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Follow Traditional Pattern:

Follow Traditional Pattern Many Traditional Textbooks Wisdom-tl Traditional Africans Usumacinta River Drainage, Tabasco, and Chiapas.—Three of the most important cities of the Maya area are located in this region: Yax-chilan, Piedras Negras, and Palenque. Their general plan has been adapted to mountainous terŽrain ; their urban pattern does not follow traditional pattern a clearly defined plan. The pattern consists of unequal terraces and steps, which tend to organize the terrain, and which create groups around plazas and courts.

Although stages of develupment show characteristic patterns, one pattern merges into the next stage, more like a panorama than a kaleiodo-scope. These patterns of development follow traditional pattern an orderly succession but the age at which each pattern appears is partially determined by the enŽvironment, which can either accelerate or retard their appearance (150, pp. 84-86,1957). It is important to distinguish between the child who is constitutionŽally slow in all aspects of maturing and the child who is retarded in a cerŽtain aspect (such as reading) by some physical or psychological hindrance or environmental lack. An example of the first pattern was a boy whose rapidly. There is marked individual variation. Two friends who have been about the same size for several years may now part company because one has suddenly grown up so much more quickly than the other (87, 1950).

See Also Many Traditional Textbooks:

Beginning in the late 19th century, chiefly in northern Europe, and continuing into the 1930's, we can distinguish a sort of scholarly culminaŽtion of many traditional textbooks grammar, achieved by men who were writing not textbooks but very careful accounts of English on the many traditional textbooks basis.

Most many traditional textbooks elementary textbooks are heavily weighted with drills intended to eradiŽcate "ain't," "didn't do nothin'," "I seen it," and the like, from the speech and writing of children of "deprived" background. At more adŽvanced levels, textbooks and handbooks warn against a host of faults, such as wrong forms of pronouns as "I" for "me" in "between you and I"), confusion of words that sound alike (as "to," "too," and "two"), split infinitives ("to quietly go"), and dangling modifiers ("Born in China, his travels took him all over the world").


On The Other Hand See Wisdom-tl Traditional Africans:

The basic adaptions to nature and the sup natural have been discovered by past generatii and are stored in the accumulated culture herited by each generation. Thus, it is in pre dent—in tradition, legend, and folk wisdom-tl traditional Africans seek solutions to presi problems. It is not characteristic of them devote much thought or planning to the creati of a radically changed and improved futu Even the common view of life beyond the "mor life" is that it is lived in a society pattern quite like this one; indeed, it is an indivisib though invisible, part of this life. Thus it is t understanding of the past, embodied in the a cestors and what they have done and contini to do, that directs present actions far more thi does a conception of a better future.

Marshall Nirenberg, another noted biochemŽist, said, "Man must refrain from [programming his own cells] until he has sufficient wisdom to use this knowledge for the benefit of mankind." Nirenberg did not explain how man could have the wisdom to refrain from using this knowledge if he did not have the wisdom to use it beneŽficially.

     
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