Saturday, September 20

Ways of learning

Economics: Economics is the study of how people choose to use their scarce resources to meet their competing desires. Resources include money, property, and time. A resource is considered scarce when people cannot obtain as much of it as they would choose if the resource were free.

Writing: Writing is to record something in letters, or words.

Reading: Reading is the process of getting information from something that is written or printed. It is one of the most important skills in everyday life.

Sociology: Sociology is the study of social life, society. And study society include culture, convention.

Political Science: Political Science is the study of public principles, public systems, public behavior and governments which includes political parties, elections, and public administration.

Religion: Every society has a religion. For many people, religion is an organized system of beliefs, rituals, personal practices, and worship directed toward a supreme power or deity.

Art: In a broad sense, art is skill in making or doing. We can say that someone knows and practices the art of basket-weaving, of tuning a piano, or even of hitting a home run. In this sense, there are many arts—as many as there are kinds of deliberate, specialized activities for human beings to engage in.

Geography: Geography is the study of the location and distribution of living things and the earth features among which they live. Geographers study where people, animals, and plants live and their relationship with rivers, deserts, and other earth features. Geographers also examine where earth features are located, how they came to be there, and why their location is important.

History: History is a branch of knowledge that is the study of past events particularly in a written record of the human race, but generally including scientific and archeological discoveries of the past.

2 comments:

Somebody said...

nice patrick how long did this take u!!?!!??!

David Carpenter said...

Nice summary.