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Test your basic knowledge |
CLEP Intro To Educational Psychology Vocab
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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. Serves as a means of teacher accountability - as an estimate of instructional effectiveness - and as a guideline for adjusting a lesson's focus. Assessment is also a means of providing students with the opportunity to give the teacher corrective feed
personal fable
assessment planning
Transductive reasoning
mnemonic devices
2. Involving a person's knowledge or feelings about themselves - relating to a person's inner self
intrapersonal
egocentrism
Maintenance rehearsal
episodic memory
3. Something that is naturally reinforcing - such as food (if you are hungary) - warmth (if you are cold) - and water (if you are thirsty)
intrapersonal
overinclusive thinking
primary reinforcement
Gardner's multiple intelligences
4. Visual diagrams which utilize graphic and hierarchical structures and linking phrases to add insight into the interconnectedness of concepts and sub-concepts.
norm-referenced testing
formative assessment
Concept maps
KWL
5. Field of study concerned with the theory and technique of educational and psychological measurement - which includes the measurement of knowledge - abilities - attitudes - and personality traits.
recency effect
Gardner's multiple intelligences
psychometric
interpersonal-concordance
6. In Piaget's theory - the preoperational child's difficulty taking another's point of view
personal fable
Elaboration rehearsal
the primacy effect
egocentrism
7. A psychometric concept referring to the degree to which a test score is actually a legitimate indication of the skill - concept or attribute it purports to measure
norm-referenced testing
reticular activating system
Construct validity
extrinsic reinforcement
8. Involves an organized classroom - an effective and clearly understood behavior management system - and a flexible and creative curriculum.
PQ4R
accommodation
overinclusive thinking
didactic teaching
9. Consider what students do to facilitate their own learning - noting especially their organizing and structuring strategies.
Bloom's Taxonomy
Removal punishment
criterion-referenced testing
mathemagenic effects
10. Suggests that items which are listed first in a series are often stored most readily in memory - whereas the recency effect would suggest that the most recent - and therefore the items last on list - would be more readily remembered
spontaneous recovery
formative assessment
the primacy effect
Gardner's multiple intelligences
11. The reappearance - after a pause - of an extinguished conditioned response
cognitive disequilibrium
negative reinforcement
spontaneous recovery
personal fable
12. The tendency to show greater memory for information that comes last in a sequence.
personal fable
extrinsic reinforcement
recency effect
norm-referenced testing
13. Memory aids - especially those techniques that use vivid imagery and organizational devices
Retroactive inhibition
overinclusive thinking
egocentrism
mnemonic devices
14. Believe that teachers - and others - are essential to construction. There is no 'pure' discovery-only discovery mediated by others.
Intrinsic reinforcement
Premack principle
empiricists
Social learning
15. Is a written statement of educational planning and programming for an individual student. It states the present level of functioning - long- and short-term goals - services to be provided - and a timeline for goal achievement.
spontaneous recovery
positive reinforcement
'g' factor
IEP (Individualized Education Plan)
16. Suggests that any behavior followed by a pleasing effect will tend to be repeated; behaviors followed by dissatisfying effects will tend to be discontinued. This is the basis for the use of reinforcement in operant conditioning.
The law of effect
centration
positive reinforcement
Concept maps
17. Memory of personal experiences
criterion-referenced testing
episodic memory
intrapersonal
Intrinsic reinforcement
18. Kohlberg's stage of moral development; is when moral/ethical decisions are based on what pleases - helps - or is approved by others.
positive reinforcement
interpersonal-concordance
schema
psychometric
19. Occurs when unacceptable behaviors are immediately followed by the removal of a desired stimulus.
extinction
Removal punishment
cognitive disequilibrium
Premack principle
20. Interference with retention of old information due to acquisition of new information
IEP (Individualized Education Plan)
schema
Retroactive inhibition
Elaboration rehearsal
21. Assessment used throughout teaching of a lesson and/or unit to gauge students' understanding and inform and guide teaching
overinclusive thinking
formative assessment
KWL
Transductive reasoning
22. 6 step active approach to learning by psychologist Francis P. Robinson - preview - question - read - reflect - recite - review
interpersonal
norm-referenced testing
Retroactive inhibition
PQ4R
23. Testing in which scores are compared with the average performance of others
reticular activating system
norm-referenced testing
Gardner's multiple intelligences
IEP (Individualized Education Plan)
24. Piaget's term for when a new experience or idea does not fit a person's existing understanding
Concept maps
centration
cognitive disequilibrium
Mainstreaming
25. Stipulates that a well-written objective include performance - conditions of performance - and criteria for achievement.
26. Provides information about student knowledge and performance relative to a pre-established standard within a specific - well-defined content domain
didactic teaching
Elaboration rehearsal
interpersonal
criterion-referenced testing
27. For Piaget - was a mental network for organizing concepts and information.
didactic teaching
schema
Social learning
Construct validity
28. A strategy for comprehension in which K stands for 'what do I know?' - W stands for 'what do I want to know?' - and L stands for 'what I learned or want to learn'
primary reinforcement
Premack principle
KWL
Gardner's multiple intelligences
29. The midbrain's neurological system that alerts us to novel stimuli - in this case the loud - sudden noise.
Maintenance rehearsal
Hierarchical maps
Mainstreaming
reticular activating system
30. Increasing behaviors by presenting positive stimuli - such as food. A positive reinforcer is any stimulus that - when presented after a response - strengthens the response.
'g' factor
Elaboration rehearsal
positive reinforcement
formative assessment
31. Things or events tht occur close to each other in space or time tend to get linked together in the mind. If you think of a cup - you think of a saucer.
accommodation
KWL
overinclusive thinking
The law of contiguity
32. Employs preferred or high frequency behaviors as reinforcement for the performance of a less preferred and thus lower frequency behavior.
interpersonal-concordance
PQ4R
Premack principle
formative assessment
33. Theory hypothesizes that a child's speech results from modeling - imitation - reinforcement and feedback.
Social learning
egocentrism
Hierarchical maps
norm-referenced testing
34. Is a process of keeping information active in short-term memory by repeating the information to ourselves.
IDEA
Construct validity
egocentrism
Maintenance rehearsal
35. Helps us recall particular skills or steps for accomplishing a task.
Assimilation
mnemonic devices
assessment planning
procedural memory
36. Involving relations between people
interpersonal
Premack principle
IDEA
criterion-referenced testing
37. Occurs when one responds differently to similar stimuli - even in similar situations. In classical conditioning - the learned ability to distinguish between a conditioned stimulus and stimuli that do not signal an unconditioned stimulus.
empiricists
recency effect
Transductive reasoning
discrimination
38. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
the primacy effect
KWL
Removal punishment
IDEA
39. SPEARMAN'S term for a general intellectual ability that underlies all mental operations to some degree
40. The process by which we filter irrelevant information from the flow of more pertinent incoming information. It allows us to block out of our focus and attention those things which we deem to be not important.
interpersonal-concordance
Sensory gating
Premack principle
cognitive disequilibrium
41. Common belief among adolescents that their feelings and experiences cannot possibly be understood by others and that they are personally invulnerable to harm
positive reinforcement
norm-referenced testing
personal fable
formative assessment
42. Piaget's term for the process of making sense of an experience or perception by fitting it into previously established cognitive structures (schemas).
mathemagenic effects
episodic memory
Assimilation
recency effect
43. Is a feature of the preoperational stage of development in which a child reasons neither inductively nor deductively - but reasons instead from particular to particular.
empiricists
Transductive reasoning
The law of contiguity
episodic memory
44. Concept and attributes arranged in a hierarchial pattern and typically constructed in a descending order or importance. Relationships are identified between and among a concepts and its attributes
interpersonal
egocentrism
Hierarchical maps
procedural memory
45. Relating things to preexisting knowledge
primary reinforcement
KWL
Sensory gating
Elaboration rehearsal
46. Theory that proposes seven different components of intelligence: (1) Language ability - (2) logical-mathematical thinking - (3) spatial thinking - (4) musical thinking - (5) bodily kinesthetic thinking - (6) interpersonal thinking - (7) intrapersonal
47. (in classical conditioning) occurs when a previously conditioned stimulus (having been associated with an unconditioned stimulus) is presented in the absence of the unconditioned stimulus and thus fails to continue to elicit the unconditioned respons
assessment planning
extinction
the primacy effect
The law of contiguity
48. That which is delivered internally (such as a sense of accomplishment - or well being)
accommodation
HUD
formative assessment
Intrinsic reinforcement
49. your memory for meanings and general (impersonal) facts
Mager's three-part system
interpersonal
interpersonal-concordance
semantic memory
50. Increasing the strength of a given response by removing or preventing a painful stimulus when the response occurs
interpersonal
Intrinsic reinforcement
negative reinforcement
Elaboration rehearsal