True or False. Instruction: Write True If The Statement Is Correct and False If The Statement Is Incorrect
True or False. Instruction: Write True If The Statement Is Correct and False If The Statement Is Incorrect
True or False. Instruction: Write True If The Statement Is Correct and False If The Statement Is Incorrect
Instruction: Write true if the statement is correct and false if the statement is incorrect.
1. The idea that one’s identity transcends geography is called global citizenship. true
2. Global citizenship does not mean that a person denounces his nationality. true
6. If you are regularly physically active reduce risk of heart attack. true
13. The title page in APA style is in the 2nd page. false
14. In MLA format the label “figure” is usually abbreviated to “Fig.” true
Instruction: Matching the statements under letter A to letter B. Write only the letter of the correct answer.
A B
f 5. With hands extended in front and clench for fists e. Stand up and sit down
I. Synthesis
discovered coronavirus. Most people who fall sick with COVID-19 will experience mild to moderate
symptoms and recover without special treatment. COVID-19 has brought disruption to the
globalized and interconnected world challenges of COVID have led to a dark period both in terms
of human suffering. The world has been turned upside down. The COVID-19 pandemic has already
radically altered vast swaths of society from human behavior to health care, politics and
economics. The question is, when things will return to normal. From smartphones to toys today’s
globalized trading system has grown to rely on long and complex supply chains but the pandemic
II. Analysis
The on- going pandemic and subsequent public health response fractured the global
economy, disrupted international supply chains, and forced many small companies out of business.
All sorts of businesses have suddenly realized the risks of relying on complex global supply chains
that are specific not just in China but to particular places such as Wuhan, the epicentre of the
pandemic.
Much of this disruption may be temporary. But the coronavirus crisis is likely to have a
lasting impact, especially when it reinforces other trends that are already undermining globalization.
It may deal a blow to fragmented international supply chains, reduce the hypermobility of global
business travellers, and provide political fodder for nationalists who favour greater protectionism
and immigration controls. An enduring consequence of the coronavirus crisis may be reduced
business travel. Technology gurus have long argued that videoconferencing and chat apps would
eliminate the need for most business travel and allow many people to work from home more. Yet
until the coronavirus crisis, business travel had continued growing, seemingly inexorably.
Globally, there is a shift in national prioritization. Countries are focusing on their healthcare
systems, tightening borders, establishing access and availability of medical resources, and
maintaining their citizens’ health. This reprioritization has caused governments to temporarily step
back from their alliances or interest in foreign nations. Yet no single country has made moves to
III. Insights/Reflections
Just as COVID-19 is a virus with global qualities, globalization is itself viral. But all viruses
evolve, and globalization is no different. The nation-states of the world have had highly uneven
success in their response to COVID-19, and that is primarily because the architecture of the
system of nation-states is not well suited to an age of problems without national boundaries. Since
globalization is here to stay, it is the system of nation-states that might well be forced to change, in
ways that some might welcome, and others will resist. That battle will outlast the story of COVID-
19.