Reflection for Nur Muhammad Yusuf Fahmy Bin Idzehar


By doing this blog task I had the opportunity to take in a considerable measure of things with respect to the sugar glider itself and furthermore about the group. Sugar gliders live in colonies of 15 to 30 lightweight flyers. They are nocturnal omnivores and exist on an eating routine of blended bugs and vegetation, which differs from season to season. As proposed by their name, sugar gliders have a thin layer connecting their wrists to their ankles which fills in as a gliding tool used to get from tree to tree. At maturity, captive sugar gliders can achieve 4 to 6 ounces in weight and a stature of around 12 inches. Regardless of their small size, captive sugar gliders can live to achieve an age of 12 to 14 years. Sometimes individuals get befuddled between Sugar gliders and flying squirrels since they seem to be comparable and all can coast from the high place. Be that as it may, they are diverse in some ways. Flying squirrels don't have pocket like sugar glider.

I likewise discovered that by working in a group advances collaboration and making the group works productively. With the assistance and guidance from the group leader and furthermore the colleagues the greater part of the tasks given us can be finished effectively in a short amount of time. From my experience in the past, I found that a leader has to set the objectives of the group and disperse tasks among the members remembering the ultimate goal is to complete a particular project. It is ordinary if some misguided judgment happened, regardless, around the complete of the talk we made sense of how to execute it.

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