SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Elementary Teaching
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. Study of a treatment's effect on one person or one group by contrasting behavior before - during - and after the treatment is applied.
Formative Assessment
Single-Case Experiment
Essentialism
Levels-of-processing theory
2. Forms of epilepsy.
externalizing problems
Enrichment programs
Linguistic Intelligence
Convulsive disorders
3. An approach to instruction and school organization that clearly specifies what students should know and be able to do at the end of a course of study.
Gifted and Talented Act
Outcomes-based education
language acquisition hypothesis
Grade-equivalent scores
4. Program in which rewards or punishments are given to a class as a whole for adhering to or violating rules of conduct.
Evaluation
Group contingency program
meaningful learning
Attribution theory
5. Stage at which children learn mentally to represent things.
Preoperational stage
Task analysis
Lloyd P. Jorgensen
Keyword method
6. Carryover of behaviors - skills - or concepts from one setting or task to another.
Progressivism
Discovery learning
Removal punishment
Generalization
7. Length of time that a teacher allows a student to take to answer a question. Calling order--The order in which students are called by the teacher to answer questions asked during the course of a lesson.
Wait time
Middle Colonies
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Attribution theory
8. Teacher's Role (Same as for Perennialism) Deliver clear lectures; increase students' understanding with critical questions
Conventional Level
Essentialism
Mastery learning
Cutoff score
9. Compensatory education programs in which students are placed in separate classes for remediation.
Growth needs
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity (ADHD)
propositional logic
Pull-out programs
10. A skill learned during the concrete operational stage of cognitive development in which individuals can mentally arrange and compare objects.
Inattention
ransitvity
Learning styles
Premack Principle
11. Assessment Frequent objective and essay tests.
Aversive stimulus
Cognitive apprenticeship
Perennialism
hypothetico-deductive thinking
12. Difficulties producing speech sounds or problems with voice quality; interruption in the flow of rhythm of speech (e.g. - stuttering)
Speech Disorders
Intelligence quotient
Schema theory
Individualized Education Program (IEP)
13. Teen's premature establishment of an identity based on parental choice instead of her own. A pseudo-identity that is too fixed/rigid to serve as a foundation for meeting life's challenges.
Cross-age tutoring
Foreclosure Status
Language Disorders
Motivation
14. An understanding and appreciation of students' personal attributes - experiences - their cultures and communities - and how all this fits in with their learning.
QAIT model
knowledge of students
Characteristics of Asperger's Syndrome
Collaboration
15. Facial abnormalities; heart defects; low birth weight; motor dysfunctions
Interpersonal Intelligence
Physical characteristics of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
Variable
Initiative v. Guilt Stage
16. A study method in which students work in pairs and take turns orally summarizing sections of material to be learned.
horizontal decalage
Cooperative scripts
Phillipe Pinel
Dartmouth College Case
17. The language - attitudes - ways of behaving - and other aspects of life that characterize a group of people.
positive reinforcer
New England Colonies
Culture
Job Corps Established
18. Release from an unpleasant situation to strengthen behavior.
Negative reinforcer
Speech disorders
Psychosocial theory
Problem solving
19. Disorder in ability to control movements caused by damage to the motor area of the brain
Accountability
Cerebral palsy
Percentile score
Normal curve equivalent
20. Perception of and response to differences in stimuli.
Discrimination
Stage 2: Instrumental Relativist Orientation
Educational Implications of Social Learning Theory
Presentation punishment
21. A response to a question made by an entire class in unison.
Class inclusion
Predictive validity
negative reinforcer
Choral response
22. Learning from observation the consequences of others1 behavior.
Vicarious learning
Private speech
Sex-role behavior
Self-esteem
23. Impairment in student's ability to understand language (receptive language disorder) or to express ideas (expressive language disorder) in one's native language. If not result of physical problem/lack of experience - indicates a LD or mental retardat
Metacognitive skills
Whole-class discussion
Table of specifications
Language Disorders
24. 18 mo to 3 yrs.; Goal is to gain the ability to do things for oneself. failure to gain a sense of autonomy leads to a sense of powerlessness/incompetence. Child may begin to doubt her abilities & feel guilty when she tries to show some independence.
Readiness training
Enrichment programs
Autonomy v. Doubt and Shame Stage
Eraut's major criticism of using reflection
25. The tendency for items that appear at the beginning of a list to be more easily recalled than other items.
Gender bias
Summative Assessment
Random Assignment
Primacy effect
26. Component of memory where limited amounts of information can be stored for a few seconds.
Linguistic Intelligence
Normal curve
Short-term memory
interlanguage
27. The act of analyzing oneself and one's own thoughts.
Dartmouth College Case
Control Group
In 1990 - P.L. 94-142 was renamed to the
Reflectivity
28. Teaching Methods Lecture; questioning; coaching students in critical thinking skills.
Perennialism
Whole-class discussion
Calling order
Verbal learning
29. Assessments that compare the performance of one student against the performance of others
Norm-Referenced Tests
Intelligence quotient
Edward C. Cubberley
Centration
30. Paying attention to only one aspect of an object or a situation.
Centration
Refers to a condition that a person has.
Deafness and Hard of Hearing
Normal curve equivalent
31. The concept that certain properties of an object (such as weight) remain the same regardless of changes in other properties (such as length).
concrete operational stage
Aptitude test
Conservation
Speech Disorders
32. Theory that emphasizes learning through observation of others.
Social learning theory
Developmentally appropriate education
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)
interindividual variation
33. People who are equal in age or status.
Fetal Alcohol Effect (FAE)
Assessment
Peers
Cognitive development
34. 1964 A federal compensatory preschool education program created to help disadvantaged 3 and 4 year old students enter elementary school "ready to learn.'
Project Head Start
Z-score
Language Disorders
Concept
35. A measure of the match between the content of a test and the content of the instruction that preceded it.
Content validity
Lesson planning
Postmodernism
Discrimination
36. Educational Implications (1) Emphasis on basic skills/certain academic subjects students must master. (2) the graduation of a literate/skilled workforce. (3) Curriculum must change to meet societal changes.
Distributed practice
Essentialism
Speech Disorders
Compulsory Education Act of 1852 (Mass.) mandatory school attendance for children - ages 8
37. A personality trait that concerns whether people attribute responsibility for their own failure or success to internal factors or to external factors.
Norm-referenced evaluations
guided participation
Locus of control
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
38. One of three types of knowledge as described by Piaget; knowing the attributes of objects such as their number - color - size - and shape; knowledge is acquired by acting on objects - experimenting - and observing reactions.
physical knowledge
Randomized Field Experiment
Learning Disability (LD)
Assertive Discipline
39. Deals abstractly with hypothetical situations and reason.
Formal operational thought
equilibration
Time out
Stage 1: Punishment and Obedience Orientation
40. Assessment Collaborative between teacher and student; emphasis is on the exposure of hidden assumptions.
Postmodernism
National Defense Act (NDEA)
Critical thinking
hypothetico-deductive thinking
41. Strategy for memorization in which images are used to link lists of facts to a familiar set of words or numbers.
Pegword method
shaping
Mock participation
Intelligence quotient
42. The order in which students are called on by the teacher to answer questions asked during the course of a lesson.
Calling order
Individualized Education Program (IEP)
Dartmouth College Case
Taxonomy of educational objectives
43. Piaget's term for an infant's understanding during the sensorimotor stage that objects continue to exist even when they can no longer be seen or acted on.
object permanence
'A Nation at Risk'
Centration
Vicarious learning
44. An individual's premature establishment of an identity based on parental choices rather than their own.
horizontal decalage
comprehensible input hypothesis
Inferred reality
Foreclosure
45. When a learner makes the same error repeatedly - without explicit outside correction - they reach the point where they never 'hear' the error. The speaker assumes his or her way of speaking is correct.
Cognitive apprenticeship
error fossilization
Reflectivity
scaffolding
46. The placement - for all or part of the school day - of disabled children in regular classes.
New England Colonies
Speech and Language Disorder
Mainstreaming
manpower Development and Training Act
47. Learning by observing others' behavior.
Language minority
Ethology
Modeling
horizontal decalage
48. Moving from the physical characteristics of language (e.g. - letter-sounds) that are interpreted into successively more symbolic and meaningful levels (syntax and semantics). Often contrasted with top-down processing.
Intellectual Disability
Moral dilemmas
bottom-up processing
Relative grading standard
49. Degree of uncorrectable inability to see 1 out of every 1 -000 children are blind (vision = 20/200 or worse in the better eye) or visually imapired between 20/70 and 20/200 in the better eye).
Vision Impairments
Title I
Essentialism
Puberty in girls
50. The age of an individual in years.
Authoritarian parents
Chronological age
cognitive behavior modification
mental retardation