PLEASE HELP ME ITS DUE)) A student is writing an article for the school newspaper about practicing new skills. The student wants to revise the draft to improve the development of ideas. Read the draft of the article and complete the task that follows. People often say that "practice makes perfect" when it comes to learning a new skill, but it turns out that too much practice could be counterproductive. Some people say that it takes 10,000 hours of practice in order to truly master a skill. Science shows that taking a break while learning something is helpful for performance. When people work at learning a new skill, their brains change over time, needing a rest to absorb the new information. For those who don't take breaks, their brains are so busy practicing that they have trouble remembering what they learned. Psychologists at the University of New South Wales proved this with an experiment. Three groups of students tried to learn a complicated computer program over a period of one day: Group 1 practiced using the program for an hour; Group 2 practiced the program for two hours straight; Group 3 also trained for two hours, but they were allowed to take a break in the middle and do whatever they wanted. In the end, the study found that Group 1 and Group 3 had learned the task even better than Group 2. Select the sentence that should be deleted because it does not support the underlined controlling idea of the article.