Heal the World! Stop the Hate. Lend a helping hand to those in need. Prepare a pictorial
presentation/collage showing at least seven ways to help make the world a better place. (You
can use conversation/quotes/newspaper cuttings in the presentation).
Answers
Answer:
Corona is now a dangerous virus spread all over the world.
SYMPTOMS :- high fever, joints pain, breathing problem, eyes pain, diarrhia, loose motion, vomit
PROTECTION :- wear mask, avoid over crowding, sanitize your hands, wash your hands after 1 hour for 20 seconds, exercise regularly, stay home as much possible, take steam twice a day, don't panic.
Please follow these rules to get protected from COVID - 19
Explanation:
STAY SAFE! :)
Answer:
“In one world, effort is a bad thing. It, like failure, means you’re not smart or talented. If you were, you wouldn’t need effort. In the other world, effort is what makes you smart or talented.” –Carol Dweck
Saga Briggs is Managing Editor of InformED. You can follow her on Twitter@sagamilena or read more of her writing here.
What if your true learning potential was unknown, even unknowable, at best? What if it were impossible to foresee what you could accomplish with a few years of passion, toil, and training? According to Stanford psychologist Carol Dweck, this isn’t some hypothetical situation, dependent on any manner of factors from genes to environment. It’s a mindset. And it’s one you can cultivate at any point in life.
A “growth mindset,” as Dweck calls it, is pretty much exactly what it sounds like: a tendency to believe that you can grow. In her book Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, she explains that while a “fixed mindset” assumes that our character, intelligence, and creative ability are static givens which we can’t change in any meaningful way, a growth mindset thrives on challenge and sees failure “not as evidence of unintelligence but as a heartening springboard for growth and for stretching our existing abilities.”