer controls—work against our tendencies to deviate
- to reject social goals and institutionalized means for achieving them
- innovation,ritualism,retreatism,rebellion
- a theory that states that when you are called something, you often will go along with what you are called
- the basics of society and things that are socially acceptable as well
- the view of social behavior that emphasizes linguistic or gestural communication and its subjective understanding, especially the role of language in the formation of the child as a social being.
- proposal that pressure derived from social factors, such as lack of income or lack of quality education, drives individuals to commit crime
- things that society holds on a pedestal
- a superhero that commits deviant behavior, symbol of a bat
- a sign or gesture that represents something in a culture
Down
- things in society that break norms but arent serious
- using illegitimate means to reach your goals
- a theory that society is in a state of perpetual conflict because of competition for limited resources
- a theory developed by Edwin Sutherland proposing that through interaction with others, individuals learn the values, attitudes, techniques, and motives for criminal behavior
- crimes committed mostly by the rich
- a framework for building theory that sees society as a complex system whose parts work together to promote solidarity and stability
- embracing conventional behavior
- crimes mostly committed by people of a lower social class
- things that aren't accepted in society and can get you jailtime
- to reject social goals and institutionalized means for achieving them and to replace them with new goals and means
20 Clues: embracing conventional behavior • crimes committed mostly by the rich • things that society holds on a pedestal • innovation,ritualism,retreatism,rebellion • using illegitimate means to reach your goals • things in society that break norms but arent serious • a sign or gesture that represents something in a culture • ...
relationships 2022-10-20
Across
- feeling or showing pleasure or contentment.
- the quality of being friendly and generous
- to belong.
- serving to help a person's feelings of grief.
- to ___ someone for who they are.
- giving or showing firm and constant support.
Down
- a view or judgement formed about something.
- give assistance to, mentally and physically.
- the quality of being honest.
- firm belief in the reliability and truth.
10 Clues: to belong. • the quality of being honest. • to ___ someone for who they are. • firm belief in the reliability and truth. • the quality of being friendly and generous • a view or judgement formed about something. • feeling or showing pleasure or contentment. • give assistance to, mentally and physically. • giving or showing firm and constant support. • ...
Sleep & Dreams 2025-10-22
Across
- Measures electrical activity in brain (brain waves)
- Complex movements while in N3 sleep (i.e., deep sleep)
- A ______ dream is when the dreamer is aware that they’re dreaming
- REM sleep behavior disorder is a disorder in which the sleeper physically acts out their dream
- The _______ gland produces melatonin
- A sleep disorder characterized by temporary breathing stoppages during sleep and repeated awakenings
- Physiological function theory states that regular brain stimulation during REM sleep may help develop & preserve brain pathways
- State of consciousness that occurs during sleep
- Sleep that features vivid, long-lasting dreams; similar to being awake; irregular breathing, heart rate; difficult to awaken from; body "paralyzed"
- Non-REM sleep; includes all other sleep stages, except for REM
- The inability to fall asleep or stay asleep
- Activation-synthesis theory is a biological theory of dreams that states that the brain weaves a story from the ______ activity of neurons
Down
- Information-processing theory dreams help to process & form day's experiences into ________
- A sleep disorder characterized by sudden and uncontrollable episodes of REM sleep
- N1 is the ________ stage of sleep
- Another name for N3 sleep; difficult to wake person; often disoriented if wake up; talking and walking in sleep happen here
- Structure in the brain involved in sleep
- Biological rhythms that change over a 24-hour period
- Lost sleep must be "paid back"
- N2 sleep is a little ________ than N1
- The suprachiasmatic _______ monitors light and regulates the sleep/wake cycle
- Hormone that causes drowsiness
- Tendency for REM sleep to increase following REM sleep deprivation is called REM ________
23 Clues: Lost sleep must be "paid back" • Hormone that causes drowsiness • N1 is the ________ stage of sleep • The _______ gland produces melatonin • N2 sleep is a little ________ than N1 • Structure in the brain involved in sleep • The inability to fall asleep or stay asleep • State of consciousness that occurs during sleep • Measures electrical activity in brain (brain waves) • ...
Market Structures (Chapter 7) 2014-11-17
Across
- consider the same regardless of who makes it or sells it
- companies join with another company or companies to form a single firm
- by government to give power to company monopoly
- difference between perfect competition and monopolistic competition
- power/ability to control prices and total market output
- fixing/agreement between firms to sell at same or very similar price
- when barriers prevent firms from entering a market that has single supplier
- monopoly/market that runs most efficiently when one large firm provides all of the output
- laws/trust are illegal
- competition/barriers to entry can lead to it
- by a formal organization of producers to coordinate prices and productions
- by government, grants firms right to operate a business
- competition/simplest market structure
Down
- between members of a oligopoly to set prices and production levels
- discrimination/charge different prices to two different groups
- of scale/firm's start-up cost are high, and its average cost fall for each additional unit it produces
- competition/competition through ways other than lower prices
- pricing/last practice
- no longer decides what role each company plays in a market and how much it can charge customers
- issued by a local authority that gives single firm the right to sell its good within an exclusive market
- a market dominated by a few large, profitable firms
- competition/many companies compete in an open market to sell products that are similar but not identically
- monopoly/monopoly created by the government
- combination close to cartel
- cost/expenses that a new business must pay before the first product reaches the consumer
- war/competitors lower their prices to win business
- to entry/factors that make it difficult for new firms to enter a market
27 Clues: pricing/last practice • laws/trust are illegal • combination close to cartel • competition/simplest market structure • monopoly/monopoly created by the government • competition/barriers to entry can lead to it • by government to give power to company monopoly • war/competitors lower their prices to win business • a market dominated by a few large, profitable firms • ...
AP Psychology 2015-04-22
Across
- Rational behavior emotive therapy
- Misinformation effect
- Bobo doll experiment
- Taste aversion
- General intelligence
- Infant temperament
- Developmental stages
- Forgetting curve
- Moral development stages
- Ethics and feminism
- Labelling experiment psychiatric hospital
- Law of proportions
- Eight life-stages
- Theory of multiple intelligences
Down
- Feminist psychology
- Learned helplessness
- Strange situation for children
- Parenting style
- Theory of intelligence
- Father of psychology
- Social comparison theory
- Classical conditioning
- Monkey study
- Behavioral economics
- Hypnosis/how easily one can be hypnotized
- Operant chamber
- Psychoanalysis
- Facial expressions
28 Clues: Monkey study • Taste aversion • Psychoanalysis • Parenting style • Operant chamber • Forgetting curve • Eight life-stages • Infant temperament • Law of proportions • Facial expressions • Feminist psychology • Ethics and feminism • Learned helplessness • Bobo doll experiment • General intelligence • Father of psychology • Developmental stages • Behavioral economics • Misinformation effect • ...
Ethics, professionalism and Corp Governance 2026-02-17
Across
- and corruption – Paying for unfair advantage.
- of ethics – Document of moral guidelines.
- – People affected by business decisions.
- – Giving jobs to family unfairly.
- theory – Action chosen for greatest good.
- of interest – Personal gain affects decisions.
- – Business caring for society.
- gifts – Gifts given to influence decisions.
- advertising – Misleading or dishonest promotions.
- goods – Legit items sold through unofficial channels.
- issues – Problems affecting workers' rights.
- fixing – Competitors agree on prices illegally.
- – Selling illegal or unlicensed goods.
- evasion – Illegally avoiding paying tax.
- trading – Using secret info to trade shares.
- harassment – Unwanted sexual behaviour at work.
- – Taking responsibility for actions.
Down
- theory – Focuses on good personal character.
- – Reporting wrongdoing inside a business.
- codes – Rules guiding correct workplace behaviour.
- – Factories with poor working conditions.
- use of funds – Spending money without approval.
- – South Africa’s official stock market.
- – Knowing what is right and wrong.
- theory – Decisions follow strict rules.
- avoidance – Legally reducing tax paid.
- – Fake products sold illegally.
- theory – Choices judged by outcomes.
- of conduct – Rules for expected behaviour.
- labour – Employing underage children illegally.
- of goods – Setting the cost of products.
- – Acting with skill and respect.
- – Stealing and copying protected content.
33 Clues: – Business caring for society. • – Fake products sold illegally. • – Acting with skill and respect. • – Giving jobs to family unfairly. • – Knowing what is right and wrong. • theory – Choices judged by outcomes. • – Taking responsibility for actions. • avoidance – Legally reducing tax paid. • – Selling illegal or unlicensed goods. • – South Africa’s official stock market. • ...
vocab 2023-04-27
Across
- examine methodically and in detail the constitution or structure of (something, especially information), typically for purposes of explanation and interpretation.
- The Geo-Inquiry Process relies on using a geographic perspective, offering a unique lens to analyze space, place, and the interconnections between both the human and natural world.
- identifies the geographic location of features.
- The location of large cities near water
- a general statement or concept obtained by inference from specific cases.
- one that was created later by someone that did not experience firsthand or participate in the events in which the author is writing about.
- a set of printed or written questions with a choice of answers, devised for the purposes of a survey or statistical study.
Down
- raw materials of history — original documents and objects that were created at the time under study.
- sources that index, abstract, organize, compile, or digest other sources.
- The key geographic questions ask Where is it located? Why is it there? What is the significance of the location?
- buy or obtain (an asset or object) for oneself.
- a supposition or proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation.
- examine or inspect closely and thoroughly.\
- Population Distribution,1.1 High population densities,1.2 The interaction between transport and location,The atmospheric and climatic framework
- facts and statistics collected together for reference or analysis.
- orm a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence.
- a conclusion reached on the basis of evidence and reasoning.
17 Clues: The location of large cities near water • examine or inspect closely and thoroughly.\ • buy or obtain (an asset or object) for oneself. • identifies the geographic location of features. • a conclusion reached on the basis of evidence and reasoning. • orm a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence. • ...
Unit 6 2025-03-23
Across
- A term from psychology referring to mental processes like thinking.
- A term from Social Cognitive Theory describing mutual influence.
- A systematic way of understanding events, behaviors, or situations.
- A concept central to the Health Belief Model regarding individual perception.
- Pertaining to society or interpersonal interactions.
- A belief that outcomes are shaped by interacting factors.
- A target or objective set for behavior change.
- External prompts that influence behavior.
- The first part of a term describing one's confidence in taking action.
- A term associated with health efforts focused on community well-being
- A model describing stages of behavior change.
Down
- A state of complete physical, mental, and social well-being.
- A key construct in Social Cognitive Theory meaning confidence in ability.
- The process of establishing specific objectives.
- The phase in behavior change where new habits are implemented.
- A representation of how things work, used in theories.
- A model emphasizing multiple levels of influence on behavior.
- Encouragement and help from others in adopting new behaviors.
18 Clues: External prompts that influence behavior. • A model describing stages of behavior change. • A target or objective set for behavior change. • The process of establishing specific objectives. • Pertaining to society or interpersonal interactions. • A representation of how things work, used in theories. • A belief that outcomes are shaped by interacting factors. • ...
abc 2023-02-24
29 Clues: SEC • DTI • UAP • CPD • PRC • PCAB • firm • CIAC • IAPOA • plans • planner • building • drawings • planning • interior • ownership • copyright • architect • authorship • partnership • consultancy • corporation • association • professional • architecture • urban-design • specialization • service-agreement • consulting-architect
3.3 Economic Concepts 2026-03-12
Across
- A desire not required to sustain life.
- When Qd changes by a greater proportion than the change in price
- When Qd changes by the same proportion as price
- Responsiveness of quantity to a change in price (or income)
- Law that reflects decreasing extra satisfaction
- Resources used to make goods/provide services
- The revenue less expenses of a firm
- Good of lower quality and less expensive than normal goods
- Rule that states that consumers are in balance when Pa/MU = Pb/MUb
- A good/service required to sustain life.
Down
- Extra/additional satisfaction from consuming an extra unit
- The earnings of a firm
- Time-frame when all factors of production are fixed (PES=0)
- The responsiveness of Qd to a change in earnings
- Time-frame when at least one factor of production is fixed (0<PES<1)
- Goods that can be used instead of another
- Rule that states that consumer will buy until P=MU
- When Qd changes by a smaller proportion than the change in price
- Time-frame when all factors of production are variable (PES>1)
- Satisfaction gained from consumption
20 Clues: The earnings of a firm • The revenue less expenses of a firm • Satisfaction gained from consumption • A desire not required to sustain life. • A good/service required to sustain life. • Goods that can be used instead of another • Resources used to make goods/provide services • When Qd changes by the same proportion as price • ...
Child Development puzzle 2025-04-25
Across
- Developed the hierarchy of needs theory, emphasizing self-actualization.
- Identified three parenting styles: authoritative, authoritarian, and permissive.
- Authored a popular parenting book advocating for a balance between discipline and affection.
- Proposed a psychosocial development theory with eight stages.
- Known for his theory of psychosexual stages and the id, ego, and superego.
Down
- Introduced the theory of multiple intelligences.
- Studied cognitive development and proposed four stages.
- Developed attachment theory, emphasizing the importance of early bonds.
- Developed an educational approach focusing on child-led learning.
- Known for his stages of moral development.
10 Clues: Known for his stages of moral development. • Introduced the theory of multiple intelligences. • Studied cognitive development and proposed four stages. • Proposed a psychosocial development theory with eight stages. • Developed an educational approach focusing on child-led learning. • Developed attachment theory, emphasizing the importance of early bonds. • ...
Plate Tectonic Boundaries & Features 2023-10-25
Across
- creator of the theory of pangea
- process in plate tectonics of edge of one crustal plate descending below the edge of another
- when two plate slide against each other in different directions
- process in which new ocean floor is created as molten material from the earths mantle rises in margins between plates or ridges and spreads out
- long cut in the ground
- when two plates move apart
- a tectonic plate that consists of primarily of continental crust
- theory of continents thats slowly drift apart
Down
- when two plates come together
- a theory explaining the earths crust
- plates that are located beneath the ocean
- formed when there is two tectonic plates meet under the ocean
- the rigid outer part of the earth
- an opening in the sea floor out of which heated mineral-rich water flows
- a super continent
15 Clues: a super continent • long cut in the ground • when two plates move apart • when two plates come together • creator of the theory of pangea • the rigid outer part of the earth • a theory explaining the earths crust • plates that are located beneath the ocean • theory of continents thats slowly drift apart • formed when there is two tectonic plates meet under the ocean • ...
3 Chapter Crossword 2025-10-21
Across
- in Vygotsky’s theory, a framework that offers children temporary support as they develop higher levels of thinking
- in Ericson’s theory, the ability to form close, loving relationships
- our sense of self
- and emotional tie with others
- the process of transition from child to adult, extending from puberty to independence
- all the mental activities connected with thinking, knowing, communicating
- the coordination of sensory input with motor actions to interact with the world
- the genetic transfer of characteristics from parents to offspring
- the biochemical units of heredity that make up the chromosome; segments of DNA
Down
- adapting our current schemas to incorporate new information
- interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas
- our experience, which we’re taking during the life
- in Piaget’s theory, the preoperational child’s difficulty taking another’s point of view
- the study of the molecular ways by which environments can influence gene expression
- a concept or framework that organize and interprets information
- a simple, automatic answer to a sensory stimulus
16 Clues: our sense of self • and emotional tie with others • a simple, automatic answer to a sensory stimulus • our experience, which we’re taking during the life • adapting our current schemas to incorporate new information • a concept or framework that organize and interprets information • interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas • ...
Past theories of the brain 2018-02-01
Across
- Who was the first philosopher to argue the brain hypothesis?
- What was theorised to control the body?
- What lost credibility in the 1850s?
- What is the name of the theory that states that the mind and body are two distinct things?
- What was Franz Galls theory based on?
- Through what procedure did Hippocrates and Herophilus develop an advanced knowledge of the brain and nervous system?
Down
- Phrenology had a lasting impact on how we think about the...?
- How was Tutankhamen's brain removed?
- Who proposed that different areas of the brain were responsible for different functions?
- Who is the father medicine?
- Who is the father of anatomy?
- What was the name of the philosopher that argued all living and non living things were composed of four elements?
- What gland secretes melatonin?
- Who incorrectly believed that the ventricles were important parts of the brain?
- Where did the theory say the soul was contained?
- How many faculties did Franz Gall map the skull with?
16 Clues: Who is the father medicine? • Who is the father of anatomy? • What gland secretes melatonin? • What lost credibility in the 1850s? • How was Tutankhamen's brain removed? • What was Franz Galls theory based on? • What was theorised to control the body? • Where did the theory say the soul was contained? • How many faculties did Franz Gall map the skull with? • ...
Tectonic crossword 2022-10-12
Across
- An Area where magma rises into earths crust
- the supercontinent made 225 million years ago
- vibration underground along a fault
- crake in earths crust where two plates meet
- the outermost layer of earth
- the scientist who made the theory of continental drift
- branch of geology studying earths the crust
- crash with violent impact
- science of earth’s structure
- molten rocks under the crust if earth
Down
- outer part of earth’s layers including the crust and mantle
- border of a tectonic plate
- the moving of on plate under another
- A big chunk of earths crust
- a long ditch cut into the earth
- layer of rock between earths crust and outer core
- idea intended to explain something
- action of splitting apart two plates
- drift the movement of continents
19 Clues: crash with violent impact • border of a tectonic plate • A big chunk of earths crust • the outermost layer of earth • science of earth’s structure • a long ditch cut into the earth • drift the movement of continents • idea intended to explain something • vibration underground along a fault • the moving of on plate under another • action of splitting apart two plates • ...
Science - AGB 2020-05-13
Across
- your genetic code
- how much space something occupies
- liquid rock inside the earth
- a path that electricity follows
- a tool used to separate solids from liquids
- a scientific way to say that an animal no longer exists
- another way to say "turn on an axis"
- the planets ______ around the sun
- the state of matter that maintains its shape
- show that a theory is wrong
- the state of matter that flows
- a scientific way to say "pull together"
- a push or pull (like gravity or friction)
- an imaginary line that something turns on
- a measure of how much matter something has
- show that a theory is correct
- the force that slows down things that are touching
- a hot, glowing ball of gas in space
- study something in depth: do ________
- change from a solid to liquid
Down
- how fast velocity changes
- a material that does not conduct heat or electricity well
- anything that has mass and occupies space
- a rock floating in space
- energy from motion: _______ energy
- a ball of ice and dust in space
- a theory that says animals change over time
- explode like a volcano
- a form of energy that makes things hot
- a scientific way to say push apart
- see how big, wide, hot, or heavy something is
- information that you gather
- write data down
- material like iron, copper, or gold
- what remains of an animal or a plant
- an explanation of why something happens
- change from liquid to solid
37 Clues: write data down • your genetic code • explode like a volcano • a rock floating in space • how fast velocity changes • show that a theory is wrong • information that you gather • change from liquid to solid • liquid rock inside the earth • show that a theory is correct • change from a solid to liquid • the state of matter that flows • a path that electricity follows • ...
Religion 2018-10-02
Across
- Love for God and neighbor
- Having a solid, almost unyielding surface structure
- Official teaching authority of the Church
- Trust in God's salvation
- Relationship between God and humans resulting in a body of beliefs & a set of practices
Down
- Firm attitudes, stable dispositions, habitual perfections of intellect and will
- Council Worldwide official assembly of Bishops under the direction of the Pope
- Theological virtue that empowers you to be able love God back
- Unlike anything else
- Not likely to give way or overturn
- Holy one of God who lives in union with God in heaven
- Written set of beliefs
12 Clues: Unlike anything else • Written set of beliefs • Trust in God's salvation • Love for God and neighbor • Not likely to give way or overturn • Official teaching authority of the Church • Having a solid, almost unyielding surface structure • Holy one of God who lives in union with God in heaven • Theological virtue that empowers you to be able love God back • ...
The Universe 2012-11-13
Across
- The brightest object in our sky
- The last four planets are made of these
- This theory suggests the Universe will stop expanding and collapse into a hot dense ball of matter
- The satellite that can observe the history of the Universe
- Measurement based on the distance between the Sun and the Earth
- Clumps together in spider like structures
- We use this when we are dealing with very small or very large numbers
Down
- 78% of our atmosphere is made up of this
- A measurement based on the distance a light travels through a vacumm in one year
- A crucial piece of evidence for the Big Bang Theory
- The first stage in a star's formation
- Small bodies believed to be left over from the beginning of the Universe
- Refers to stars roughly the size of our sun
- This theory suggests that our Universe started from a simgle point and has been expanding ever since
- A high mass star may turn into this
- Small icy bodies that give off gas and dust as they pass by
- The first four planets are made of these
17 Clues: The brightest object in our sky • A high mass star may turn into this • The first stage in a star's formation • The last four planets are made of these • 78% of our atmosphere is made up of this • The first four planets are made of these • Clumps together in spider like structures • Refers to stars roughly the size of our sun • ...
Personal Conflict Management: Theory and Practice (Chapters 1-4) 2019-09-07
Across
- "____-conflicts "the goal interference is based on miscommunication or inaccurate perceptions of another person's intentions.
- What is a key element in many modern definitions of conflict?
- Proposed that every conversation between two people has 6 views (1970).
- Managing conflicts productively is a source of personal ____.
- (Two words) is anything that someone perceives to be limited in supply.
- This theory advances the concept that people consistently attempt to make sense of the world around them.
- "Resilience under pressure is stress management to deal with ____."
- Submission within the controversy.
- In ____ climates, individuals feel threatened and react to others negatively.
- Defending one's positions and attacking the other party's positions.
- "____ conflict "a struggle among a small number of interdependent people arising from perceived interference from another."
- A learning theory that attitudes and behaviors are developed by observing others.
- ____ is an inevitable and integral part of life.
- Communicating about communication, can help. This provides a statement of intention and is less open to misinterpretation.
- Which of the 4 goal types relates to how things should be done?
- (Two words) is the event that precipitates a conflict.
- ____interdependence where each person's goals are moving in the SAME direction.
- Everybody has them. It's a desired condition. They may be profound or simple. Related to needs.
Down
- Removing ones self from the controversy.
- How many general assumptions of conflict apply to everyone?
- Freud's ____ theory conceived in internal struggle between the id and the superego.
- Behavior is determined by biology ie; genetics or chemical/hormonal influence (theory).
- a critic of the competitive influence, containing 4 myths (1986).
- In ____ climates, individuals feel safer, believe they are valued, and are more likely to engage in productive problem solving and conflict management.
- Self-concept is defined as a relatively stable set of ____ about ones self.
- Goals that include tangible resources or any measurable factor around which desired outcomes can be built.
- ____ goals involve who the parties want to be to each other.
- The level to which people need each other to attain their goals.
- A conflict that pivots around deeply seated beliefs about right and wrong.
- (Two words) sometimes called the mutual gains perspective or interest-based bargaining, seeks creative and innovative solutions that maximally meet the needs of all parties.
- There are two approaches to conflict: competition and ____.
- Behavior comes from interaction with the environment (theory).
- The personal association for a meaning, it's different then denotative.
- ____ gains that encompass the concept that the goals of all parties in a conflict might be met if creative strategies are applied to the problem.
- Tentative explanations for observed behaviors.
- ____ interdependence where attainment of one person's goals means that the other will not attain his or hers goal.
- Who created the communication privacy management theory, where individuals manage the disclosure of private information.
- Communication ____ are associated with competitive and cooperative tactics. They can be stormy, temperate or chilling.
- This theory suggests looking at the interactions between parties over time and in context.
- An aggression where name-calling, sneering tones, and demeaning evaluative statements are tactics.
40 Clues: Submission within the controversy. • Removing ones self from the controversy. • Tentative explanations for observed behaviors. • ____ is an inevitable and integral part of life. • (Two words) is the event that precipitates a conflict. • How many general assumptions of conflict apply to everyone? • There are two approaches to conflict: competition and ____. • ...
REVISING CHEMISTRY 2021-03-05
Across
- Solid sphere model
- Father of modern chemistry
- Proposed a theory for the hydrogen atom based on quantum theory
- The first to think of the atom
- ___ number is the number of protons plus neutrons
- atom or group of atoms with electric charge
- She won two Nobel prizes
- atom or group of atoms with negative charge
- _____number is the number of protons
- the simplest element
- Emission of ionizing radiation or particles
Down
- non-metal solids are ___ and fragile
- Plum pudding model
- She was part of a team that discovered nuclear fission
- atom or group of atoms with positive charge
- He stated the law of definite proportions
- Planetary atomic model
- ____ shell is the outermost shell of every element
- The Group 1 elements are known as the ____ metals
- He discovered neutrons
20 Clues: Plum pudding model • Solid sphere model • the simplest element • Planetary atomic model • He discovered neutrons • She won two Nobel prizes • Father of modern chemistry • The first to think of the atom • non-metal solids are ___ and fragile • _____number is the number of protons • He stated the law of definite proportions • atom or group of atoms with positive charge • ...
Midterm Review 2012-10-07
Across
- Type of coding in qualitative research that condenses data into broad themes
- Gender, religion, and marital status are examples of this type of variable
- In ethnography, the particular location or setting where “members” live
- Type of research that constructs social reality and cultural meaning and theory and data are fused
- _________-test reliability examines if several items measure the same construct
- When an ethnographer questions and notices ordinary details it is called the attitude of ___________________
- In ethnography, people with formal or informal authority to control access to a site
- When an ethnographer starts sampling events, times, and places that will collect data to support his/her grounded theory, it is called: _____________ sampling
- Type of reliability that measures agreement between two raters
- As we collect data, we develop and revise the theory based on what the data tell us
- How much an ethnographer reveals about him/herself
Down
- Linking a conceptual definition to a set of measurement techniques or procedures
- In qualitative research, this is the content that is physically present and countable
- Type of research that measures objective facts and separates theory and data
- Type of variable that contains a large number of values or attributes that flow along a continuum
- Level of measurement that includes different categories only
- Level of measurement that includes different categories, ranking, and allows distance between categories to be measured
17 Clues: How much an ethnographer reveals about him/herself • Level of measurement that includes different categories only • Type of reliability that measures agreement between two raters • In ethnography, the particular location or setting where “members” live • Gender, religion, and marital status are examples of this type of variable • ...
AP Government Vocabulary Review 2013-02-19
Across
- A plan for representation in Congress to be decided by population
- Splitting your vote among several different political parties
- Powers of government that are reasonably suggested from the expressed powers
- A plan for representation in Congress to be decided equally among all states
- The issues that attract the attention of politicians
- The process of reallocating seats in the House of Representatives every 10 years based off of the census
- The gradual disengagement of people and politicians from the two main political parties
- The process through which a person acquires their particular political views
- A theory where voters look back at a candidate's previous years and ask, "What have you done for me lately?"
- A problem faced by unions when people at a company do not join the group but still reap the benefits
- The ways that issues get on the government's policy agenda
- A compromise setting up two houses in Congress based both on population and equality
Down
- A theory of government that states that politics is a competition among groups
- The idea that people pay attention to things they already agree with
- A system of selecting policymakers and of organizing government so that policy represents and responds to the public's preferences
- Appealing to a narrow audience with a specific interest
- A condition that occurs when no coalition is strong enough to form a majority and establish policy
- Large means of communication
- The idea that a winning candidate has the authority to carry out their platform
- A theory of government that contends that the upper class rules
- A theory of government that contends groups are so strong that government is weakened
- Powers of government that are expressly stated in the Constitution
- Political contributions made for "party-building activities"
- A person working for an interest group or on their own to influence members of government
- The tendency for states to hold primaries earlier and earlier to capitalize on media attention
25 Clues: Large means of communication • The issues that attract the attention of politicians • Appealing to a narrow audience with a specific interest • The ways that issues get on the government's policy agenda • Political contributions made for "party-building activities" • Splitting your vote among several different political parties • ...
Exam Two Study Guide 2025-03-22
Across
- A personality trait that predicts high job performance; part of the Big Five model.
- A method in employee selection where applicants must meet a minimum score at each stage before moving forward. (2 words)
- A motivational theory focused on intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, proposed by Deci & Ryan. (2 words)
- The belief that one’s own abilities will lead to successful performance.(2 words)
- A theory that outlines how specific, challenging goals improve motivation. (3 words)
- The process of enhancing employees’ skills through planned learning experiences.(2 words)
Down
- A popular method of measuring job satisfaction that assesses five dimensions like pay and supervision. (3 words)
- A method of testing that adjusts difficulty based on previous answers. (3 words)
- Positive discretionary behaviors at work. (3 words)
- This theory outlines how positive job dimensions (like autonomy) improve motivation. (3 words)
- The commitment type in which employees stay with a company due to emotional attachment.(2 words)
- The process by which employees mentally rehearse learned skills to apply them on the job. (3 words)
- This theory emphasizes that people are active decision-makers who evaluate effort, performance, and rewards. (2 words)
- Theory that suggests people compare their input-output ratios to others in the workplace. (2 words)
- An emotional state resulting from fulfilling job expectations and personal satisfaction.(2 words)
15 Clues: Positive discretionary behaviors at work. (3 words) • A method of testing that adjusts difficulty based on previous answers. (3 words) • The belief that one’s own abilities will lead to successful performance.(2 words) • A personality trait that predicts high job performance; part of the Big Five model. • ...
Renaissance crossword 2016-11-28
Across
- _____ caused many innovators to experience setbacks
- A form of purchasing a path to heaven condemned and damned by Luther
- The feudal system caused many to have a very poor _______
- The era we live in now is know is the _____
- Wrote many books including the prince
- Before scientific discoveries celestial bodies had an impact on natural affairs. Da vinci had a horoscope of Aries.
- Caused the protestant reformation
- Non-Religious way of doing things. Many artists during the Renaissance created Secular pieces of art. Raphael created Secular pieces of art
- The first to introduced Linear perspective into artwork
- After the Renaissance the European population increased greatly because of the ______ of previously uninhabited areas
- World The Renaissance occurred here
- This is different to every person and there are different types of it. Da Vinci was the first to create artwork that incorporated ________
- Was greatly changed after the Renaissance took place
- The theory of the universe followed by the Church before the theory of heliocentrism was proven by Galileo and other astronomers.
- Created the heliocentric theory
- Office of the church
Down
- When there’s a ruling class. The Medici is an example
- Depending on one’s _____ the might have contributed differently than others to Renaissance.
- A woman author in the French Renaissance who was the French princess
- Copernicus invented this theory
- Luther challenged the church and this happened
- Was invented by Gutenberg
- Many philosophers and innovators believed that people had the right to express themselves and shape their own lives.
- Expanded on a theory about heliocentrism
- Luther loathed a journey that people would take to spiritually significant place. Those who would take this journey had a specific name.
- This faith played a dominant role in the 2 routes that ran across the Western World. These routes caused a deadly plague.
- Worked with Luther to translate the bible into the vernacular creating new versions on his own invention
- Played a large role in the English Renaissance creating plays and pieces of literature that would be forever remembered
- Depending on the status of one on the feudal system you might have different ____?
- A author of mixed cultures who played a role in the French and Italian Renaissance
- The rise of the merchant class led to the downfall of a specific system
- The bible had to be printed in the ______ of the people so that ordinary people could read it
32 Clues: Office of the church • Was invented by Gutenberg • Copernicus invented this theory • Created the heliocentric theory • Caused the protestant reformation • World The Renaissance occurred here • Wrote many books including the prince • Expanded on a theory about heliocentrism • The era we live in now is know is the _____ • Luther challenged the church and this happened • ...
Crossword 1 2024-12-26
Across
- Unlike the classical school, the positivist school sought ____ for their theories
- In Massachusetts, a juvenile is a person under the age of ____ (spell out the number).
- The movement that led to the forcible sterilization of “genetically inferior” individuals
- Your professor’s favorite property crime
- Violation of a criminal law
- An invasive surgery that involved drilling a hole into the skull
- The classical school argued that criminals are ____ individuals
- Amendment 6: the right to a speedy, public trial by a/an ____ jury
- The main source of national data on crime in the United States since 2021
- These types of theories explain the differences in offending between individuals
- The theory that criminals are possessed by evil spirits
Down
- The city where your professor was robbed
- The tenet that punishment should fit the crime
- The author of On Crimes and Punishments (1764)
- Violation of social norms
- The Austrian neurologist who theorized that crime resulted from a weak superego and/or uncontrollable id
- Violation of a criminal law by a juvenile
- Lombroso argued that criminals are _____; not fully evolved
- A good theory must have concepts that can be empirically measured and tested; in other words, it should be ____.
- A set of statements designed to explain a particular phenomenon
- In modern scholarship, low intelligence is considered a risk factor for crime but is no longer considered ____
- The ____ school argued that criminals are fundamentally different from non-criminals, both biologically and psychologically
- The body type most closely associated with criminality, according to William Sheldon
- These types of theories explain the differences in offending between larger units of analysis
- Bentham’s theory that people seek pleasure and avoid pain: the ____ calculus
- According to victimization surveys, less than ____ percent of victimizations are reported to the police (spell out the number)
26 Clues: Violation of social norms • Violation of a criminal law • The city where your professor was robbed • Your professor’s favorite property crime • Violation of a criminal law by a juvenile • The tenet that punishment should fit the crime • The author of On Crimes and Punishments (1764) • The theory that criminals are possessed by evil spirits • ...
AP Psychology Names Crossword 2015-04-16
Across
- Founder of functional psychology and “father of American psychology”.
- A famous linguist who argued that all languages shared basic elements called universal grammar.
- Developed rational emotive behavior therapy.
- Known for working with and against Kohlberg on ethical communities, ethical relationships, and problems in ethics.
- Emphasized how the child’s mind grows through interaction with the social environment.
- A developmental psychologist known for the strange situation experiment, which displayed two types of infant attachment (secure attachment, insecure attachment).
- A cognitive psychology specialized in memory and known for her works on the misinformation effect, eyewitness memory, and false memories.
- Known for his discovery of the forgetting curve and spacing effect.
- Developed the widely used humanistic technique called client-centered therapy.
- Believed that we have one general intelligence.
- Known for his theory of multiple intelligences.
- Known for his work on cognitive dissonance and the social comparative theory.
- Proved that an infant’s temperament is quite stable over time in that certain behaviors in infancy are predictive of behaviors in adolescence.
- A feminist psychologist who believed that the interplay of conscious and unconscious motives and conflicts shape personality.
Down
- Known for his research on taste aversion learning.
- His theory of learned helplessness states that the feeling of helplessness and the perception of control as external deepens their feelings of resignation.
- A developmental psychologist known for recognizing three parenting styles (authoritarian, permissive, authoritative).
- Believed that humans have a collective unconscious, a common reservoir of archetypes derived from our species’ universal experiences.
- Researched mental age and created a widely used intelligence test.
- Known for his theory of stages of moral development (pre-conventional, conventional, post-conventional).
- Known for research conducted on the split brain.
- A cognitive psychologist who researched how the availability heuristic operates.
- Discovered the principle that, to be perceived as different, two stimuli must differ by a constant minimum percentage.
- Known for his triarchic theory of intelligence.
- A cognitive therapist who believed that changing people’s thinking can change their functioning.
- Studied emotions and its relation to facial expressions.
- Believed hypnosis involved both social influences and a dual-processing state of dissociation.
- A gestalt psychologist known for his conformity experiments.
28 Clues: Developed rational emotive behavior therapy. • Known for his triarchic theory of intelligence. • Believed that we have one general intelligence. • Known for his theory of multiple intelligences. • Known for research conducted on the split brain. • Known for his research on taste aversion learning. • Studied emotions and its relation to facial expressions. • ...
locke 2022-09-14
Across
- Founder of educational philosophy
- Studied Freudian theory from Anna
- Stressed the importance of children cultural
- Founder of kindergarten
- Children’s moral development
- Founder of child psychoanalysis
- Children's intellectual development
- Inventor of the first usable intelligence test
- exercised considerable influence in academic educational
Down
- Children develop at their own pace
- Believed that children are born naturally good
- Developed Reggio Emilia Schools
- Established the normative theory
- Considered the father of psychology
- Social developmentalist coined the term
- Saw the importance of home education
16 Clues: Founder of kindergarten • Children’s moral development • Developed Reggio Emilia Schools • Founder of child psychoanalysis • Established the normative theory • Founder of educational philosophy • Studied Freudian theory from Anna • Children develop at their own pace • Considered the father of psychology • Children's intellectual development • ...
Management and Leadership 2018-10-31
Across
- Theory X says that workers ______ work
- Having a realistic view of our own abilities is an example of this
- The name of the man who identified the ten managerial roles
- The art of motivating a group of people towards achieving a common objective
- Using social skills to persuade, negotiate and lead is an example of this
- What does the E stand for in EI?
- A style of leadership which incorporates two way communication
- The managerial role where you might open a new factory
- Person responsible for setting objectives
Down
- The managerial role where you might present at the AGM
- A style of leadership where the leader takes all the decisions
- The roles which include entrepreneur and resource allocator fall under which category?
- The roles which include figurehead and liaison fall under which category?
- This style of leadership means 'father like'
- What does the I stand for in EI?
- The managerial role where you might attend a seminar or a business conference
- The man who identified theory x and theory y
17 Clues: What does the I stand for in EI? • What does the E stand for in EI? • Theory X says that workers ______ work • Person responsible for setting objectives • This style of leadership means 'father like' • The man who identified theory x and theory y • The managerial role where you might present at the AGM • The managerial role where you might open a new factory • ...
Crossword Puzzle World Literature 2021-01-16
Across
- adopted heathcliff
- the one who maltreated and abuse heathcliff
- The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights
- title of the story
- the story taken
- the foil in the story
- the son of Heathcliff and Isabella
- What kind of point of view is the stors Wuthering Heights
Down
- authors of the story
- son of hindley
- the another literary theory of the story
- is the power to get the others to do necessary work to produce goods and services they want
- who longs to spend the rest of his life with catherine
- lacks power
- heathcliffs wife
- has a power
- protagonist in the stor
- heathcliff love of her life
- literary theory of the story
- daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton
20 Clues: lacks power • has a power • son of hindley • the story taken • heathcliffs wife • adopted heathcliff • title of the story • authors of the story • the foil in the story • protagonist in the stor • heathcliff love of her life • literary theory of the story • the son of Heathcliff and Isabella • The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights • daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton • ...
Crossword Puzzle World Literature 2021-01-16
Across
- adopted heathcliff
- the one who maltreated and abuse heathcliff
- The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights
- title of the story
- the story taken
- the foil in the story
- the son of Heathcliff and Isabella
- What kind of point of view is the stors Wuthering Heights
Down
- authors of the story
- son of hindley
- the another literary theory of the story
- is the power to get the others to do necessary work to produce goods and services they want
- who longs to spend the rest of his life with catherine
- lacks power
- heathcliffs wife
- has a power
- protagonist in the stor
- heathcliff love of her life
- literary theory of the story
- daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton
20 Clues: lacks power • has a power • son of hindley • the story taken • heathcliffs wife • adopted heathcliff • title of the story • authors of the story • the foil in the story • protagonist in the stor • heathcliff love of her life • literary theory of the story • the son of Heathcliff and Isabella • The kind of novel is Wuthering Heights • daughter of Catherine and Edgar Linton • ...
Business unit 4 2015-03-19
Across
- A firm with more than 25% market share.
- The moral principles that should underpin decision making.
- A fall in the value of money.
- This means taking an idea for a new product or process and turning it into a commercial success.
- A production process that can be continued indefinitely because it uses resources that are not depleting.
- Handing power down the hierarchy to managers and workers.
- Measures how efficiently a firm turns inputs into the production process into outputs.
- An individual with a flair for business opportunities and risk taking.
Down
- The site(s) where a firm decides to carry out its operations.
- When firms get together and discuss ways to work together in order to raise prices.
- The pressures leading to the world becoming one “market”
- A document a company has to produce when they go public.
- A tax placed on imports in order to increase price.
13 Clues: A fall in the value of money. • A firm with more than 25% market share. • A tax placed on imports in order to increase price. • The pressures leading to the world becoming one “market” • A document a company has to produce when they go public. • Handing power down the hierarchy to managers and workers. • The moral principles that should underpin decision making. • ...
Enlightenment and Revolution - Mia Ashurst 2025-01-10
Across
- simple and elegant
- government exists only for the consent of the people
- Earth-centered theory
- belief in god
- System of government
- party's for nerds
- peoples rules 'we the people'
- First 10 amendments
- french thinkers
- knowledge can be acquired through reason alone
- stars guy who made the telescope
- wrote the declaration of independence
Down
- giving up certain rights to protect other rights
- ruled Russia and was a enlightened despot
- process of experimentation
- believed that man was born good
- basically the palace of Versailles
- Catherine the great
- laws of gravitation
- wanted to limit government power
- intellectual movement
- Principle of Government
- fought for womens education
- Sun-centered theory
- Took place in Europe and made advantages in the natural sciences
- used satire
26 Clues: used satire • belief in god • french thinkers • party's for nerds • simple and elegant • Catherine the great • laws of gravitation • Sun-centered theory • First 10 amendments • System of government • Earth-centered theory • intellectual movement • Principle of Government • process of experimentation • fought for womens education • peoples rules 'we the people' • believed that man was born good • ...
theorist 2022-09-14
Across
- of child psychoanalysis,
- the importance of a child's cultural background as an effect to the stages of
- Erikson
- environment;
- that children are born naturally good;
- Freud
- Skinner
- exercised considerable influence in academic educational psychology.
- develop at their own pace and gain knowledge by actively using their senses;
- the father of psychology;
- of the first usable intelligence test ,
- Freudian theory from Anna; Social/Emotional theorist,
Down
- moral development begins with a desire to avoid punishment
- developmentalist coined the term, operant conditioning;
- Piaget
- the importance of home education in the early years; Wrote How Gertrude Teaches
- Reggio Emilia Schools;
- Children;
- the normative theory;
- of kindergarten;
- Binet
- Locke Founder of educational philosophy; Believed children are born as blank slates
- intellectual development proceeds through stages, as they adapt to the
23 Clues: Freud • Binet • Piaget • Erikson • Skinner • Children; • environment; • of kindergarten; • the normative theory; • Reggio Emilia Schools; • of child psychoanalysis, • the father of psychology; • that children are born naturally good; • of the first usable intelligence test , • Freudian theory from Anna; Social/Emotional theorist, • developmentalist coined the term, operant conditioning; • ...
Chapter 1: Overview of Marketing 2025-05-07
Across
- Intangible customer benefits that are produced by people or machines and cannot be separated from the producer.
- Reflects the relationship of benefits to costs, or what consumers get for what they give.
- Thoughts, opinions, philosophies, and intellectual concepts.
- A business philosophy and set of strategies, programs, and systems that focus on identifying and building loyalty among the firm’s most valued customers.
- The particular way in which a person chooses to satisfy a need, which is shaped by a person’s knowledge, culture, and personality.
- The process in which consumers sell to other consumers.
- A basic necessity, such as food, clothing, shelter, or safety.
Down
- A method of building a relationship with customers based on the philosophy that buyers and sellers should develop a long-term relationship.
- Customers act as collaborators with a manufacturer or retailer to create the product or service.
- Product, price, place, and promotion—the controllable set of activities that a firm uses to respond to the wants of its target markets.
- A written document composed of an analysis of the current marketing situation, opportunities and threats for the firm, marketing objectives and strategy specified in terms of the four Ps, action programs, and projected or pro forma income (and other financial) statements.
- The process in which businesses sell to consumers.
- The process of selling merchandise or services from one business to another.
- Content distributed through online and mobile technologies to facilitate interpersonal interactions.
- A set of business practices designed to plan for and present an organization’s products or services in ways that build effective customer relationships.
- The group of firms and set of techniques and approaches firms use to make and deliver a given set of goods and services
- The trade of things of value between the buyer and the seller so that each is better off as a result.
- The groups of people who need or want a company’s products or services and have the ability and willingness to buy them.
- The customer segment or group to whom the firm is interested in selling its products and services.
- Items that can be physically touched.
20 Clues: Items that can be physically touched. • The process in which businesses sell to consumers. • The process in which consumers sell to other consumers. • Thoughts, opinions, philosophies, and intellectual concepts. • A basic necessity, such as food, clothing, shelter, or safety. • The process of selling merchandise or services from one business to another. • ...
Economics Crossword Puzzle 2019-05-27
Across
- costs that are not affected by changes in output
- curve that shows increasing opportunity costs
- when actions of a person have an impact on others
- the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed
- recurring fluctuations in economic activity consisting of recession and recovery and growth and decline
- competition that has only one firm that sets prices
- an increase in money supply increases the quantity of investment demanded because of a decrease in ____.
- minimum price below which the product cannot be sold
- when the interest rates in a country rise, the value of their ______ increases.
Down
- the period of time in which state of the economy declines
- a grant or contribution used to increase the supply of goods with positive externalities
- factor market in which there is a sole firm that has market power
- a decrease in government spending results in a decrease in _____.
- loss of funds for private investment caused by government borrowing
- C + I + G + (X – M)
- tax where the proportion of income paid in taxes rises as income rises
- excess burden caused from not being at the competitive market equilibrium
- indirect costs included in economic profit
- models strategic interactions of firms in oligopoly markets
- general increase in prices over time
20 Clues: C + I + G + (X – M) • general increase in prices over time • indirect costs included in economic profit • curve that shows increasing opportunity costs • costs that are not affected by changes in output • when actions of a person have an impact on others • the percentage of the workforce that is unemployed • competition that has only one firm that sets prices • ...
Plate Tectonics 2024-11-04
Across
- What type of activity is common along the Ring of Fire?
- What deep ocean features can occur from subduction?
- What type of plate boundary involves plates sliding past each other?
- What bodies of water are also moved by tectonic plates?
- What can form at subduction zones?
- What type of spreading occurs at mid-ocean ridges?
- What is the hot and bendable layer under the Earth's crust?
- What are the large landmasses that move across the Earth's surface?
- Who proposed the theory of Continental Drift? (Last name only)
- What is the study of the movement of Earth's plates called? (no spaces)
Down
- What occurs when one plate moves under another?
- What geological event can occur at convergent plate boundaries?
- Which state is home to the San Andreas Fault?
- What was the name of the ancient supercontinent?
- What evidence did Wegener use to support his theory?
- What is the name of the area in the Pacific known for volcanic activity? (no spaces)
- What is the hot liquid rock that comes from the mantle?
- What can form when two continental plates collide?
- What type of valley can form at divergent boundaries?
- What is the process called when new oceanic crust is created (hint: moving apart)?
- What is the outer layer of the Earth called?
- Tectonics What is the scientific theory that explains geological events?
22 Clues: What can form at subduction zones? • What is the outer layer of the Earth called? • Which state is home to the San Andreas Fault? • What occurs when one plate moves under another? • What was the name of the ancient supercontinent? • What can form when two continental plates collide? • What type of spreading occurs at mid-ocean ridges? • ...
Atomic Theory and Atomic Structure 2012-12-02
Across
- English school teacher
- The number of protons in the nucleus of an atom (two words)
- unable to be cut or divided
- Theory: mass of an atom in the center
- Rutherford's discovery
- Charge: 0
- Number of electrons in energy level 4 (two words)
- _________ are attracted to negative electrons by electrical force (2 words)
- ______ atoms have no overall charge because the number of protons and electrons is the same
- A unit or quantum of light
Down
- Charge: +1
- Was Thompson's theory negatively or positively charged?
- Date: 1897
- holds the atom together (two words)
- Number of electrons in energy level 1
- unstable isotopes that emit radiation and decay into another isotope
- Each element has a unique number of protons
- Greek philosper
- different numbers of neutrons
- Charge: -1
20 Clues: Charge: 0 • Charge: +1 • Date: 1897 • Charge: -1 • Greek philosper • English school teacher • Rutherford's discovery • A unit or quantum of light • unable to be cut or divided • different numbers of neutrons • holds the atom together (two words) • Theory: mass of an atom in the center • Number of electrons in energy level 1 • Each element has a unique number of protons • ...
Social Learning Theory 2022-02-07
Across
- Toy used in the study
- Sutherland came up with this theory
- Sutherland's theory is shown by this
- Name of the Theorist who investigated SLT
- Researchers who supported Bandura's theory
- Who was used in the study other than children?
Down
- What did Bandura find the children copied?
- Case study for this theory
- In modern society we can learn through the ......
- Observational learning can take place through this context
- High ........... shows behaviour is learnt from peers
- Moral panic was created by this film
12 Clues: Toy used in the study • Case study for this theory • Sutherland came up with this theory • Moral panic was created by this film • Sutherland's theory is shown by this • Name of the Theorist who investigated SLT • What did Bandura find the children copied? • Researchers who supported Bandura's theory • Who was used in the study other than children? • ...
Eartquake/Volcano Crossword puzzle 2021-12-17
Across
- A theory explaining the structure of the earth
- A scientist who first learned about and told the Theory of the Continental Drift in 1912
- A soft layer of the mantle and where the lithosphere floats
- A molten layer of iron and nickel surrounding the earth's inner core
- A plate boundary that moves apart from each other
- A landmass that broke apart 225 million years ago
- What causes the tectonic plates to move through the lithosphere and the asthenosphere
Down
- The process by which oceanic crust sinks beneath a trench and back into a convergent plate boundary
- Alfred Wegener's theory that the Continents was once a huge landmass
- The thickest layer of earth that consist of the lithosphere and the asthenosphere
- A layer made up of part of the mantle and the crust
- A plate boundary that hit each other, moving it in different directions
- A plate boundary where two plates move together
- Where molten material makes new ocean floor
- A crack in the lithosphere which rocks move along
- An underwater mountain chain where a divergent plate boundary creates new ocean floor
- A deep and wide crack on the ocean floor
- A deep valley where two plates move in opposite directions
- A ball of solid material at the center of the earth
- A layer that forms on the surface of the earth
20 Clues: A deep and wide crack on the ocean floor • Where molten material makes new ocean floor • A theory explaining the structure of the earth • A layer that forms on the surface of the earth • A plate boundary where two plates move together • A crack in the lithosphere which rocks move along • A plate boundary that moves apart from each other • ...
Chapter 19 2023-11-30
Across
- Individuals go through life embedded in a personal network of individuals to whom they give and from whom they receive support
- The view that our aging society is being unfair to its younger members because older adults receive inequitably large allocations of resources
- Prejudice against others because of their age, especially prejudice against older adult
- This gender of child is more likely to be involved in the lives of aging parents.
- Erikson's eighth and final stage occurring late adulthood
- Theory that the more active and involved older adults are, the more likely they are to be satisfied with their lives
- With compensation theory) The theory that successful aging is related to three main factors
Down
- One factor in the Selective Optimization with compensation theory
- Theory that motivation changes as a function of time horizons; older adults become more selective about social networks (familiar individuals with established rewarding relationships)
- One factor in the Selective Optimization with compensation theory
- This increases in middle adulthood but declines in the 70s and 80s
- An event that alters a late adulthood coup's lifestyle and requires adaption
- These types of issues include health care, generational inequity, income, and technology in late adulthood
- Openness, neuroticism, pessimistic, positive: the forementioned words make up someone's _________
- Relevant theorist to Socioemotional development
15 Clues: Relevant theorist to Socioemotional development • Erikson's eighth and final stage occurring late adulthood • One factor in the Selective Optimization with compensation theory • One factor in the Selective Optimization with compensation theory • This increases in middle adulthood but declines in the 70s and 80s • ...
AP Psychology 2015-04-22
Across
- Facial expressions
- Feminist psychology
- Taste aversion
- Learned helplessness
- Psychoanalysis
- Labelling experiment psychiatric hospital
- Operant chamber
- Theory of multiple intelligences
- Social comparison theory
- Parenting style
- Classical conditioning
- Ethics and feminism
- Strange situation for children
- Hypnosis/how easily one can be hypnotized
- General intelligence
Down
- Infant temperament
- Eight life-stages
- Developmental stages
- Bobo doll experiment
- Father of psychology
- Law of proportions
- Theory of intelligence
- Behavioral economics
- Forgetting curve
- Moral development stages
- Monkey study
- Misinformation effect
- Rational behavior emotive therapy
28 Clues: Monkey study • Taste aversion • Psychoanalysis • Operant chamber • Parenting style • Forgetting curve • Eight life-stages • Facial expressions • Infant temperament • Law of proportions • Feminist psychology • Ethics and feminism • Developmental stages • Bobo doll experiment • Father of psychology • Behavioral economics • Learned helplessness • General intelligence • Misinformation effect • ...
Famous Scientists 2023-09-03
Across
- Key figure in the Manhattan Project.
- Supported heliocentrism in astronomy.
- Laws of motion and universal gravitation.
- Astronomer and science communicator.
- Formulated the theory of evolution.
- Pioneered research on radioactivity.
Down
- Theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate.
- Proposed the Higgs boson in particle physics.
- Inventor and electrical engineering pioneer.
- Discovered the expansion of the universe.
- Developed the theory of relativity.
- Theoretical physicist known for black holes.
- Father of modern genetics.
- Developed the atomic model.
- Made significant fossil discoveries.
15 Clues: Father of modern genetics. • Developed the atomic model. • Developed the theory of relativity. • Formulated the theory of evolution. • Key figure in the Manhattan Project. • Made significant fossil discoveries. • Astronomer and science communicator. • Pioneered research on radioactivity. • Supported heliocentrism in astronomy. • Theoretical physicist and Nobel laureate. • ...
Astronomy 2016-04-24
Across
- Equal length of day and night.
- Brightest objects in the Universe.
- Death of a massive star.
- Discovered laws of planetary motion
- Space telescope, launched in 1990.
- What the Sun will be when Earth is destroyed.
- Birth place of stars.
- Collection of stars kept together via gravity.
Down
- North star.
- Discovered moons around Jupiter.
- Band of EM radiation we see the heat of the Big Bang in.
- Distance related to a parallax of 1 arcsecond.
- Theory pushed by Fred Hoyle.
- Not a planet.
- The hunter, a constellation.
- Current theory for the formation of everything.
- Manned missions to the Moon.
17 Clues: North star. • Not a planet. • Birth place of stars. • Death of a massive star. • Theory pushed by Fred Hoyle. • The hunter, a constellation. • Manned missions to the Moon. • Equal length of day and night. • Discovered moons around Jupiter. • Brightest objects in the Universe. • Space telescope, launched in 1990. • Discovered laws of planetary motion • ...
Types of Business Organisations 2024-10-16
Across
- separate legal entity is a characteristic of
- There is a risk of _________ in a partnership firm
- owners of a company are termed as
- a company is managed and run by _______
- A company has _________ when one of the owners die
- One man ownership and control
Down
- Shareholders ______ company can sell their shares to the public
- Partnership is an ___________ business
- Each partner will ______ profits and losses
- members of a partnership firm are called
- liability of members in LLP is
11 Clues: One man ownership and control • liability of members in LLP is • owners of a company are termed as • Partnership is an ___________ business • a company is managed and run by _______ • members of a partnership firm are called • Each partner will ______ profits and losses • separate legal entity is a characteristic of • There is a risk of _________ in a partnership firm • ...
Chapter 27 and 6 2015-12-02
Across
- _________ theory is a paradigm that involves a critique of society and societal processes and stuctures.
- ___________ analyses involve splitting the effect size information from studies into distinct categorical groups, such as gender and ethnicity.
- The most prominent theoretical system in grounded theory consisting of three premises: 1) humans act toward things based on the meanings that the things have for them 2) the meaning of things arises out of the interaction humans have with other fellow humans 3) meanings are handled in an interpretive process in dealing with the things humans encounter
- __________ ____________ model is a popular framework in nursing studies focused on patient compliance and preventative healthcare services. The model suggests that health seeking behavior is influenced by a person’s perception of a threat posed by a health problem and the value placed on the actions aimed at reducing the threat.
- The analysis of the theoretical foundations on which the studies are grounded
- The study of the studies’ methodologic rigor
- __________ literature are studies with a more limited distribution, includes dissertations and unpublished reports.
- Involves predicting the effect size based on possible explanatory factors.
- The conceptual underpinning of a study, which includes an overall rationale and conceptual definitions of key concepts.
- __________ studies are preliminary investigations that clarify the range and nature of the evidence base. It addresses broad questions, uses flexible procedures, and does not formally evaluate the quality of evidence. They can provide background and suggest strategies for a full systematic review.
- Explicit reporting guideline for meth-analyses of randomized controlled trials
Down
- _________ models are graphic, theory-driven representations of phenomena and their relationships to each other using symbols or diagrams and minimal use of words
- ________ theories attempt to describe large segments of the human experience.
- Type of bias that refers to the tendency for published studies to over-represent statistically significant findings.
- A review that methodically combines research evidence about a specific research question in a manner that can be verified and reproduced. The review consists of carefully developed sampling and data collection procedures that are predetermined.
- __________ theory suggests that cultural conditions and adaptation stem from mental activity and ideas
- An abstract generalization that systematically explains relationships among phenomena.
- ___________ _________________ model views humans as biopsycholosocial adaptive systems who cope with environmental change through the process of adaptation
- 27
- ___________ plot involves plotting effects from individual studies on the horizontal axis and precision on the vertical axis.
- Theories that view material conditions, such as money and resources, as the source of cultural developments
21 Clues: 27 • The study of the studies’ methodologic rigor • Involves predicting the effect size based on possible explanatory factors. • ________ theories attempt to describe large segments of the human experience. • The analysis of the theoretical foundations on which the studies are grounded • ...
Cells and Organelles 2022-10-11
Across
- Who came up with the theory that all PLANTS are made of cells?
- Makes the protein for the cell.
- Creates the energy for the cell by respiration.
- Able to control what can leave and enter the cell.
- Hard, rigid,____ made of cellulose; plant cells only.
- Have nuclei and membrane bound organelles; both plants and animals have these.
- First person to see living cells, then proceeded to name them “animalcules”.
- Able to move and cushion organelles; jelly-like.
- Packages the proteins and materials and transports them.
- A large, green, rod-shaped organelle that captures light to make food (photosynthesis).
- Who saw cells by looking at a cork under a microscope and named the cells, “cells”.
- Who came up with the theory that all cells come from pre-existing cells?
Down
- Who made it possible to SEE cells?
- Single celled organisms; most abundant life forms.
- All living things are made of cells as they are the building blocks of life.
- Controls all of the cells activities.
- Who came up with the theory that all ANIMALS are made of cells?
- Responsible for transportation of materials within the cell.
- Stores the food, water, and waste; larger in plant cells.
- Small, round sac filled with digestive fluids.
20 Clues: Makes the protein for the cell. • Who made it possible to SEE cells? • Controls all of the cells activities. • Small, round sac filled with digestive fluids. • Creates the energy for the cell by respiration. • Able to move and cushion organelles; jelly-like. • Single celled organisms; most abundant life forms. • Able to control what can leave and enter the cell. • ...
Culture practice 2022-10-24
Across
- theory where everything serves a purpose and helps society move on
- non-physical things in a culture
- theory that life moves on because of symbols and interactions
- what you believe is important
- a opinion or conviction
- practice of the most broadly shared meanings in the social system
- to prohibit something because of fear
- social interventions that are moral
Down
- judging of other cultures off of preconception
- culture objects in peoples culture
- a moral norm
- theory where conflict is what moves life foreword
- believing in a higher power
- something you do without thinking about it
14 Clues: a moral norm • a opinion or conviction • believing in a higher power • what you believe is important • non-physical things in a culture • culture objects in peoples culture • social interventions that are moral • to prohibit something because of fear • something you do without thinking about it • judging of other cultures off of preconception • ...
intro: technology transfer 2025-09-25
10 Clues: avoid reinventing wheel • near maturity technology • example of horizontal TT • from one firm to another • from one location to another • from one industry to another • from r&d organization to firm • from another region to another • build the image of technopreneur • transfer across national boundaries
AP Psychology: people 2023-05-19
Across
- divided the unconscious mind into the collective and personal unconscious
- misinformation effect
- forgetting curve
- developed law of effect
- studied innate language development and universal grammar
- study infant attachment
- functionalist, wrote Principles of Psychology
- studied imprinting in ducklings
- co-founder Gestalt psychology
- 16 Trait Personality Inventory/factor analysis
- discovered classical conditioning
- proposed a general intelligence (g)
- developed the WAIS (adult) and WISC (child)
- eight stages of psychosocial development
- studied cognitive development in children
- Bobo doll experiment
- operant conditioning
- first women to receive a PhD in psychology
- studied species variations
Down
- first APA president
- studied obedience
- studied conformity
- Stanford Prison Experiment
- discovered the left side of the brain,responsible forspeaking
- developed the field of psychophysics
- dissociative theory
- changed mental health treatment
- first modern intelligence test
- the father of psychology
- stressed importance of striving for superiority and power
- discovered responsible for speech comprehension
- developed a cognitive therapy for depression
- client-centered therapy
- studied parenting styles
- triarchic theory of three intelligence
- developed Weber’s law regarding the constant percentage of the difference threshold
- dismissed introspection
- developed psychoanalytics
- developed a hierarchy of needs theory
39 Clues: forgetting curve • studied obedience • studied conformity • first APA president • dissociative theory • Bobo doll experiment • operant conditioning • misinformation effect • developed law of effect • study infant attachment • client-centered therapy • dismissed introspection • the father of psychology • studied parenting styles • developed psychoanalytics • Stanford Prison Experiment • ...
Child and Family Studies Test 1 Terms 2017-09-05
Across
- Last stage in child birth, placenta is delivered
- Set of expressed genotype; physical traits
- Development where new understandings emerge "stair"
- A design that combines cross sectional and longitudinal studies
- Descriptions that are not biased
- A lifelong process with age related changes
- Anything that causes a birth defect
- Failure to conceive after 12 months
- Same result can be obtained by using different researchers as they have the same process
- "Spontaneous abortions," usually a hidden experience
- A study that gathers people from multiple age groups to detect age related differences
- Effects due to a person's time of birth and not their actual age
- A theory that describe development as unconscious and heavily influenced by emotion
- Inherited genetic genes
- A period during the first 2 weeks after conception, includes creation of zygote
- A genotype environment correlation where children seek out environments
Down
- Statement(s) that describe, explain, and predict behavior
- A theory that change is created by environment; "nurture" view
- Results are consistent over time and observers
- A genotype environment correlation where the child's genotype elicit certain environments
- A genotype environment correlation where the genetically related parents provide the environment for the child
- A theory where individuals manipulate and strategize information; computer is the model
- A study where a single age group of people is studied over time
- Development that builds on previous material "elevator"
- A theory that change is from within individual as they are actively involved in their development
- A sample that represents a larger population to support generalizability
- A period during 2-8 weeks after conception, has rapid change and development of organs
- Genetic predisposition of an individual to a certain condition
- A conditioning process where an unconditioned stimulus aquires the ability to produce a response
- Period after childbirth when the mother adjusts physically and psychologically
- A conditioning process where probability of behavior is based on environmental consequences
- Behavior being studied is the actual reflection of underlying process
- A period that lasts about 7 months, growth and finishing phase
33 Clues: Inherited genetic genes • Descriptions that are not biased • Anything that causes a birth defect • Failure to conceive after 12 months • Set of expressed genotype; physical traits • A lifelong process with age related changes • Results are consistent over time and observers • Last stage in child birth, placenta is delivered • ...
Child and Family Studies Test 1 Terms 2017-09-05
Across
- A conditioning process where probability of behavior is based on environmental consequences
- A genotype environment correlation where children seek out environments
- A lifelong process with age related changes
- A theory that change is created by environment; "nurture" view
- Last stage in child birth, placenta is delivered
- A study where a single age group of people is studied over time
- A theory that describe development as unconscious and heavily influenced by emotion
- A theory where individuals manipulate and strategize information; computer is the model
- Results are consistent over time and observers
- A genotype environment correlation where the child's genotype elicit certain environments
- Development where new understandings emerge "stair"
- Behavior being studied is the actual reflection of underlying process
- Genetic predisposition of an individual to a certain condition
- A period during the first 2 weeks after conception, includes creation of zygote
Down
- Inherited genetic genes
- Period after childbirth when the mother adjusts physically and psychologically
- A design that combines cross sectional and longitudinal studies
- A conditioning process where an unconditioned stimulus aquires the ability to produce a response
- Failure to conceive after 12 months
- A sample that represents a larger population to support generalizability
- Set of expressed genotype; physical traits
- Effects due to a person's time of birth and not their actual age
- A study that gathers people from multiple age groups to detect age related differences
- A period during 2-8 weeks after conception, has rapid change and development of organs
- Anything that causes a birth defect
- "Spontaneous abortions," usually a hidden experience
- Same result can be obtained by using different researchers as they have the same process
- Development that builds on previous material "elevator"
- Descriptions that are not biased
- A theory that change is from within individual as they are actively involved in their development
- A genotype environment correlation where the genetically related parents provide the environment for the child
- Statement(s) that describe, explain, and predict behavior
- A period that lasts about 7 months, growth and finishing phase
33 Clues: Inherited genetic genes • Descriptions that are not biased • Failure to conceive after 12 months • Anything that causes a birth defect • Set of expressed genotype; physical traits • A lifelong process with age related changes • Results are consistent over time and observers • Last stage in child birth, placenta is delivered • ...
Suffering 2015-11-29
Across
- Theory to solve the problems of suffering
- theory where it states that suffering has to happen to know pleasure and the world is designed for us to experience pain.
- All loving
- To ask forgiveness for the sins we have committed
- The internal voices, helping us choose what to do it also thinks about the consequences
- The deliverance of salvation from sins
- Christians believed that anyone who worshipped him was a devil worshipper
- One of Gods angels
- Christians believe in a powerful evil being, he causes evil in our world
Down
- to every human allows us to make decisions
- All powerful
- theory where God created Adam and Eve
- The unconditional love God has for mankind
- The reconciliation of God and humankind
- All Knowing
15 Clues: All loving • All Knowing • All powerful • One of Gods angels • theory where God created Adam and Eve • The deliverance of salvation from sins • The reconciliation of God and humankind • Theory to solve the problems of suffering • to every human allows us to make decisions • The unconditional love God has for mankind • To ask forgiveness for the sins we have committed • ...
Psych Unit 3 & 4 Review 2023-11-14
Across
- emotion that is a response to danger and need for defense
- an emotional state that is general and extended in time
- the consistency of a measure
- factors that are social and physical (room temperature, family)
- type of nervous system that relaxes the body after actvity
- Hemisphere of the brain that is associated with depression and avoidance
- type of learning where the learner has sudden awareness of a solution
- type of learning where the learner subconsciously retains information but needs motivation
- Name of the doll in Bandura's observational learning experiment
- the subjective experience associated with an emotion
- Personality trait with a spectrum from narrow interest to curious
- Moral component of a person according to Psychodynamic theory
- What happens when repeated behaviors are rewarded to achieve a goal behavior
Down
- Psychologist who created the Social Learning Theory
- the environmental predictor of a person's personality
- the accuracy of a measure
- type of nervous system that prepares the body for activity
- step in effective modeling where the observer must remember the observed behavior
- Personality trait with a spectrum from quiet to outgoing
- What a person is aware of when they think of themselves according to Psychodynamic theory
- Personality trait with a spectrum from irritable to considerate
- the biological predictor of a person's personality
- factors that are cognitive, affective, and biological events
23 Clues: the accuracy of a measure • the consistency of a measure • the biological predictor of a person's personality • Psychologist who created the Social Learning Theory • the subjective experience associated with an emotion • the environmental predictor of a person's personality • an emotional state that is general and extended in time • ...
Assessment Crossword November 2021-11-02
Across
- Developed the theory of cognitive ability
- Differential item functioning
- Ability to be flexible in solving new problems, regardless of previous knowledge
- Proposed the theory of multiple intelligences
- Sternberg's theory of intelligence
- same format, same types of questions and the same content no matter when or where the test is administered or who is taking the test
Down
- Type of aptitude test
- Also known as general intelligence, introduced by Charles Spearman
- Primary mental ability (anagrams, similarities)
- Ability to understand and interact with others
- Father of eugenics
- Aimed to improve the genetic quality of a human population
- Most commonly used standardized test for college admission
13 Clues: Father of eugenics • Type of aptitude test • Differential item functioning • Sternberg's theory of intelligence • Developed the theory of cognitive ability • Proposed the theory of multiple intelligences • Ability to understand and interact with others • Primary mental ability (anagrams, similarities) • Aimed to improve the genetic quality of a human population • ...
PTEG words Level 5 2024-09-25
Across
- loyalty or commitment to a group; cause; or country.
- to collect information from different sources and arrange it into a list or report.
- a conception of or belief about something.
- to comply with rules; standards; or laws; to match a pattern.
- to evaluate or estimate the nature; ability; or quality of something.
- expected or likely to happen or become.
- to say something again or a number of times for emphasis or clarity.
- to give special importance or prominence to something in speaking or writing.
- an attempt to achieve a goal.
- to remain undamaged or unaffected by; to resist.
- very complicated or detailed.
- to deduce or conclude something from evidence and reasoning rather than from explicit statements.
- to publicly recommend or support a particular cause or policy.
- to regard something as being caused by someone or something.
- coming after something in time; following.
- written or spoken communication or debate.
- a thing that motivates or encourages someone to do something.
- critical observation or examination.
- based on; concerned with; or verifiable by observation or experience rather than theory or pure logic.
- complete and including everything that is necessary.
Down
- to check or prove the validity or accuracy of something.
- to make an action or process easy or easier.
- no longer needed or useful; superfluous.
- to make something less severe; serious; or painful.
- logical and consistent; making sense as a whole.
- able to withstand or recover quickly from difficult conditions.
- to regard or consider in a specified way.
- to consider one thing to be the same as or equivalent to another.
- an earlier event or action regarded as an example or guide for future circumstances.
- perceptible by touch; clear and definite.
- to restore friendly relations between; to make or show to be compatible.
- to form a theory or conjecture about a subject without firm evidence.
- a proposed explanation made on the basis of limited evidence as a starting point for further investigation.
- to communicate or make known a message or information.
- of considerable importance; size; or worth.
- capable of working successfully; feasible.
- to be the cause or basis of something.
- to evoke or draw out a response; answer; or fact from someone.
- a lack of compatibility or similarity between two or more facts.
39 Clues: an attempt to achieve a goal. • very complicated or detailed. • critical observation or examination. • to be the cause or basis of something. • expected or likely to happen or become. • no longer needed or useful; superfluous. • to regard or consider in a specified way. • perceptible by touch; clear and definite. • a conception of or belief about something. • ...
G5_Warm-up activity 2022-03-12
Across
- Topic of today's presentation
- In one-to-none equivalence, ____ equivalent is available in the TL.
- Who developed the theory that mainly focuses on literary translation for equivalence?
- Connotation of speech level is one of connotative __________.
- Translating the text for a particular readership is the achievement of _______ equivalence.
- Connotative equivalence can also be called ________ equivalence.
- Equivalence in translation is the ____________ between the SL and the TL
- An _________ of form is required to achieve formal equivalence.
Down
- Who developed the theory of quantitative equivalence?
- One-to-one, one-to-several, one-to-part, one-to-none are types of ___________ equivalence.
- Koller’s theory about equivalence in translation bases on _______.
- Which connotative dimension does this example belong to? ST: Duodenum TT: Tá tràng
- What is the central area of concern in denotative equivalence?
- What must be preserved in the SL text as a requirement of equivalence?
- Approximate equivalence means that only ________ equivalents are available.
15 Clues: Topic of today's presentation • Who developed the theory of quantitative equivalence? • Connotation of speech level is one of connotative __________. • What is the central area of concern in denotative equivalence? • An _________ of form is required to achieve formal equivalence. • Connotative equivalence can also be called ________ equivalence. • ...
Culture practice 2022-10-24
Across
- theory where everything serves a purpose and helps society move on
- non-physical things in a culture
- theory that life moves on because of symbols and interactions
- what you believe is important
- a opinion or conviction
- practice of the most broadly shared meanings in the social system
- to prohibit something because of fear
- social interventions that are moral
Down
- judging of other cultures off of preconception
- culture objects in peoples culture
- a moral norm
- theory where conflict is what moves life foreword
- believing in a higher power
- something you do without thinking about it
14 Clues: a moral norm • a opinion or conviction • believing in a higher power • what you believe is important • non-physical things in a culture • culture objects in peoples culture • social interventions that are moral • to prohibit something because of fear • something you do without thinking about it • judging of other cultures off of preconception • ...
industrial organization 2024-03-16
Across
- - process of deciding what to do and then getting it done through the effective use of resources.
- SCALE - requires a person to rate that one individual they would least want to work with
- – he states that every person has one of three main driving motivators the needs for achievement, affiliation, or power.,
- GOAL THEORY - Leaders define the path that should be followed by their team to achieve goals
- MANAGEMENT - the control and operations of various marketing activities and the people involved in those activities.
- - The top level usually consists of top executives, and each subsequent level represents lower levels of authority and responsibility.
- - is a group of people working together to achieve a common goals or set of goals.
- Level - Ensure team members have the necessary skills, including being able to handle various tasks.
- - Guiding and motivating team
- - is the process of making arrangements in the form of defined or understood responsibilities and relationships to enable those people to work cooperatively together.
- – Avoid overwhelm and unnecessary stress and frustration by making the goals
- - a set of parts that interact to form a complex whole
- - consists of a statement or an understanding of what the organization or a part of it wants to become, where it wants to go and, broadly, how it means to get there.
- THEORY - Leader`s effectiveness depends on leadership style and favorableness of situation
- - it describes a vision of what something will look like in a few years’ time
- – scientist who defines bureaucracy theory
- Goals - Make sure everyone understands what the team needs to achieve.
- Level - Relate specifically to the team's purpose and its contribution to broader goals.
- MODERN SCHOOL - dominates thinking about how organizations function
- RESOURCE MANAGEMENT - field that focuses on the effective management of an organization's workforce.
- - scheduling and prioritizing the work required
- – something that has to be accomplished
- uncontrollable informal relations.
- THEORY – the focus shifted to the behavior of people in organization.
- Capability - the capacity to create an achievable vision for the envisage options, to select sound courses of action, and to challenge the status quo.
- management - is the process of developing, sharing and implementing a view of what needs to be done.
- LEADERSHIP - based on situation
- order, formality
Down
- feedback - Regularly letting employees know how they're doing at their job.
- - Provide direction and support, even for self-managed teams.
- Drucker – he emphasized the need for systematic, purposeful, and organized discharge of tasks.
- THEORY - scientific management theory,
- - Making sure that everything is going according to plan.
- - on the idea of the business and its objectives, are the foundations for these activities to have excellence based on priorities and strategies.
- objectives- These focus on the results or contributions needed to achieve team, departmental, or corporate goals.
- - Leaders have complete power over people
- - This places individuals in boxes that denote their job and their position in the hierarchy and traces the direct lines of authority
- - leaders delegate decision making authority to their followers
- - it shows how it is expected that the vision will be realized
- Management - is what managers do when they look ahead at what they need to achieve in the middle or relatively distant future
- – be clear and specific so your goals are easier to achieve
- Level - Ensure team members have the necessary skills, including being able to handle various tasks.
- - managing performance throughout the year
- – a data helps us stay focused and motivated, inspiring us and providing something to work towards
- MANAGEMENT – about controlling the flow of money in and out of the organization.
- - can provide the ‘elusive bridge between the aims of the individual employee and the objectives of the organization, [they] provide the medium for linking employee performance targets to the factors critical to the success of the business’
- structures - refers to the way an organization is designed and arranged to achieve its goals.
- - Leaders involve followers in the decision making process
- - taking personal responsibility for delivering what they are there to do
- objectives - individual's personal development, growth, and improvement.
- MANAGEMENT - HOW GOODS AND SERVICES ARE PRODUCED IN ORGANIZATION
- Systems Theory - this theory views organizations as complex systems withinterrelated and interdependent parts.
52 Clues: order, formality • - Guiding and motivating team • LEADERSHIP - based on situation • uncontrollable informal relations. • THEORY - scientific management theory, • – something that has to be accomplished • - Leaders have complete power over people • - managing performance throughout the year • – scientist who defines bureaucracy theory • ...
The Family Business CH. 5 2020-02-08
Across
- business in third and so on generations when children of siblings take ownership and managemnt positions
- an organization in which either the individuals who established or acquired the firm or their descendants significantly influence the strategic decisions and life course of firm
- business in which children of founder become owners and managers
- couples team who own and manage a business
- the practice of employing relatives
Down
- organized group of family members who gather periodically to discuss family related business issues
- patterns pf behaviors and beliefs that characterize a particular firm
- passing owneship of family business to the next gen
- this business is operated by a founding entreprenuer
- gathering of family members usually at remote locations to discuss business matters
10 Clues: the practice of employing relatives • couples team who own and manage a business • passing owneship of family business to the next gen • this business is operated by a founding entreprenuer • business in which children of founder become owners and managers • patterns pf behaviors and beliefs that characterize a particular firm • ...
Psychology Crossword (James P) 2024-09-12
Across
- specialty of diagnosing, treating, and preventing mental conditions
- how a bunch of things foreign when combined together become recognizable
- Based around how the brain and nerves interact with certain processes
- A theory about how someones environment and culture influences their behavior
- The scientific study of mind / behaviors
- What's visible isn't the majority
- Theory that all behaviors come from conditioning
Down
- A way of treating mental disorders
- A type of psychology entirely based around emphasizing the human aspect of it
- looking into oneself's thoughts / feelings
- everything is a signal and there's a structure to them
- The process in which one thing may feel related to another randomly
- Analzying someones skull to figure out their personality
- theory about how all mental states are defined by their functional role
- To think
15 Clues: To think • What's visible isn't the majority • A way of treating mental disorders • The scientific study of mind / behaviors • looking into oneself's thoughts / feelings • Theory that all behaviors come from conditioning • everything is a signal and there's a structure to them • Analzying someones skull to figure out their personality • ...
Theory of Evolution 2019-07-20
Across
- descent Theory whereby all living organisms are related
- The ship Darwin sailed on for 5 years
- The Peppered Moth changed as a result of the....revolution
- The island where Darwin formulated his ideas on finches
- Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural ....
- In 1943 it was discovered that ... was a genetic material
Down
- Evidence Darwin found whilst in Argentina
- Changes can be PHENOTYPE or ...
- "..... don't evolve, instead evolutionary changes affect entire populations"
- Alfred... was also a significant Naturalist
- Title of Darwin's famous book "The....of Species"
11 Clues: Changes can be PHENOTYPE or ... • The ship Darwin sailed on for 5 years • Evidence Darwin found whilst in Argentina • Alfred... was also a significant Naturalist • Darwin's Theory of Evolution by Natural .... • Title of Darwin's famous book "The....of Species" • The island where Darwin formulated his ideas on finches • ...
Theory of flight 2021-09-28
Across
- must be increased to maintain the original airspeed and altitude while turning
- of Attack is the angle between chord and relative airflow
- they are designed to increase the lift of the wing at lower speeds
- Located in the leading edge of the wing & is a fixed duct
- is the all up weight (AUW) of the aircraft divided by the wing area
- It occurs when the angle of attack becomes so great that the energy in the air flowing over the wing can no longer pull air down to the surface
Down
- increases with increase in lift
- The Lift on the wings during the _______ is greater than the Lift which the wings have to supply during straight flight
- it is a movable slot
- _______ increases with increasing the angle of attack
- it is the minimum speed the aircraft can fly without stalling
11 Clues: it is a movable slot • increases with increase in lift • _______ increases with increasing the angle of attack • of Attack is the angle between chord and relative airflow • Located in the leading edge of the wing & is a fixed duct • it is the minimum speed the aircraft can fly without stalling • they are designed to increase the lift of the wing at lower speeds • ...
Chapter 27 and 6 2015-12-03
Across
- ___________ plot involves plotting effects from individual studies on the horizontal axis and precision on the vertical axis.
- The analysis of the theoretical foundations on which the studies are grounded
- A review that methodically combines research evidence about a specific research question in a manner that can be verified and reproduced. The review consists of carefully developed sampling and data collection procedures that are predetermined.
- __________ literature are studies with a more limited distribution, includes dissertations and unpublished reports.
- ________ theories attempt to describe large segments of the human experience.
- Type of bias that refers to the tendency for published studies to over-represent statistically significant findings.
- _________ models are graphic, theory-driven representations of phenomena and their relationships to each other using symbols or diagrams and minimal use of words
- __________ theory suggests that cultural conditions and adaptation stem from mental activity and ideas
Down
- The conceptual underpinning of a study, which includes an overall rationale and conceptual definitions of key concepts.
- __________ ____________ model is a popular framework in nursing studies focused on patient compliance and preventative healthcare services. The model suggests that health-seeking behavior is influenced by a person’s perception of a threat posed by a health problem and the value placed on the actions aimed at reducing the threat.
- Involves predicting the effect size based on possible explanatory factors.
- Theories that view material conditions, such as money and resources, as the source of cultural developments
- The study of the studies’ methodologic rigor
- The most prominent theoretical system in grounded theory consisting of three premises: 1) humans act toward things based on the meanings that the things have for them 2) the meaning of things arises out of the interaction humans have with other fellow humans 3) meanings are handled in an interpretive process in dealing with the things humans encounter
- __________ studies are preliminary investigations that clarify the range and nature of the evidence base. It addresses broad questions, uses flexible procedures, and does not formally evaluate the quality of evidence. They can provide background and suggest strategies for a full systematic review.
- ___________ _________________ model views humans as biopsycholosocial adaptive systems who cope with environmental change through the process of adaptation
- Explicit reporting guideline for meta-analyses of randomized controlled trials
- ___________ analyses involve splitting the effect size information from studies into distinct categorical groups, such as gender and ethnicity.
- _________ theory is a paradigm that involves a critique of society and societal processes and structures.
- An abstract generalization that systematically explains relationships among phenomena.
20 Clues: The study of the studies’ methodologic rigor • Involves predicting the effect size based on possible explanatory factors. • The analysis of the theoretical foundations on which the studies are grounded • ________ theories attempt to describe large segments of the human experience. • ...
Famous Scholars 2023-05-21
Across
- Proposed the theory of evolution
- Proposed the Theory of Proportions
- Wrote The Book of Knowledge of Ingenious Mechanical Devices
- Made Collectanea Adagiorum
- The discoverer of the laws of gravity
Down
- Developed the theory of relativity
- Regarded as the first computer programmer
- Father of Comparative Religion
- Authored the Republic
- A student of Plato and taught Alexander the Great
- Sentenced to life imprisonment by the Roman Catholic church for claiming that Earth orbits the Sun
11 Clues: Authored the Republic • Made Collectanea Adagiorum • Father of Comparative Religion • Proposed the theory of evolution • Developed the theory of relativity • Proposed the Theory of Proportions • The discoverer of the laws of gravity • Regarded as the first computer programmer • A student of Plato and taught Alexander the Great • ...
BLG Crossword 2023-06-05
Across
- General William Arnold Howard spearheads a campaign to create the law school at this university
- BLGers providing innovative client service and support in all practice areas.
- McMaster Meighen handles the amalgamation of the Bank of Montreal with this bank in 1924
- Borden & Elliot partner that served as President of the Canadian Bar Association
- BLG alum who served as prime minister in 1993
- President of the Vancouver Law Students Society, which first proposed opening a provincial law school in Vancouver
- Partner who becomes Prime Minister in 1891
- This lawyer was the first from a BLG legacy firm to argue a Supreme Court of Canada case
- What BLG Reads to Kids supports
Down
- BLG's virtual healthcare service. Also another word for conversation.
- Calgary office supports this Child and Youth Advocacy Centre
- BLG Beyond service that improves efficiency of document review.
- Henry Borden won this scholarship to study at Oxford
- BLG101 is designed for them.
- Name of BLG's internal awards program
- Elected BLG's first managing partner at the merge in 2000
- Scott & Aylen was the first Canadian firm to admit these agents as partners.
- David Scott was the cofounder of the Pro Bono association in this province
- Past BLGers
19 Clues: Past BLGers • BLG101 is designed for them. • What BLG Reads to Kids supports • Name of BLG's internal awards program • Partner who becomes Prime Minister in 1891 • BLG alum who served as prime minister in 1993 • Henry Borden won this scholarship to study at Oxford • Elected BLG's first managing partner at the merge in 2000 • ...
English 12 2013-05-19
Across
- Part of game theory that shows asymmetric information
- A witch from Calcus
- A subject, predicate, and complete thought
- Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre
- Created a monster
- Part of game theory that states that if one wins, the other loses
- Friend of Vladimir
- A fence for words
- 'Friend' of Pozzo
- The main character in Catcher in the Rye
Down
- Dies under the Argo
- Rides the carousel
- Hanged after being falsely accused of murder
- A book in which kino finds something that brings him pain
- Existential movie in Tokyo
- He dead
- Process by which information is gathered
- Greatest English teacher ever (ok, maybe not)
- Saves his brother's son
- In love with his enemy's daughter
20 Clues: He dead • Created a monster • A fence for words • 'Friend' of Pozzo • Rides the carousel • Friend of Vladimir • Dies under the Argo • A witch from Calcus • Saves his brother's son • Existential movie in Tokyo • Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre • In love with his enemy's daughter • Process by which information is gathered • The main character in Catcher in the Rye • ...
Enlightenment Crossword puzzle 2020-10-31
Across
- Influence writer devoted himself to the study of political liberty
- He developed analytical geometry, which linked algebra and geometry
- Vaccination for smallpox
- discovered the relationship between volume gas and pressure
- Created a telescope and discovered Jupiter has 4 moons
- The agreement between the government and the people
- Came up with the idea that planets move in orbits shaped like an ellipse.
- he believed without the government's keeping order there would be war and life would be solitary poor nasty brutish and short
- He believed that people could learn from experience and improve themselves
- a tool to study space
- A woman who published something on the rights of women
- He was an English writer that helped with the scientific method
Down
- theory that states that the earth is the center of the universe
- new way of thinking of the Modern World
- created the Sun centered theory
- François-Marie Arouet writing name
- Theorys of motion
- social critics
- theory that states that the planets revolve around the sun
- social gathering where attendees would discuss enlightenment ideas
- A tool to make large objects smaller to look at cells, bacteria, etc.
- committed to individual freedom
- Is an Italian philosopher his thoughts were mostly on the justice system
23 Clues: social critics • Theorys of motion • a tool to study space • Vaccination for smallpox • created the Sun centered theory • committed to individual freedom • François-Marie Arouet writing name • new way of thinking of the Modern World • The agreement between the government and the people • Created a telescope and discovered Jupiter has 4 moons • ...
Processes of Change, Theories and Concepts 2015-03-16
Across
- The theory that change is inevitable and potential for change is built withing the structures of society and the relationship between social classes.
- The process in which the number of people living in cities increases compared with the number of people living in rural areas.
- This theory assumes, on the whole, that as societies develop, they become increasingly more complex and interdependent.
- This theory focuses on the way in which individuals act
- The increasing and breaking down of cultural and social barriers around the world.
- An economic system in which trade, industries, and the means of production are largely or entirely privately owned and operated for profit.
- Process whereby society come under or adopt Western culture.
Down
- The period of social and economic change that transforms a human group from an agrarian society into an industrial one.
- The process of traditional societies adopting modern and contemporary social and cultural values.
- Belonging to the current or present.
- The theory that was based on the assumption that all societies develop from simple, 'small-scale' beginnings into more complex industrial and post-industrial societies.
- The transmission of cultures, beliefs and practices from generation to generation.
- Contemplative and rational type of abstract or generalizing thinking, or the results of such thinking.
13 Clues: Belonging to the current or present. • This theory focuses on the way in which individuals act • Process whereby society come under or adopt Western culture. • The increasing and breaking down of cultural and social barriers around the world. • The transmission of cultures, beliefs and practices from generation to generation. • ...
Conflict Management Vocabulary 2020-06-14
Across
- There is a finite amount of something and any part of it that one individual obtains another cannot.
- A desired condition
- A relatively stable set of perceptions about oneself.
- Theory, A theory that states there is a constant internal struggle between humans “ids” and “superegos”.
- Behaviors that are determined by biology
- View: An overarching set of beliefs about how the world works and ones place in it.
- Theory, States that people make relationship choices on a cost- benefit tally system.
- A rational weighing of facts and evidence that uses rules of logic.
- Conflict, When there are differences present but they are not strong enough for one of the parties to act.
- Process, The idea that communication occurs in a series of one way conversations
- Removing one self from controversy
- Agression, Attacks others and their positions
- A type of interaction theory that states that people create meaning through a series of personal constructs.
- Conflict, A struggle among a small number of interdependent people arising from perceived interference with goal achievement.
- Agression, Begrudging compliance, possibly with a plan to get even attached with it.
- Goals, Goals that relate to how things should be done
- Needs
- Theory, States that conflict management must involve the perspective of all parties to the conflict, not just one side.
- Management, Any communication intended to move two people’s views of a situation closer together.
- Communication, An individuals internal dialogue about their actions and beliefs conflicting.
Down
- Process, The idea that communication occurs continuously and simultaneously
- Conflict, Arises from a focus on the underlying needs of each party rather than the surface demands.
- An event that precipitates a conflict and usually is directly related to the topic.
- Meaning, The personal association of a word.
- Defending ones positions and attacking the other party’s positions.
- Goals, Who two parties want to be to eachother
- What conversations are about
- Motive, A situation where goals are more or less positive or more of less negatively related and the actions are more or less effective.
- Tentative explanations for observed behaviors.
- Goals, Goals that relate to an individuals sense of self worth, pride, self respect or power.
- Meaning, The dictionary definition of a word.
- Theory, Within any system there are forces that drive conflicts and forces that restrain conflicts.
- Demands, proposed solutions or other fixed outcome statements.
- Point A moment where an individuals response can change the entire direction of a relationship.
- The level which people need each other to attain their goals.
- Resource, Anything someone perceives to be in limited supply.
- Gains, Encompasses the concept that the goals of all parties in conflict might be met if creative strategies are applied to the problem.
- Goal: How an individual wishes events to unfold, how decisions are made or how communication occurs.
- Behaviors that are learned
39 Clues: Needs • A desired condition • Behaviors that are learned • What conversations are about • Removing one self from controversy • Behaviors that are determined by biology • Meaning, The personal association of a word. • Meaning, The dictionary definition of a word. • Agression, Attacks others and their positions • Goals, Who two parties want to be to eachother • ...
Development 2025-12-15
Across
- Experiment which tested aggression and observational learning in children
- Belief in adolescence that people are paying more attention to you than they are
- Section of identity theory where a person has not explored or committed to any options
- Psychologist who developed stages throughout the entire lifespan focusing on inner conflicts
- Attachment style marked by emotional distance
- Type of development that occurs in distinct stages
- Piaget stage that focuses on the development of the senses and motor skills
- Smallest sound units in language
- The principle that objects remain the same despite changes in shape or appearance
- Part of ecological systems theory that looks at the connections between intimate people/groups
- Play milestone where toddlers play side-by-side but not together
- Harmful substances that can affect fetal development
Down
- Visions of who one might become in the future
- Supports given to help a learner master a task
- Experiment that proved comfort as a biological need
- Type of development that happens gradually with no clear stages
- Parenting Style that strict with little collaboration or warmth
- Traumatic childhood events that influence development
- Test measuring a toddler's perspective-taking ability
- Theory that explains how different environments influence development
20 Clues: Smallest sound units in language • Visions of who one might become in the future • Attachment style marked by emotional distance • Supports given to help a learner master a task • Type of development that occurs in distinct stages • Experiment that proved comfort as a biological need • Harmful substances that can affect fetal development • ...
Spring Gathering 2024 2024-05-02
Across
- What we all aspire to do
- A special type of report that reflects a company’s commitment to diversity, labor practices and data security, among other topics
- What many of our MST services entail
- A software platform MST helps implement at companies
- Man's best friend
- The largest group in the firm and a typical entry point for multiple services
- A specialty area of PWA
- One of the firm’s key service areas
- Part of the name of several affiliates
- What every company and high net worth family needs
- Likes to chase mice
- A type of advisory service that helps buyers and sellers of companies
- Firm members speak and practice in more than this many languages
- Managed blank and Technology
- Something PWA advisors help client protect
- How PWA creates a comprehensive approach
- What assurance and cyber teams often do
- Has a trunk
- A governmental agency that scares of our clients but not us
- One approach our tax controversy team takes with the IRS
Down
- Large marsupial
- Present blank analysis
- A type of organization that serves the community, we do their taxes and audits
- An activity that often uses talents from a variety of departments
- Where our first office was located
- A service that several departments have in their names
- A type of tax credit for manufacturing or product improvement
- A special type of audit for public companies
- BPB was founded in nineteen
- An acronym for a special type of insurance that is tax mitigation tool
- He is the CEO and grew up in the firm
- How our HR department helps clients
- An area that helps high-net-worth people manage their financial lives
- An acronym for solving repetitive tasks with robotics
- Something BayBridge Real Estate Capital helps clients manage, find or refinance
- A charity event the firm teams have contributed $2 million to since it started 14 years ago
- Diversity, equity and blank
- Investigating, often in fraud or legal situations
- An area of tax that especially impacts clients with operations in multiple states
- A core value brought to life by our participation in the DCC and Bounce Back from Cancer
- The area of tax services BPB is probably most famous for
- A lifechanging client event we can help with from planning to tax preparation to estate planning
- Flying mammal
- Where most of the firm’s new business is originated
- A type of entity that provides tax benefits for manufacturers and distributors that export products
45 Clues: Has a trunk • Flying mammal • Large marsupial • Man's best friend • Likes to chase mice • Present blank analysis • A specialty area of PWA • What we all aspire to do • BPB was founded in nineteen • Diversity, equity and blank • Managed blank and Technology • Where our first office was located • One of the firm’s key service areas • How our HR department helps clients • ...
Scientific Revolution/Enlightenment 2025-03-20
Across
- discovered the laws of gravity and laws of motion
- Supported the heliocentric theory by building his own telescope, discovered the law of the pendulum
- key contributor/helped to develop the scientific method
- This theory stated that the earth was at the center of the universe, and the sun rotated around the earth
- A new method used by scientists to experiment and provide proof
- Developed the heliocentric theory
- Time period during the mid-late Renaissance that focused on new ideas surrounding math & science
Down
- developed the idea that planets rotate around the sun in elliptical orbits
- The new ideas developed during the Scientific Rev. caused conflict with THIS institution
- This theory stated that the sun was at the center of the universe, and planets rotated around the sun
- studied the functions of the human heart & blood vessels
- developed the smallpox vaccine
12 Clues: developed the smallpox vaccine • Developed the heliocentric theory • discovered the laws of gravity and laws of motion • key contributor/helped to develop the scientific method • studied the functions of the human heart & blood vessels • A new method used by scientists to experiment and provide proof • ...
Enlightenment 2023-09-26
Across
- English philosophe who wrote the leviathan
- sent to bastille prison
- Believed that Jewish would stop being persecuted
- Age of reason
- First servant of the state
- English physicist whose name is a food
- Wrote the edict tollerance
- Married Peter III
- Improved the microscope and discovered microorganisms
- German Astrologist who theorized about planetary motion
- theory that the earth is the center of the universe
- English philosophe who wrote the two treatises of government
Down
- Wrote the vindication of women's rights
- French philosophe who believed in checks and balances
- Mathematician who invented analytical geometry
- theory that the sun is the center of the universe
- Swiss philosophe who wrote the social contract
- english pharmacist who created the small pox vaccine
- Italian astronomer who built his own telescope
- English physicist who made the three laws of motion
20 Clues: Age of reason • Married Peter III • sent to bastille prison • First servant of the state • Wrote the edict tollerance • English physicist whose name is a food • Wrote the vindication of women's rights • English philosophe who wrote the leviathan • Mathematician who invented analytical geometry • Swiss philosophe who wrote the social contract • ...
EDUCATION 2024-07-28
Across
- - Educational approach that focuses on individual students' needs, abilities, interests, and learning styles.
- - Ability to read and write.
- - Concept of the range of tasks that a learner can perform with the help of more capable others.
- - Advocate of critical pedagogy and empowerment through education.
- - Ability to understand and work with numbers.
- - Child-centered educational approach based on scientific observations of children.
- - Known for theories on cognitive development in children.
- - Clear goals that define what students are expected to learn.
- - Instructional strategy where students teach other students.
- - Fairness and inclusion in education, ensuring all students have access to the same educational opportunities.
- - Behaviorist approach to learning with emphasis on reinforcement.
- - Developed taxonomy of educational objectives.
- - Theory of learning based on the idea that all behaviors are acquired through conditioning.
- - Emphasized the role of social interaction in learning and development.
- - Theory and practice of educating adults; contrasted with pedagogy.
- - Method of teaching through questioning and dialogue.
- - Proposed theory of multiple intelligences.
- - Learning theory where learners actively build their own understanding and knowledge.
- - Awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes.
- - Educational model where traditional lecture and homework elements are reversed.
- - Theory of learning that focuses on mental processes, including how people perceive, think, remember, and learn.
- - Classification of educational goals, including cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains.
- - Student-centered pedagogy in which students learn about a subject through the experience of solving open-ended problems.
- - Tests administered and scored in a consistent manner to measure educational achievement.
- - The objective analysis and evaluation of an issue in order to form a judgment.
- - Teaching method in which students learn by actively engaging in real-world and personally meaningful projects.
- - Techniques used to maintain a healthy learning environment.
- - Use of technology to enhance learning, teaching, and assessment.
Down
- - Support given to students to help them achieve learning goals.
- - Educational approach where students follow a process of investigating questions and problems.
- - Teaching approach that tailors instruction to meet individual needs.
- - Education program that combines online digital media with traditional classroom methods.
- - Motivation driven by external rewards such as grades or praise.
- - Motivation driven by internal rewards and personal satisfaction.
- - Theory that learners construct knowledge through their experiences and interactions.
- - Various approaches or ways of learning; visual, auditory, kinesthetic.
- - Latin term meaning "blank slate" in education philosophy.
- - Teaching method that engages students in the learning process.
- - Theory by Howard Gardner suggesting people have different kinds of intelligences.
- - Learning approach involving joint intellectual effort by students.
- - Process of learning through experience, emphasized by John Dewey.
- - Influential figure in progressive education theories focusing on experiential learning.
- - Method of education developed by Maria Montessori emphasizing independence and self-directed learning.
- - Educational approach that emphasizes the development of the whole person.
- - Evaluation at the conclusion of a unit or course to measure student learning.
- - Complex thinking processes such as analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.
- - The method and practice of teaching, especially as an academic subject or theoretical concept.
- - Ongoing assessment used to monitor student learning and provide feedback.
- - Subjects comprising a course of study in a school or college.
- - Learning conducted via electronic media, typically on the internet.
50 Clues: - Ability to read and write. • - Proposed theory of multiple intelligences. • - Ability to understand and work with numbers. • - Developed taxonomy of educational objectives. • - Method of teaching through questioning and dialogue. • - Known for theories on cognitive development in children. • - Latin term meaning "blank slate" in education philosophy. • ...
Salovey and Mayer 2014-10-19
12 Clues: A measurement. • A measurement. • The ..... based. • The ability-based... • What type of theory? • How is this measured? • What does it measure? • The theory measures this. • The theory measures this. • Who was the theory based on? • One of the men who developed the theory. • One of the men who developed the theory.
AP GOV 2023-12-07
Across
- The party of the donkey
- The theory that the majority opinion should be uphelp
- The party of the elephant
- An organization that links the public
- Made up of the Senate and the House of Representatives
- The most powerful position in America's government
- The political party of Thomas Jefferson
- The highest court in America
Down
- The political party of Alexander Hamilton
- A member of the senate
- the section of congress that can levy taxes
- The topics that politicians focus on
- A person who attempts to influence policy makers on behalf of an organization
- The theory that government is controlled by many groups trying to support their own cause
- The process of selecting governmental officials
- A system of government that is run by the people
- Redrawing voting districts to favor a specific party
- A group that supports political issues
- America's first black president
- The most recent Republican president
20 Clues: A member of the senate • The party of the donkey • The party of the elephant • The highest court in America • America's first black president • The topics that politicians focus on • The most recent Republican president • An organization that links the public • A group that supports political issues • The political party of Thomas Jefferson • ...
The Big Bang Theory 2024-10-17
Across
- The natural satellite of Earth.
- A collection of billions of stars and planets.
- The scientific word for everything that exists.
- Giant balls of gas that shine in the night sky.
- An object made of ice and dust that has a bright tail when near the sun.
- A path an object takes as it moves around another object in space.
- The largest planet in our solar system.
- The force that pulls objects toward each other.
- The energy that makes things visible.
- The type of energy that we feel as warmth from the sun.
Down
- The space above the Earth where clouds and airplanes are.
- A large object that orbits Earth and lights up the night.
- A mix of elements that can fill space, like air.
- The smallest part of an element, making up everything.
- What the universe is doing after the Big Bang.
- A hot, glowing ball of gas in space, like the Sun.
- The closest star to Earth.
- Tiny pieces of matter floating in space or on the ground.
- The planet we live on.
- Bang A huge explosion that started the universe.
20 Clues: The planet we live on. • The closest star to Earth. • The natural satellite of Earth. • The energy that makes things visible. • The largest planet in our solar system. • A collection of billions of stars and planets. • What the universe is doing after the Big Bang. • The scientific word for everything that exists. • Giant balls of gas that shine in the night sky. • ...
Unit 7 - Personality 2021-04-08
Across
- a widely used test in which people are asked to interpret 10 inkblots.
- the passive resignation a person or animal develops from repeated exposure to inescapable aversive events.
- in Freud's theory, the personality system consisting of basic sexual and aggressive drives.
- locus of control that reflects the belief that one's fate is determined by forces not under personal control.
- in Freud's theory, the complex developed by boys in which they are sexually attracted to their mother and resent their father.
- a person's characteristic pattern of behavior.
- an individual's characteristic pattern of thinking, feeling, and acting.
- defense mechanism in which an impulse is shifted to an object other than the one that originally aroused the impulse.
Down
- in Freud's theory, the area of the unconscious containing material that is retrievable into conscious awareness.
- the ego's methods of unconsciously protecting itself against anxiety.
- in Freud's theory, the conscious division of personality.
- according to Freud, _________ occurs when development becomes arrested in an immature psychosexual stage.
- projective test consisting of ambiguous pictures about which people are asked to make up stories.
- the most widely used personality inventory.
14 Clues: the most widely used personality inventory. • a person's characteristic pattern of behavior. • in Freud's theory, the conscious division of personality. • the ego's methods of unconsciously protecting itself against anxiety. • a widely used test in which people are asked to interpret 10 inkblots. • ...
Vocabulary 2016-03-04
Across
- barely heard
- to pledge to do something
- lower in quality
- capable of being heard
- not capable of being explained
- forming pus;putrefying
- abuse
- to descend downward
- peculiar characteristic
- deserted
Down
- influence
- extreme pain
- a wild uproar;chaos
- an extraordinary event
- distinctive clothing of one group
- unwilling to believe what is said
- destruction of one's property
- popularly known
- the position of the back
- strong;firm
20 Clues: abuse • deserted • influence • strong;firm • barely heard • extreme pain • popularly known • lower in quality • a wild uproar;chaos • to descend downward • an extraordinary event • capable of being heard • forming pus;putrefying • peculiar characteristic • the position of the back • to pledge to do something • destruction of one's property • not capable of being explained • ...
UCSP Q1 W7 (Socialization & Groups) 2023-10-11
Across
- They own and control the means of production.
- refers to the culture, language, social structures and one’s position within a particular society
- focuses on one-on-one interactions and communications
- He introduced the looking-glass self.
- He developed a technique called dramaturgical analysis.
- It looks at society as a competition for limited resources.
- French: capitalist
- French: workers
- He is considered a founder of symbolic interactionism.
Down
- coined the term “symbolic interactionism”
- focuses on the way each part of society functions together to contribute to the whole.
- He believes that society is a complex system of interrelated and interdependent parts that work together to maintain stability.
- Marx’s term for the proletarian’s inability to see her real position within the class system.
- These are the unsought consequences of a social process.
- He saw similarities between society and the human body
- He believed that in addition to economic inequalities, there were inequalities of political power and social structure that cause conflict.
- the exchange of meaning through language and symbols
- Each of these serves one or more functions within a society.
- plays an important role in socialization of students of all ages
- This theory sees society as a structure with interrelated parts designed to meet the biological and social needs of the individuals in that society.
- This theory focuses on the way inequalities contribute to social differences and perpetuate differences in power.
- These are the consequences of a social process that are sought or anticipated
- A social institution
- He pointed out that social processes often have many functions.
- any collection of people who interact on the basis of shared expectations regarding one another’s behavior.
- They have only their labor to sell, and do not own or control capital.
- German philosopher and sociologist Karl Marx (1818–1883), who saw society as being made up of two classes.
27 Clues: French: workers • French: capitalist • A social institution • He introduced the looking-glass self. • coined the term “symbolic interactionism” • They own and control the means of production. • the exchange of meaning through language and symbols • focuses on one-on-one interactions and communications • He saw similarities between society and the human body • ...
1920's Vocab 2015-01-27
Across
- Women being an equal
- A lot of new inventions
- Temperance movement
- Radio entertainment
- Celebrities all over America
- The Great Gatsby
- The good life
- African Americans time to shine
- The blues of music
- animated voices
- Why stay old fashion girls? Lets have fun
- Better opportunities for African Americans
Down
- Teaching the theory of revolution illegally
- Very courageous African American writer
- Good years after World War 1
- $60 million in illegal alcohol
- Law that cast women the right to vote
- Movie theater creates their own celebrity
- Group who wanted to kill African Americans
- Baseball is Americas ball game
- trial pushing Darwin's theory into the media
- No more alcohol
22 Clues: The good life • animated voices • No more alcohol • The Great Gatsby • The blues of music • Temperance movement • Radio entertainment • Women being an equal • A lot of new inventions • Good years after World War 1 • Celebrities all over America • $60 million in illegal alcohol • Baseball is Americas ball game • African Americans time to shine • Law that cast women the right to vote • ...
Chapter 16 2024-03-07
Across
- this happened man's moral capacities after the fall
- showing forth
- caused Saul to lose the kingdom
- God did not create this way
- glorify God by obeying these
- believe the universe as a whole is god
- God's special creation
- cause you to act a certain way
- the display of God's perfections
- Jesus recognized this as history
- cannot defend against objections
- this evolution theory teaches no God
- mutual agreement of 2 or more parties
Down
- testing period
- sinful by nature
- who was the first Adam
- man was formed from this
- something based on theory
- Adam's condition at creation
- came as a result of sin
- who was the second Adam
21 Clues: showing forth • testing period • sinful by nature • who was the first Adam • God's special creation • came as a result of sin • who was the second Adam • man was formed from this • something based on theory • God did not create this way • glorify God by obeying these • Adam's condition at creation • cause you to act a certain way • caused Saul to lose the kingdom • ...
CC! 2022-01-06
Across
- study of attractive or repulsive forces.
- physical quantities, defined as a measurement process.
- An object in ____ stays in motion?
- Not proven as a law, but Scientist may believe in _____?
- A to scale representation.
- An educated prediction in the Scientific Method.
- Conversion of 60 minutes?
- Unit for base quantaties.
- conversion of 1 minute?
- Base unit of thermodynamic temperature.
- Einstein was first to discover what theory?
Down
- base unit of length.
- Deals with very small, not classic.
- the study of moving objects
- study of motion of molecules and atoms.
- Who's three laws of motion?
- What kind of prefix is used to convert units.
- The Study of Electric Charge.
- Study of light.
- what is a conversion factor?
20 Clues: Study of light. • base unit of length. • conversion of 1 minute? • Conversion of 60 minutes? • Unit for base quantaties. • A to scale representation. • the study of moving objects • Who's three laws of motion? • what is a conversion factor? • The Study of Electric Charge. • An object in ____ stays in motion? • Deals with very small, not classic. • ...
Series 6 Unit 2 2020-11-19
Across
- A full power of attorney allows someone to make _______ decisions
- This is a formal arrangement by two or more people to manage and operate a business and share its profits
- A customer can give ________ power over their account(s) to someone else only by a trading authorization or limited power of attorney
- A partnership must complete a partnership _______, stating which partner(s) can make transactions for the account
- A person with limited power of attorney cannot make _______ of assets
- When a customer only provides minimum information, they account can still be opened but suitability cannot really be determined. Only this type of trade can occur.
- If a registered representative moves to a new firm, how long does the delivery of educational materials to former customers apply after the rep begins the new employment
- Knowing your customer begins with the ________ form.
- In this type of joint account provides that a deceased tenants fractional interest in the account is retained by that tenant's estate
- ________ is required from the employer when a firm employee wishes to open an account with a different broker-dealer
- Whose signature is required on the new account form
- This is an unincorporated business that has just one owner who pays personal income tax on profits earned from the business. All income (or loss) is that of the single individual
- A partnership is known as an ___________ association
- This type of account has one beneficial owner
- In an advisory account, a fee is paid for _______
- This is provided to clients by a RIA and describes how they do business, reveals any potential conflicts of interest, and clearly defines how the RIA is compensated
- Any person who has access to nonpublic information about a company
- In this type of account, the broker lends the customer cash to purchase stocks or other financial products
- Customers have the right to _______ of the sharing of nonpublic personal information
- What the "S" stands for in Regulation S-P
- A registered Investment Advisor has a _______ obligation to act in the best interest of their clients
- If the security has increased in value and the registered owner has passed away, the beneficiary will receive the higher tax valuation, which is referred to as a _____ ____ cost basis
- In this type of joint account, all parties have equal undivided interests
Down
- A _______ POA will survive a declaration of mental competence
- The Customer _________ Program is a requirement of broker-dealers and is designed to verify the identity of any new customer
- In a brokerage account, a fee is paid when a _________ occurs
- Under Regulation S-P, each financial institution has the responsibility to protect the privacy of its customers ______
- Accounts may be opened by any legally ______ person above the age of majority
- In a prime brokerage account, this firm handles all trades place by the customer.
- This suitability component requires a broker to examine the client portfolio and make sure that the recommendation is suitable in both amount and fit in light of the clients existing assets
- The _______ firm has one day to validate the securities listed on the TIF form or take exception
- ________ property is a marital property classification recognized by some states where most property acquired during the marriage is considered to be owned jointly by both spouses
- __________ basis is one of the suitability components the gives the broker the obligation to perform due diligence and have a legitimate belief that the investment has the potential to earn a profit.
- The Transfer _______ Form facilitates the transfer of securities from one trading account to another at a different brokerage firm or bank
- This suitability component obligates the broker to have a reasonable basis to believe that a particular recommendation is suitable for a given customer
- Brokers must make a __________ effort to obtain additional information when opening a new account, but a customer may neglect or refuse to provide all information
- This is one of the exceptions made under the community property classification
- This type of account charges a single fee for brokerage services
- Generally, this is the type of customer in a prime brokerage account
- This occurs when the value of an investor's margin account falls below the broker's required amount
- This is an account that firms provide a group of services for a single fee.
- A wrap account is generally an investment _______ account
- _______ information is any material information that has not been disseminated to, or is not readily available to, the general public
- When a person passes away, the cost basis to the beneficiary is the ___ on the date of the owner's death
- This type of account has two or more owners
- This type of account requires the customer to pay in full for securities purchased
- This automates and standardizes the procedures for transferring customer accounts
- The ________ firm sends the TIF form to ACATS
- This type of account lets beneficiaries receive assets at the time of the registered owner's death without going through probate
- The completed new account form (and any updated forms) must be sent to the customer within _____ days
- In a prime brokerage account, this firm provides custody and other service.
51 Clues: What the "S" stands for in Regulation S-P • This type of account has two or more owners • This type of account has one beneficial owner • The ________ firm sends the TIF form to ACATS • In an advisory account, a fee is paid for _______ • Whose signature is required on the new account form • Knowing your customer begins with the ________ form. • ...
science project 2025-05-13
Across
- How close a measurement is to the true value.
- A factor that remains unchanged in an experiment.
- The act of carefully watching and noting phenomena.
- A simplified representation of a system or process.
- A testable statement or prediction about a phenomenon.
- A standard against which results are compared in an experiment.
- A prejudice or preconceived opinion.
- Information used to support a claim or theory.
- How close repeated measurements are to each other.
- Describing data with words or characteristics.
- A descriptive statement of a natural phenomenon.
- Based on observation and experimentation rather than theory or speculation.
Down
- A statement about what might happen in the future.
- A conclusion drawn from evidence and reasoning.
- A controlled test or procedure to investigate a hypothesis.
- A well-substantiated explanation of an aspect of the natural world.
- Method: A systematic approach to scientific inquiry, involving observation, experimentation, and analysis.
- Expressing data as numbers or measurements.
- A factor that can change in an experiment or study.
- Information, often numerical, collected during an experiment or observation.
20 Clues: A prejudice or preconceived opinion. • Expressing data as numbers or measurements. • How close a measurement is to the true value. • Information used to support a claim or theory. • Describing data with words or characteristics. • A conclusion drawn from evidence and reasoning. • A descriptive statement of a natural phenomenon. • ...
Nobel Prize Winners 2021-07-10
Across
- The 'King' of the American Civil Rights Movement
- Theory of Relativity
- Discoverer of Penicillin
- Youngest Nobel Prize Winner
- Discovery of Noble Gases
- Theory of Isotopes
- Writer of 'The Jungle Book'
Down
- Writer of the play "Liola"
- Missionaries of Charity
- 44th President of USA
- Radioactivity
- _____ Dog Experiment
12 Clues: Radioactivity • Theory of Isotopes • Theory of Relativity • _____ Dog Experiment • 44th President of USA • Missionaries of Charity • Discoverer of Penicillin • Discovery of Noble Gases • Writer of the play "Liola" • Youngest Nobel Prize Winner • Writer of 'The Jungle Book' • The 'King' of the American Civil Rights Movement
