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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.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
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. A mnemonic device that aids the memory of a long list of information by linking each item in the list to a specific well-known location.
Hyperactivity
Method of Loci
Analytical Intelligence
Self-Determination Theory
2. Memory tools that enhance one's recall by relating information to knowledge with which it has no natural resemblance.
Percentile Scores
Mnemonic Devices
Academic Learning Time
Social Cognition
3. 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.
Cooing
Formative Evaluation
Competency Tests (or End-of-Grade Tests)
Criterion-Related Validity
4. The innate ability to use language - as described by Chomsky.
Keyword
Development
Language Acquisition Device (LAD)
Steiner-Waldorf Education
5. 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
Time-Out
Extensive Retardation
Attribution Theory
Descriptive Grading Scales
6. Taxonomies detailing the types of values and attitudes the student should develop by the end of the course.
Automaticity
Cognitive Objectives
At-Risk Students
Affective Objectives
7. A measure of how well scores from the same test correlate when taken by the same people on two different occasions.
Expository Advance Organizers
Test-Retest Reliability
Time-Out
Assertive Discipline
8. The application of knowledge - skills - and experience to achieving a particular goal.
Percentile Scores
Advance Organizer
Problem Solving
Gender Bias
9. Punishing or rewarding the entire class based on its obedience to the rules.
Scheduled Time
Functional Fixedness
Group Consequences
Seriation
10. Programs which teach students about different positive character traits and how to apply them to their lives.
IDEAL Strategy
Character Education Programs
English as a Second Language (ESL) Programs
Percentile Scores
11. An approach to grading where the students are given a numerical score - using either a 10-point or a 7-point grading scale. These scores may be translated into a letter grade or compared to the average score on a test.
Inner Speech
Absolute Grading Standards
Conventional Morality
Anxiety Disorders
12. A kind of performance-based testing strategy that allows students to apply knowledge learned in one situation to a different one.
Working-Backward Strategy
Demonstrations
Generative learning
Zone of Proximal (or Potential) Development
13. The degree to which a test accurately predicts a student's future behavior.
Stanine (STAndard NINE)
Predictive Validity
Respondent Behavior
Real Self-Efficacy
14. Taxonomies dealing with the different cognitive abilities the student should develop.
Communication
Two-sigma problem
Maintenance or Rote Rehearsal
Cognitive Objectives
15. Familiar responses to a problem one uses without thinking the situation through.
Steiner-Waldorf Education
Criterion-Referenced Testing
Corporal Punishment
Response Set
16. A possible range a student's scores may fall in if the student took the test multiple times.
Formative Evaluation
Identity
Confidence Interval
Severe and Profound Retardation
17. A taxonomy created by Bloom. According to this model - there are six levels of mastery of a concept. The student must reach the levels in specific order; higher level skills cannot be mastered without the lower levels. The levels are knowledge (simpl
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18. A form of negative punishment where a disruptive student is removed from the classroom and not allowed back until he or she is ready to behave.
Deficiency Needs
Pivotal Response Therapy
Time-Out
Clustering
19. Spontaneous noises an infant makes which include all of the sounds from every different language.
Stability
WAIS (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale)
Psychomotor Objectives
Cooing
20. A mnemonic device that creates a sentence based on the first letter of each word in a set to be memorized.
Acrostic Mnemonic Device
Educational Psychology
Formative Evaluation
Descriptive Statistics
21. According to self-determination theory - the drive one has to perform a specific behavior not for a reward (extrinsic motivation) but for the sheer pleasure of the action itself.
Response Set
Response-Cost System
Intrinsic Motivation
Internalization
22. According to the Two-Store Model - this is the first phase of memory processing. This part of memory temporarily holds all sensory information.
Organization
Sensory Register
Learning Disability
Educational Goals
23. A method of assessing how much students know by giving them closed-ended response questions they are to answer by themselves.
Preconventional Morality
Specific Learning Outcomes
Static Assessment Approach
Perception
24. A measure of how imperfect the validity of a test is.
Extrinsic Motivation
Standard Error of Estimate
Primary Reinforcer
Self-Efficacy
25. The natural physical changes that occur due to a person's genetic code.
Symbolic Modeling
Feedback Loop
Maturation
IDEAL Strategy
26. The smallest meaningful units in a language.
Object-Relations Theory
Instruction
Morphemes
Cerebral Palsy (CP)
27. A division of long-term memory for storing events in one's life.
Internalizing Behavior Disorders
Automaticity
Episodic Memory
WISC (Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children)
28. Spontaneous noises an infant makes which include only the sounds found in his or her native language.
Babbling
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences
Mastery Learning
Reversibility
29. A type of instruction which involves the teacher systematically leading the students step by step to a particular learning goals. This type of teaching is best for learning math or other complex skills - but not for less structured tasks such as Engl
Identity Diffusion
Data-Driven Models
Character
Direct instruction
30. Another name for classical conditioning - based on the importance of stimuli on this approach.
Character
Type-S Conditioning
Learning Disability
Luck
31. A reinforcer which is naturally desirable - such as food - water - or heat.
Reversibility
Primary Reinforcer
Conventional Morality
Internalizing Behavior Disorders
32. Assumptions about how different social relationships work and how other people feel and think.
Internal Locus of Control
Keyword
Social Inferences
Babbling
33. One of the two divisions of human needs according to Maslow. These needs are intellectual achievement - aesthetic appreciation (understanding and appreciating the beauty and truth in the world) - and self-actualization (becoming all that one can be).
Growth Needs
Tracking
Psychometrics
Invincibility Fallacy
34. How capable one actually is.
Real Self-Efficacy
Brainstorming
Phonics Approach
Achievement Motivation
35. Reading models which focus on analyzing words letter-by-letter to fully understand the meaning of a text.
Data-Driven Models
Teaching Efficacy
Relative Grading Scales (Curving)
Speech and Language Communication Disorders
36. Disabilities that affect children with average or above average intelligence who nevertheless have difficulty with some aspect of learning - such as reading - writing - or solving problems.
Internal Locus of Control
Learning Disabilities
Syntax
Secondary Reinforcer
37. Another name for operant conditioning - due to the importance of responses in determining whether learning has occured.
Mental Retardation
Achievement Motivation
Type-R Conditioning
Cerebral Palsy (CP)
38. A five-step problem-solving strategy that involves identifying the problem - defining one's goals - exploring possible ways to reach the goals - anticipating the outcomes and acting - and looking back on one's work.
Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives
Face Validity
Gender Identity
IDEAL Strategy
39. The ability to arrange objects in order based on some common quality - such as height - color - or size. According to Piaget - concrete operational children have mastered this skill.
Phonology
Seriation
Subschemata
Reinforcer
40. A bell-shaped curve which can be easily and consistently used to interpret scores.
ADHD (Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)
Reinforcer
Invincibility Fallacy
Normal Distribution
41. 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
Concept-Driven Models
Relative Grading Scales (Curving)
Psychomotor Objectives
42. A process that occurs when two stimuli are consistently paired - causing the presence of one to evoke the other.
Conditioning
Acrostic Mnemonic Device
Corporal Punishment
Shaping
43. A neurological disorder characterized by seizures. This disorder is caused by excessive - abnormal brain activity.
Forgetting
Active teaching
Epilepsy
Retrieval
44. Difficulty pronouncing the correct sound or substituting with an incorrect sound.
Luck
Demonstrations
Formative Evaluation
Articulation Difficulties
45. The collection of traits in a person that inspires him to behave honestly - respectfully - and courageously.
Forgetting
Visual Impairment
Character
Static Assessment Approach
46. The amount of time the student spends focused on his studies when he is successful at learning the material.
Models (Observational Learning)
Vicarious Learning
Academic Learning Time
Conditioning
47. A division of long-term memory for storing rules and methods or performing specific tasks - called procedures.
Instructional Objectives
Psychomotor Objectives
Vicarious Learning
Procedural Memory
48. The difference between the skills a child develops alone and those that can be learned with the help of someone knowledgeable. This concept was developed by Vygotsky.
Zone of Proximal (or Potential) Development
Shaping
Syntax
Sensory Register
49. A testing procedure that measures a student's mastery of a particular skill or understanding of a certain concept. The purpose of this kind of test is to measure whether a student has achieved a certain learning objective.
Concurrent Validity
Iconic Storage Register
Externalizing Behavior Disorders
Criterion-Referenced Testing
50. The degree to which a test accurately measures the trait or skill it is designed to measure.
Construct Validity
Brainstorming
Self-Determination Theory
Encoding