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Test your basic knowledge |
Educational Psychology Basics
Start Test
Study First
Subject
:
teaching
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
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. Piaget believes that the different thinking throughout childhood occurs in _______
Erikson's criticisms
Language
Educational psychology
Stages
2. ______ says kids often engage in parallel play
Standard score (derived score)
Parpain
Vygotsky beliefs
Beverly Fargot
3. Piaget said we has humans inherit two basic tendencies ______ and ______.
Lorenz - imprinting
Early and late maturation
Educational psychology
Organization and adaptation
4. Belief that some people have that they have little or no control over their lives ; those that often have this have problems with depression
Learned helplessness
Normal curve ( bell shaped curve)
Standardized testing
Moral development
5. Factor being manipulated in experimental group
Frequency distribution
Conventional morality
Independent variable
Vygotsky beliefs
6. About 7 to 11 years old; this stage is a major turning point in a child's cognitive development ; child's thinking begins to resemble that of an adult more than that of a child ; child is able to utilize conservation - decentration - and reversibilit
Concrete-operational stage
Grade equivalency score
Invariant
Scheme
7. At any point in a child's development there are problems that the child is just on the verge of being able to solve by them but they dont have quite enough skills to solve them themselves; however - if they are given assistance/guidance they are ofte
Sensorimotor stage
Double blind study
Zone of Proximal Distance
1. preconventional morality 2. conventional morality 3. post conventional morality
8. A branch of psychology that studies children in an educational setting and is concerned with teaching and learning methods - cognitive development - and aptitude assessment
Educational psychology
Standardized scores
ZPD - zone of prozimal distance
Parpain
9. What are the Piaget's 3 Principles?
1. conservationism 2. De-centration 3. Reversibility
Arthur JEnsen
6 hour retardets
Carol Gilligan
10. One individual is studied in dept for a long period of time (situations: you would use this - people in war - murder's - serial killers - multiple personalities)(children with skills to advanced for their age)
Accommodation
1st year ; development of trust
Individual case study
Formal operation stage
11. Take a standard set of items presented in a uniform manner and the results are reported in terms of standards
Erikson's criticisms
Standardized testing
Laray Pee case
Preoperational stage
12. Ruled that tests that are biased (IQ tests) cannot be used for the placement of minority kids into classes
'storm and stress'
Criticisms of Piaget
1st year ; development of trust
Laray Pee case
13. Where is this new experience causes a change in an existing scheme ; child may have to modify this scheme (ex: john lenon's child adding a new idea of what a court is )
Decentration
Beverly Fagot
Accommodation
Different types of tests and surverys
14. Relationship between two variables where they increase or decrease together ; example - number of calories and number of pounds gained
Jane Mercer
Dependent variable
Positive correlation
Stanine scores
15. Found that from an early age boys are encouraged to be competitive - to achieve - and to control the expression of their feelings; girls at an early age are encouraged to develop close relationhips - talk about their troubles - and show affection and
Preoperational stage
Educational psychology
Early and late maturation
Jean Block
16. Did research and found that parents tend to treat their boys and girls differently; they became negative when their daughters were overly physical or athletics ( parents were oten not aware of the negative feedback they gave when their daughter was i
Universal
'storm and stress'
Preconventional morality
Beverly Fagot
17. Said alot of kids were able to describe what they were supposed to do in hypothetial situation but when you place them in a real life situation they often engage in the opposite behavior ; final observation: kids know the rules - they just dont follo
Identity foreclosure
Equilibrium ( mental balance)
Hartshore and May
Criticisms of Piaget
18. Piaget also found that young kids engage in __________; presume that everyone sees things or experiences things the same way as they do
Egocentric thinking
Criticisms of Piaget
Late maturing girls
Jean Block
19. Refers to puberty and the hormones influencing behavior and feelings - what Stanley Hall considered adolescence
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20. Talked about kids in schools that were only considered retarded during the 6 hours they were at school
6 hour retardets
Correlation
Jane Mercer
Normal curve ( bell shaped curve)
21. Believed that intelligence is 80% due to heredity; he also believes that innate differences may exist between blacks and whites
Zone of Proximal Distance
Independent variable
Arthur JEnsen
Emotional intelligence
22. Did research and used moral dellima stories like Kohlberg to compare males to females; discovered women showed more care/concern; men experience more of a feeling of justice being served
Psychosocial moratorium
Carol Gilligan
Normal curve
Accommodation
23. When the experimenter or the subject dont know which group they are in ; helps to avoid experimental bias and certain kinds of treatment that may change subjects behavior
Identity vs role confusion
Sandra bem
Double blind study
Parallel play
24. 1. 1st person that got us looking at the fact that kids develop cognitively in stages 2. got us to realize that kids think differently from each other and from adults 3. got us to realize that qualitative changes in thinking happen as a child goes
Correlation
Conventional morality
Contributions of Piaget
Jean Block
25. Liuson and Peskin looked at kids who began to develop physically mature before their class mates ( ___________)
Equilibrium ( mental balance)
Jane Mercer
Negative correlation
Early and late maturation
26. Having the ability to focus on more than one quality at a time
Organization and adaptation
Correlation
Adaptation
Decentration
27. She said what we should strive for is psychological androgony (means not gender specific - can be both male and female characteristics)
Sandra bem
Arthur JEnsen
Laray Pee case
Stages
28. Said that IQ tests are so biased they should be declared illegal
Standard score (derived score)
Kohlberg
Jane Mercer
Negative correlation
29. 11 years and on ; the child begins to use abstract thinking - deal with hypothesis - engages in mental manipulations; this formal thinking develops gradually
Invariant
Frequency distribution
Formal operation stage
Stanine scores
30. What are 3 different ways to study behavior?
Norm reference test
1. sensorimotor stage 2. preoperational stage 3. concrete-operational stage 4. formal operation stage
Individual case study - naturalistic observation - tests and surverys
Intelligence
31. By the age of 9 _________ disappears because they reach the cognitive level where this form of speech does not need to guide their behavior or thinking any more
Psychologists have trouble agreeing on what intelligence is and any type of test including IQ cannot test intelligence it only shows a sample of behavior
Preoperational stage
Private speech
Beverly Fargot
32. One of the approaches Piaget used was the _____ - he would pose a problem then he would ask the child a question and based on the answer he got he would ask the child additional questions
Stages
Clinical method
Identity achievement
1. conservationism 2. De-centration 3. Reversibility
33. The sens of balance is known as ________________
Vygotsky calls this Private Speech
6 hour retardets
Frequency distribution
Equilibrium ( mental balance)
34. The purpose of a ____ is to separate the performance of individuals so that there is a distribution of scores from the highest to the lowest score
Norm reference test ( ACT - GRE - IQ tests - in class exams - special education placement)
Dependent variable
Identity diffusion
Individual case study - naturalistic observation - tests and surverys
35. A window of opportunity; if something doesnt happen during this period it may never happen
Standard score (derived score)
Parpain
Correlation
Critical period
36. What are the two types of adaptation?
1. conservationism 2. De-centration 3. Reversibility
Assimilation and accommodation
Cognitive reasoning
'storm and stress'
37. What are the 3 levels of moral reasoning developed by Kohlberg?
1. conservationism 2. De-centration 3. Reversibility
Identity vs role confusion
Accommodation
1. preconventional morality 2. conventional morality 3. post conventional morality
38. Believes that kids learn about their culture through interaction with those older than they are
Vygotsky
4 times - successful suicide
Standardized testing
Beverly Fagot
39. Age 6 to 11 years; during this stage the child begins school; if they are sucsessful in school they develop a sense of accomplishment ; these feelings may stay with a child throughout their entire life
Standardized scores
Moral development
Industry vs inferiority
Correlation
40. Sometimes given on reports ; were developed back in WWII by air force psychologists and they were used to screen men for different kinds of programs
Stanine scores
Testing
Piaget
Organization and adaptation
41. Does it measure what it claims to measure?
Validity
Clinical method
Equilibrium ( mental balance)
Control variable
42. Piaget also believes the cognitive stages children go through are _______
Universal
ZPD - zone of prozimal distance
Psychologists have trouble agreeing on what intelligence is and any type of test including IQ cannot test intelligence it only shows a sample of behavior
BITCH test
43. Most psychologists believe that intelligence is due to ___ ____; you cant prove which one is more or if they equal but they both play a role
Validity
Criticisms of Piaget
Assimilation
Nature vs nurture
44. When a child encounters a new experience that does not fit an existing scheme _________ becomes necessary
Adaptation
Experimental methods
'storm and stress'
Parpain
45. We inherit the tendencies to combine processes into coherent systems
Sensorimotor stage
Concrete-operational stage
Psychosocial moratorium
Organizations
46. These kids are only considered 'retarded' during the 6 hours they attend school; characteristics mostly male - minority - come from lower SES familes
Object permanence
Individual case study
Cognitive reasoning
6 hour retardets
47. 1. some people feel as though he may have underestimated the ability of kids 2. he talked about there being 4 distinct stages of development 3. some critics focused too much on what children couldnt do rather than what they could do 4. some think t
Criticisms of Piaget
Grade equivalency score
Psychologists have trouble agreeing on what intelligence is and any type of test including IQ cannot test intelligence it only shows a sample of behavior
Early maturing girls
48. New experiences that fit an existing scheme ; a child sees a ew type of ball and realizes it a ball - different from his ball but understands its still a ball
Preconventional morality
James Marcia
Assimilation
Sensorimotor stage
49. Are the scores repeatable?
Reliability
Psychoscoial moratorium
Beverly Fagot
Late maturing girls
50. Goes from birth to about the age of 2 years - during this stage schemes are developed primarily through sensory and motor activities ; around the age of 6 to 8 months the child develops an important cognitive milestone object permanence
Piaget
Pase vs Hannon
Sensorimotor stage
Hartshore and May