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Test your basic knowledge |
CSET Subtest III: Human Development - 2
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
cset
,
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. Sensorimotor movements manipulating objects in order to receive pleasure - Begins during infancy - Involves repetition of behavior/muscle movement - Can be engaged in throughout life
Ivan Pavlov
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Alcohol
Functional play
Child's cognitive ability
2. Boys/girls about same weight/height - Girls growing only slightly slower than boys
1
Growth and Development - Infancy -- gender differences
Influences on Development - Prenatal -- Embryonic stage 2-8 wks
Anxious avoidant attachment
3. Difficulty paying attention - Easily distracted - Show hyperactivity - Become frustrated easily - Difficulty controlling muscle or motor activity (constantly moving) - Difficulty staying on task - succumbing to whatever attracts their attention - Sho
Influences on Development
Behaviors related to hyperactivity or attention disability
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Alcohol
Temperament
4. Miscarriage - Low birth weight - Poor respiratory functioning
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Nicotine
Intelligence
Transitive Inference
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Drugs
5. By understanding Piaget's stages of cognitive development - teachers can avoid presenting material in the classroom that is beyond the...
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6. Recognition that objects and events continue to exist even when they are not visible
Erik Erikson's Psychosocial Stages of Development
Centration
Social Development
Object permanence
7. Drawing conclusions from specific examples to make a general conclusion - even when the conclusion is not accurate
Growth and Development - Adolescence -- gender differences
Erikson stage four
Goodness of fit
Inductive reasoning
8. WISC. IQ test designed for school - age children. Test assesses potential in many areas - including vocabulary - knowledge - memory - spatial comprehension
Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - IQ Test
Why teachers must familiar with signs and symptoms of child abuse
B.F. Skinner
Mixed temperaments
9. Sensorimotor - preoperational - concrete operations - formal operations
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10. The tendency of the child to focus on only one piece of information at a time while disregarding all others
Growth and Development - Infancy
Classical conditioning
1
Centration
11. Birth defects - Premature birth - Low birth weight - Neurological disturbances - High startle rate - Learning disabilities - Slowed motor development
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Drugs
Cognitive
Anxious - Resistant Attachment
basis of temperament
12. Language development; disagreed with Skinner about language acquisition - stated there is an infinite # of sentences in a language - humans have an inborn native ability to develop language
Animism
Mandatory Child Abuse Reporting Law - Under CA law abuse includes these situations
Noam Chomsky
Zone of proximal development
13. A conceptual tool that allows a child to recognize that when altering the appearance of an object the basic properties do not change
Moral Development or Morality
Goodness of fit
Conservation
Temperament
14. Trust vs. Mistrust - infancy to 1st year - Physical comfort - minimal fear and low apprehension about the future. Sets stage for life long expectation that world is good. The absence of trust can result in eaving the infant feeeling suspicious - guar
Influences on Development - Prenatal -- Common Teratogens
Piaget's Contributions
Anxious - Resistant Attachment
Erikson stage one
15. Children in the US consume excess ____ and ____.
fat - sugar
Pretend or Imaginative play
Mental Retardation
Stage 3- Concrete operations period
16. Bruises - Sores - Burns & Child's vague or reluctant response about where they originated
Conventional
Temperament
Characteristics of physical abuse
Influences on Development - Prenatal -- Common Teratogens
17. Child readily separates from parent - Actively avoids parent upon reunion
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Alcohol
Casual Reasoning
Anxious - Avoidant Attachment
begining of imagination
18. Belief in the ability to do things on one's own
Growth and Development - Adolescence -- gender differences
Anxious - Avoidant Attachment
Postconventional
Self - efficacy
19. Infancy - Birth to 2 years - infants physical response to the immediate surroundings - Infants learn of their environments through sensation and movement. Egocentrism - infants are the center of their universe.
Stage 1- Sensorimotor stage
Irreversibility
Audtory Perceptural Disability
Reasoning
20. Using objects to make something - Combines sensorimotor movements and creation/construction of something - Toddlers & preschoolers
Effect of play
Egocentrism
Growth and Development - Adolescence -- body image
Constructive play
21. Type of play begins during infancy with sensorimotor movements manipulating objects on order to receive pleasure
Centration
Schemas
Functional play
Constructive play
22. Children who don't fall into an easy/difficult/cautious category have...
Postconventional
Mixed temperaments
Characteristics of physical abuse
Anger - sadness
23. Children are not equipped: physically - emotionally - socially - compared to adult caregivers
Diet - poor
Influences on Development
Why teachers must familiar with signs and symptoms of child abuse
Scaffolding
24. Early childhood - 2 to 7 years - Egocentric focus on symbolic thought and imagination - This stage lasts from about two to seven years of age. During this stage - children get better at symbolic thought - but they can't yet reason. According to Piage
Thomas & Chess temperament theory
Stage 2- Preoperational period
Erik Erikson's Psychosocial Stages of Development
Its own sake
25. The way children incorporate new information with existing schemes in order to form a new cognitive structure - fitting the new knowledge into a template of existing schemes
Assimilation
Growth and Development - Adolescence -- gender differences
begining of imagination
Anxious resistant attachment
26. Pioneer of operant conditioning who believed that everything we do is determined by our past history of rewards and punishments. he is famous for use of his operant conditioning aparatus which he used to study schedules of reinforcement on pidgeons a
B.F. Skinner
Growth and Development - Middle Childhood
Functional play
Characteristics of physical abuse
27. Modern descendent of the first successful intelligence test that measures general intelligence and four factors verbal reasoning - quantitative reasoning - spatial reasoning - and short - term memory.
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Nicotine
Seriation
fat - sugar
Stanford - Binet Intelligence Scale - IQ Test
28. Development is motivated by the search for a stable balance toward effective adaptations
Zone of proximal development
Equilibrium
1
Influences on Development - Prenatal -- Common Teratogens
29. 1. Physical Abuse 2. Physical Neglect 3. Sexual Abuse 4. Emotional Maltreatment
Scaffolding
Secure Attachment
Kohlberg's three stages of moral development
Categories of Abuse
30. Birth to 2 years old - Grow faster in this period than any other
Categories of Abuse
Growth and Development - Infancy
Moral Development or Morality
Seriation
31. The distance between a child's actual performance and a child's potential performance
Anxious avoidant attachment
Zone of proximal development
Influential - personality - emotional
Growth and Development - Early Childhood -- gender diffs
32. Involves a given set of rules and declines around age 12 usually replaced with organized sports
Anxious resistant attachment
Games with rules play
Play therapy
Educational Implications of Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development
33. Children imitate behavior through: socialization - by learning gender roles - by self - reinforcement - by self - efficacy - and - via other aspects of personality
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34. Mother's age - Birth complications for younger & older mothers - Mother's nutrition
Influences on Development: 2 Other possible impacts on fetus development
Growth and Development - Adolescence
Cognitive
Secure attachment
35. Child uses caregiver as secure base from which to explore environment - example - Child freely separates from parent to play
Anxious avoidant attachment
Effect of play
Secure Attachment
1
36. A Russian researcher in the early 1900s who was the first research into learned behavior (conditioning) who discovered classical conditioning through the salvation of dogs on the ringing of a bell.
Temperament
Ivan Pavlov
Stage 4- Formal operations period
Conservation
37. Identity vs. Identity Confusion (10-20 years - adolescence) - Finding out who they are - what they are all about - where they are going in life. - Confronted with new roles and adult statuses (vocational and romantic) - Identity confusion occurs when
Erikson stage five
Goodness of fit
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Drugs
Influences on Development - Prenatal -- Teratogens
38. Strongly improves child's problem - solving abilities - E.g. reading buddies
Value of shared activity?
Educational Implications of Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development
Anxious avoidant attachment
Language Development
39. Piaget quantified the __________________ - suggesting that there are predictable and orderly developmental accomplishments. Children can be tested at each stage to verify their level of cognitive understanding.
Play therapy
How to help an abused child cope
Bandura's beliefs
Conceptual - learning process
40. By 10-12 girls/boys same height/weight - Vast differences gross fine motor skills - Boys' leg/arm muscle coordination stronger - Run faster; jump - catch - throw - kick farther - Girls: stronger fine motor skills - More coordinated hand - manipulatio
Why teachers must familiar with signs and symptoms of child abuse
Behaviors related to hyperactivity or attention disability
Influences on Development: 2 Other possible impacts on fetus development
Growth and Development - Middle Childhood - gender differences
41. Condition of significantly sub - average intelligence combined with deficiencies in adaptive behavior; implies an inability to perform at least some of the ordinary tasks of daily living skills; IQ of 0-70 in categories of mild - moderate - severe -
Temperament
Mental Retardation
Disorganized disoriented attachment
Erikson stage one
42. ndustry vs. Inferiority (6 years - puberty) - Mastering knowledge and intellectual skills - enthusiastic about learning - imagination - Inferiority if feelings of incompetence and unproductiveness arise. If inferiority out weights industry - low self
Temperament
Disorganized disoriented attachment
Cognitive
Erikson stage four
43. Temporary support system to support child until task can be mastered alone
Scaffolding
Growth and Development - Adolescence
Goodness of fit
Classical conditioning
44. Children with a perceptual - motor disability have difficult with coordination and may often appear clumsy or disoriented - Sometimes their hands are in constant motion and may get in the way of their activity
Bobo doll experiment
Erikson stage four
Educational Implications of Operant Conditioning
Perceptual Motor Disability
45. 1. release physical energy 2. gain mastery over their bodies 3. acquire new motor skills 4. form better relationships among peers 5. try out new social rules 6. advance cognitive development 7. practice and explore new competencies
Vygotsky - Premise of his theory
Effect of play
Rough and tumble play
Growth and Development - Early Childhood
46. Ages 13 to adult in which morality is judged by abstract principles rather than existing rules that govern society and looking into oneself - Involves working out a personal code of ethics. Allows for the possibility of noncompliance with society's r
Physical abuse - Neglect - Sexual abuse
Anxious - Avoidant Attachment
Influences on Development: Potential impact Teratogens on fetus: Nicotine
Postconventional
47. Children believe that their thoughts can cause actions whether or not the experiences have a casual relationship - when I move the clouds move - god moves - sun moves - wind currents move
Growth and Development - Adolescence
Erikson stage five
Egocentrism
Casual Reasoning
48. Children learn from operating in the environment
Operant conditioning
Conservation
Object permanence
Centration
49. 1. Functional 2. Constructive 3. Pretend or Imaginative 4. Rough - and - Tumble 5. Games with Rules
types of play
Growth and Development - Early Childhood -- gender diffs
Animism
Piaget's four stages of cognitive development
50. Come from both heredity and environment. Many typical changes during childhood are related to maturation. Individual differences tend to increase with age
Educational Implications of Classical Conditioning
Social Development
Stage 2- Preoperational period
Influences on Development