I'm not looking forward to the Science Fair but it's getting all my attention. I hate Science right next to Math but much like pop-up ads, these things are vexing and ungovernable.
Our group has yet to finalize on whatever project we have in mind but I'm hoping for the best. Science fairs could get downright crazy and projects on rubbing alcohol don't just stand out.
I stumbled upon this project from Niles North High School. I don't know where that school is but I'm pretty sure it's nowhere near this place.
If my life were part of this thing's experimentation, damn all the hypotheses and scientific guesses because my whole entity is agreeing. I won't consider myself "hostile", though. "Insecure" is the more appropriate term.
I make myself believe the world hates me so I hate it back. It makes a lot of sense but I'm still surprised people actually got a grade for that. The school I'm in usually severs the heart and the head when it comes to grading or being graded.
Our group has yet to finalize on whatever project we have in mind but I'm hoping for the best. Science fairs could get downright crazy and projects on rubbing alcohol don't just stand out.
I stumbled upon this project from Niles North High School. I don't know where that school is but I'm pretty sure it's nowhere near this place.
Title: The Correlation Between Perceived Personal Inadequacy and Hostility in Young Women
Purpose: The purpose of this experiment is to examine the correlation, if any, between perceived personal inadequacy and hostility in females. Perceived personal inadequacy is a composite of low optimism and low self-esteem. More specifically, the exhibitors wish to observe this relationship in high school girls.
Procedure: Surveys were compiled using the three psychological scales: the Rosenberg Self-esteem Scale, the Revised Life Orientation Test, and the Hostility Towards Women Scale. Surveys were distributed to a variety of different level classes and were completed by high school aged students. Only surveys filled out by females were used.
Conclusion: There is a strong, positive correlation between self-esteem and optimism, low self-esteem and hostility, and low optimism and hostility. As hypothesized, there is a significant correlation between perceived personal inadequacy and hostility. It can be concluded that if a woman has a high sense of perceived personal inadequacy, then she will have a high degree of hostility, and vice versa. All of the above applies to high-school girls, allowing us to conclude that the factors that cause this correlation have been formed by the time girls reach high-school, and are probably based in society.
If my life were part of this thing's experimentation, damn all the hypotheses and scientific guesses because my whole entity is agreeing. I won't consider myself "hostile", though. "Insecure" is the more appropriate term.
I make myself believe the world hates me so I hate it back. It makes a lot of sense but I'm still surprised people actually got a grade for that. The school I'm in usually severs the heart and the head when it comes to grading or being graded.