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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Human Growth And Development
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
clep
,
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. This system and organ are most susceptible to teratogens after conception
scaffolding
CNS and heart
Diana Baumrind
memory
2. Suggested children are born into world with empty minds - environment shapes them
self-concept differentiation
prosocial behavior
Locke
Moro reflex
3. Characteristic of the thought of a preoperational child. children in this stage tend to project human qualities into inanimate objects
street smarts
Lev Vygotsky
animistic reasoning
Lawrence Kohlberg
4. Social cognitive theorist who proposed that learning takes place in social context: observing and imitating others. also believed people used self-efficacy to overcome fear/trauma.
12 and 30
Albert Bandura
concrete operations stage
animistic reasoning
5. A technique of detecting fetal abnormalities that involves examination of placental tissue extracted from the chorion
formal operations stage
scripts
chorionic villus sampling
Diana Baumrind
6. First of Piaget's. lasts from birth to acquisition of language. cognitive devmt begins and children learn causality - object permanence towards end
normative approach
learning set
sensorimotor stage
Diana Baumrind
7. The principle that development proceeds from the center of the body outward
intermodal perception
Harry Harlow
proximodistal development
conscientiousness
8. Second of Piaget's (age 2-7). begin to use words as mental symbols and to form mental images. still limited in their ability to use logic to solve problems. do not yet understand conservation.
preoperation stage
instinctive drift
Locke
Lewis Terman
9. Unresponsiveness to others - oc behaviors - anger outburst - social avoidance - regression in behavior/language (4x more prevalent in boys)
Noam Chomsky
habituation method
characteristics of autism
metacognition
10. The understanding that a certain object or event can be simultaneously perceived by more than one sensory system
zone of proximal development
reaction range theory of intelligence
accommodation
intermodal perception
11. Infant who appears withdrawn - depressed - and is losing all interest in the world is expressing symptoms of this
Diana Baumrind
social deprivation
overregularization
ethology
12. Inflicting harm in order to obtain something of value
superego
John Bowlby
instrumental aggression
habituation method
13. An explicit understanding of how learning works and an awareness of yourself as a learner.
5 psychosexual stages
metacognition
Uri Bronfenbrenner
Noam Chomsky
14. The average number of MORPHEMES
mean length of utterance
Moro reflex
ethology
street smarts
15. From Lev Vygotsky's theory. the difference between what a child can do with help and what the child can do without any help or guidance.
vision
Lawrence Kohlberg
zone of proximal development
proximodistal development
16. The set of rules by which we derive meaning from morphemes - words - and sentences in a given language; the study of meaning
assimilation
animistic reasoning
identity moratorium
semantics
17. Psychologist who defined 3 styles of parenting: authoritarian - authoritative - permissive.
neglect
pragmatics
Diana Baumrind
Lev Vygotsky
18. Form of indirect aggression - prevalent in girls - involving spreading rumors - gossiping - and nonverbal putdowns for the purpose of social manipulation
memory
relational aggression
Lawrence Kohlberg
learning set
19. When infants display a decrease in interest toward an object
habituation method
Moro reflex
first spoken word
scaffolding
20. Increased exposure to stimuli - enhanced encoding (storing) of information in long-term memory - and increased ease and efficiency in retrieving the stored information will improve this
instrumental aggression
concrete operations stage
learning set
memory
21. Psychologist who researched the relationship of body contact and nourishment to attachment - using infant monkeys and artificial mothers
John Bowlby
Susan Carey
Harry Harlow
habituation method
22. Piaget's notion of adapting one's current understandings (schemas) to incorporate new information
first spoken word
accommodation
amniocentesis
CNS and heart
23. The basis for most human learning
street smarts
metacognition
imitation
12 and 30
24. The need to connect with others - which is often intensified if a threat of danger is imminent and people need to come together to support each other
Locke
affiliation motive
overregularization
learning set
25. Those with this disease are often normal weight
functional play
social deprivation
Uri Bronfenbrenner
bulimia
26. Third of Piaget's (7-11). children learn conservation and mathematical transformations.
zone of proximal development
concrete operations stage
intermodal perception
sensitive period
27. 1896-1934; russian developmental psychologist who emphasized the role of the social environment on cognitive development and proposed the idea of zones of proximal development
conscientiousness
Lev Vygotsky
learning set
Susan Carey
28. Sense that is least well-developed at birth
Rousseau
affiliation motive
vision
conscientiousness
29. Term coined by animal psychologists Marian Breland Bailey and Keller Breland; tendency for animals to return to innate behaviors following repeated reinforcement
vision
instinctive drift
triarchic theory of intelligence
accommodation
30. Occurs when grammatical rules are incorrectly generalized to irregular cases where they do not apply
accommodation
relational aggression
overregularization
reaction range theory of intelligence
31. This action during pregnancy may be associated with poor academic performance by the child later on
Uri Bronfenbrenner
Lawrence Kohlberg
bulimia
maternal smoking
32. In Bronfenbrenner's bioecological approach - settings not experienced directly by individuals still influence their development (for example - effects of events at a parent's workplace on children's development).
concrete operations stage
Susan Carey
exosystem
basic emotions
33. We don't inherit a specific IQ; rather we have a range of academic potential
Howard Gardner
reaction range theory of intelligence
triarchic theory of intelligence
Harry Harlow
34. Father of attachment theory
John Bowlby
fetal alcohol syndrom symptom
sandwich generation
Rousseau
35. Devised the Triarchic Theory of Intelligence (academic problem-solving - practical - and creative); proposed three components of adult love: intimacy - commitment - and passion
mental operations
preoperation stage
Robert Sternberg
relational aggression
36. Child has smaller-than normal brain leading to other disabilities
accommodation
overregularization
fetal alcohol syndrom symptom
pragmatics
37. Suggested that children are born good - bad experiences lead to negative changes
Locke
sandwich generation
Rousseau
presbyopia
38. Hall and Gesel launched this approach in which measures of behavior are taken on large numbers of individuals and age-related averages are computed to represent typical development
pragmatics
Robert Selman
normative approach
social deprivation
39. Term for practical intelligence
affiliation motive
Lewis Terman
street smarts
Robert Sternberg
40. In Piaget's theory these are flexible and reversible
scripts
mental operations
assimilation
chorionic villus sampling
41. This causes more deaths in children than physical abuse
animistic reasoning
neglect
triarchic theory of intelligence
Lewis Terman
42. A period of time in the development of identity in which a person delays making a decision about important issues but actively explores various alternatives
imitation
identity moratorium
overregularization
Albert Bandura
43. Occurs between 11 and 13 months
instinctive drift
Lawrence Kohlberg
Robert Sternberg
first spoken word
44. Big 5 trait that increases for both sexes over their lifetimes
learning set
affiliation motive
conscientiousness
social deprivation
45. Behavior that benefits someone else or society but that generally offers no obvious benefit to the person performing it; can be taught through positive reinforcement - observational learning - modeling - and assignment of responsibilities designed to
prosocial behavior
Robert Selman
habituation method
Moro reflex
46. Oral - anal (1-3) - phallic (4-6) - latency (6-puberty) - genital
learning set
bulimia
mental operations
5 psychosexual stages
47. Harvard researcher that has identified at least eight types of intelligences: linguistic - logical/mathematical - bodily/kinesthetic - musical - spatial (visual) - interpersonal (the ability to understand others) - intrapersonal (the ability to under
presbyopia
Howard Gardner
Lawrence Kohlberg
social deprivation
48. When more categories are added to one's self-description
Lev Vygotsky
self-concept differentiation
5 psychosexual stages
social deprivation
49. A theory of development that takes its cue in many ways from evolutionary theory - concentrating on traits that are inborn or dependent on 'critical periods' for their eventual emergence
affiliation motive
ethology
chorionic villus sampling
concrete operations stage
50. Loss of elasticity of the lens and thus loss of ability to see close objects as a result of the aging process
presbyopia
amniocentesis
vision
Howard Gardner