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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Intro To Educational Psychology
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Subjects
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clep
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teaching
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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study here
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Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. The ability to organize objects based on some common characteristic. According to Piaget - concrete operational children have mastered this skill.
WPPSI (Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence)
Forgetting
Classification
Pragmatics
2. Disorder affecting a child's sight.
Visual Impairment
Reciprocal Determinism
Test-Retest Reliability
Diagnostic Achievement Tests
3. A division of long-term memory for storing events in one's life.
Student Team Achievement Decisions
Growth Needs
Cerebral Palsy (CP)
Episodic Memory
4. A level of identity status where the adolescent is actively trying out different beliefs - behaviors - and lifestyles to discover his or her identity.
Moratorium
Specific Learning Outcomes
Acrostic Mnemonic Device
Identity Achievement
5. A method of assessing how much students know by giving them closed-ended response questions they are to answer by themselves.
Static Assessment Approach
Identity Diffusion
Direct Modeling
Aptitude Tests
6. The innate ability to use language - as described by Chomsky.
Percentile Scores
Language Acquisition Device (LAD)
Structural Cognitive Modifiability
Character
7. Tests used to determine if students have achieved a minimum amount of learning needed to pass a class.
Competency Tests (or End-of-Grade Tests)
Organization
Content Validity
Mastery Grading Scales
8. A category of psychological disorders where the sufferer will experience chronic anxiety and apprehension.
Socioeconomic Status
Anxiety Disorders
Achievement Tests
Carroll's Model of School Learning
9. A method of scaling scores using a nine-point scale with a mean of 5 and standard deviation of 2. This method is intended to minimize insignificant differences between scores.
Stanine (STAndard NINE)
Stability
Response-Cost System
Method of Loci
10. A method of scaling scores using a mean of 0 and a standard deviation of 1.
Z-Scores
Morphemes
Learning Disabilities
Kuder-Richardson Reliability
11. A kind of testing the teacher uses to determine what aspects of a subject to focus on - depending on how much the students know and comprehend.
Formative Evaluation
Method of Loci
Reliability
Mental Retardation
12. A condition where a test consistently provides an inaccurate score due to some property of the test taker - such as gender - socioeconomic status - or race.
Behavioral Theory
Internal Locus of Control
Test Bias
Articulation Difficulties
13. A level of moral reasoning guided by rewards and punishments - developed by Kohlberg. This level is further divided into two stages: stage 1 (adherence to rules to please authority figures) and stage 2 (follow rules that satisfy one's needs).
Receptive Language Disorders
Preconventional Morality
Learned Helplessness
Two-sigma problem
14. The process of learned information simply fading from memory.
Concurrent Validity
Decay
Content Validity
Morphemes
15. A type of cooperative learning where the teacher will teach the students a skill - divide them into teams - and allow each team to practice the skill until all teams understand it perfectly.
Encoding
Student Team Achievement Decisions
Expository Advance Organizers
Classification
16. A humanistic - interdisciplinary form of teaching which emphasizes the role of creativity and imagination in learning. According to this theory - children pass through three learning stages: imitative learning - artistic learning - and abstract learn
Steiner-Waldorf Education
Subschemata
Achievement Tests
Brainstorming
17. A measure of how well a test correlates with the skill - trait - or behavior the test is supposed to be evaluating.
Operant Behavior
Social Cognition
Validity
Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA)
18. The ability to perform a task automatically - with little or no conscious effort.
Keyword
Inattention
Face Validity
Automaticity
19. Disorder affecting a child's hearing.
Hearing Impairment
Educational Psychology
Schemata
Reading
20. A division of long-term memory for storing rules and methods or performing specific tasks - called procedures.
Procedural Memory
Heuristics
Comparative Advance Organizers
Vicarious Learning
21. The degree to which a test correlates with a direct measure of what the test is designed to measure - such as how well a reading test correlates with a student's actual reading level.
Criterion-Related Validity
Community-Based Education Programs
Development
Academic Learning Time
22. Difficulty forming smooth connections between words.
Diagnostic Achievement Tests
Fluency Disorders
Pivotal Response Therapy
Educational Psychology
23. Disorders characterized by difficulty communicating - either by having trouble expressing oneself or by being unable to properly receive information.
Identity Diffusion
Speech and Language Communication Disorders
Anxiety Disorders
Echoic Storage Register
24. Anything which increases the likelihood that a behavior will be repeated.
Gender Identity
Language System
Reinforcer
Type-R Conditioning
25. A theory which proposes that there are eight different kinds of cognitive intelligences - none of which are necessarily correlated. The intelligences are spacial - linguistic - logical-mathematical - bodily-kinesthetic - musical - interpersonal - int
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26. A method of scaling scores using a mean of 50 and a standard deviation of 10.
Internalization
T-Scores
Cultural Differences Theories
Diagnostic Achievement Tests
27. According to the Two-Store Model - this is the first phase of memory processing. This part of memory temporarily holds all sensory information.
Test-Retest Reliability
Sensory Register
Self-Determination Theory
T-Scores
28. A strategy of teaching reading which stresses the overall meaning of a passage.
Meaning Emphasis Strategy
Norm Group
Time-Out
Mastery Learning
29. Consciously focusing on specific stimuli. This process prevents irrelevant information from interfering with one's cognitive processes.
Attention
Enrichment Programs
Engaged Time
Educational Psychology
30. A learning disability which impairs a person's language ability. Those with this disorder may have difficulty with reading - writing - or spelling.
Dyslexia
General Exploratory Activities
Learning Disabilities
Centration
31. Repeating information in the same way it was received.
Imaginary Audience Fallacy
Extensive Retardation
Data-Driven Models
Maintenance or Rote Rehearsal
32. Testing strategies which have students create long-term projects to determine how much they have learned.
Group Consequences
Performance-Based Test Strategies
Dyslexia
Exhibition
33. An approach to problem solving where one reasons how to reach the goal based on the current situation.
Means-Ends Analysis
Reciprocal Teaching
Z-Scores
Transitional Bilingual Programs
34. A theory of intelligence by Sternberg which views intelligence as consisting of three components: processing components (the ability to process information and solve problems) - contextual components (the ability to apply intelligence to everyday pro
Triarchic Theory
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences
Epilepsy
Norm Group
35. Educating exceptional learners in a regular classroom while offering them any extra assistance they need.
Reciprocal Teaching
Inclusion
Summative Evaluation
Demonstrations
36. A possible range a student's scores may fall in if the student took the test multiple times.
Confidence Interval
Self-Talk (or Private Speech)
Psychomotor Objectives
Portfolio
37. A teaching method developed by Feuerstein where the teacher will intervene between the student and the learning task. In this method - the teacher will help the student make inferences about the world based on different experiences. This can be done
Generalized Reinforcer
Morphemes
Zone of Proximal (or Potential) Development
Mediated Learning Experiences (MLE)
38. Thinking of all the possible solutions to a problem.
Brainstorming
Metacognition
Decay
Working-Backward Strategy
39. Learning objectives relating to abstract concepts such as understanding or being able to apply knowledge to different situations. Gronlund proposed a instructional theory focusing on this kind of learning objective.
WAIS (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale)
Cooperative Learning
Long-Term Memory
General Objectives
40. A theory which states that how students view the world determines their motivation and behavior. This theory attempts to explain how people account for their successes and failures. In general - students attribute their successes to their innate abil
Attribution Theory
Social Inferences
Expository Advance Organizers
Learning Disability
41. A kind of testing the teacher uses to measure the students' mastery of a particular subject. These tests are used in a student's final grade.
Summative Evaluation
Invincibility Fallacy
Internalization
Real Self-Efficacy
42. One of the characteristics of ADHD. This term describes students who act without thinking - drift quickly from activity to the next - and perform dangerous behaviors without regarding their consequences.
Impulsivity
Law of Effect
Grade-Level Equivalent Scores
Internal Locus of Control
43. The use of a single word to represent an entire thought. This kind of speech is found in young children.
Holophrastic Speech
Phonemes
Behavior Disorders
Planned Ignoring
44. Memory tools that enhance one's recall by relating information to knowledge with which it has no natural resemblance.
Data-Driven Models
Split-Half (or Spearman-Brown) Reliability
Behavioral Theory
Mnemonic Devices
45. A group of non-progressive motor problems which cause psychical disability. These disorders are caused by injuries to the motor control centers in the brain during birth or early childhood.
Extensive Retardation
Cerebral Palsy (CP)
Communication
Problem Solving
46. Teachers with this quality are constantly aware of and in control of everything going on in a classroom.
Withitness
Operant Behavior
Mastery Learning
Portfolio
47. The process of transferring information from short-term to long-term memory by developing meaningful relationships and patterns in the data that relate to one's previous knowledge.
Inattention
Test-Retest Reliability
Class Inclusion
Encoding
48. An approach to teaching reading which attempts to enhance children's phonetic awareness - or ability to discriminate between different phonemes. This method teaches students the relationships between written words and their different phonemes.
Perception
Phonics Approach
Automaticity
Two-Store Model
49. Allowing each student to reach full mastery of a concept - regardless of how long it takes.
Echoic Storage Register
Mastery Learning
Moratorium
Human Needs Theory
50. The art of teaching. It encompasses different styles and methods of instructing.
Synthesized Modeling
Internalizing Behavior Disorders
Episodic Memory
Pedagogy