When constructing a study, Bill decides he wants to recruit children in area schools but is
worried about getting access. Which of the following strategies is most likely to help Bill?
A) Consider how his work has implications for bettering the quality of education for
children in the schools.
B) Avoid trying to achieve support from parents whose children attend these schools, or
teachers that work at them. Recruiting their support will look too political to the school
administrators.
C) Set up meetings with the building principals and convince them they should appreciate
the scientific merits of the research, even though it is unlikely to directly benefit the
schools.
D) Avoid face-to-face meetings with the key administrators. These people should be
directly mailed the study protocol and corresponded with only via e-mail.
A
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P.J. is a 13-year-old boy who needs to work in order to help feed his family. P.J. feels the pressure to conform to his culture's beliefs. Where does P.J. most likely live?
a. Sweden b. England c. Canada d. Japan
The Boy Scouts were conceived as a way to overcome the perceived danger
a. globalization. b. religious teachings. c. immigrants. d. moral decline.