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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. Peer tutoring between an older and a younger student.
egocentric speech
Why testing accommodations for students with disabilities are important
adaptation
Cross-age tutoring
2. The practice of grouping students by ability level in separate classes within-class ability
Self-esteem
Ethology
Between-class ability grouping
Norm-referenced evaluations
3. A teaching method that includes evaluation of students improvement relative to past achievement.
Centration
Mental Retardation
Deficiency needs
Individual Learning Expectation (ILE)
4. Teaching Methods Lecture; questioning; coaching students in critical thinking skills.
John Joseph Hughes
Perennialism
Valentine Huay
Know Nothing Party
5. Dispensing reinforcement following an unpredictable number of correct behaviors.
Variable-ratio schedule (VR)
Development
Typical of 5 year olds
Group alerting
6. Educational Implications (1)rigorous intellectual curriculum for all students. (2) Focus on math - science - and literature = logical thought/enduring ideas. (3) Goal = students develop intellectual skills in writing - speaking - computing - problem-
Perennialism
Performance assessment
Formative evaluation
interlanguage
7. A question or a partial statement in a test item that is completed by one of several choices.
Stem
Common School Movement
In loco parentis "in the place of parents"
metacognition
8. Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA).
'A Nation at Risk'
Constructed response
Ages 12 - 18
In 1990 - P.L. 94-142 was renamed to the
9. Technique in which items to be learned are repeated at intervals over a period of time.
Characteristics of Asperger's Syndrome
Distributed practice
Completion items
unconditioned responce
10. Structured lessons that students can work on individually - at their own pace.
Programmed instruction
Pedro Ponce de Leon
Gender bias
Trust v. Mistrust Stage
11. Disorder in one or more basic psychological processes involved in understanding/using spoken and/or written language = imperfect ability to listen - think - read - write - spell - or do math calculations.
Instructional objective
Identity Achievement Status
Learning Disability (LD)
Language Disorders
12. Teen is not able to develop a clear direction or sense of self. May have experienced an identity crises but was unable to resolve it.
Identity Diffusion Status
modeling
Premack Principle
Shaping
13. Professionals working cooperatively to provide educational services.
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Discovery learning
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Collaboration
14. Child's body grows much more slowly relative to other periods of life; the brain continues to develop fast than any other part of the body - up to 90% of its adult weight;
Ages 2 - 6
Foreclosure
Reinforcer
Control Group
15. A thinking-skills program in which students work through a series of paper-and-pencil exercises designed to develop various intellectual abilities.
Emotional and Behavior Disorders (EBD)
Vision Impairments
Instrumental Enrichment
Attachment Theory
16. Evaluations designed to determine whether additional instruction is needed
Rote learning
active listening
Formative Assessment
Achievement batteries
17. A set of critical issues that individuals must address as they pass through eight life stages - according to Erikson.
Applied behavior analysis
Sensory register
Psychosocial crisis
Common School Movement
18. Stages 5 and 6 in Kohlberg's model of moral development - in which individuals make moral judgements in relation to abstract principles.
matrix classification
Postconventional level of morality
hierarchial classification
Seatwork
19. The desire to experience success and to participate in activities in which success is dependent on personal effort and abilities.
Autonomy v. Doubt and Shame Stage
Variable-interval schedule
First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
Achievement motivation
20. Renowned scientist who founded wild boy
role play
Phillipe Pinel
Autism
PQ4R method
21. A motivational orientation of students who place primary emphasis on gaining recognition from others and earning good grades.
Individualized Education Program (IEP)
Essentialism
Common School Movement
Performance goals
22. A concept in Vygotsky's theory regarding children's potential for intellectual growth rather than their actual level of development; the gap between what children can do on their own and what they can do with the assistance of others.
New England Colonies
zone of proximal development
Identity Diffusion Status
Students at risk
23. The age of an individual in years.
Chronological age
New England Colonies
Intellectual Disability
Foreclosure
24. Theories that knowledge is stored in the brain in a network of connections - not in systems of rules or individual bits of information.
Dual code theory of memory
Project Head Start
Achievement motivation
Connectionist models
25. Students: 1) think about the lesson topic; 2) pair up with partners and share according to the guidelines the teacher has provided; 3) share their discussions with the rest of the class. Each person takes a turn retelling their partners' information.
Performance goals
Bernard Bailyn
think - pair - share
Essentialism
26. An activity acting out situations encountered in the classroom or in everyday life - using the language that might be used in such situations
attention deficit hyperactive disorders
Reflectivity
role play
Primary reinforcer
27. Assignments or activities designed to broaden or deepen the knowledge of students who master classroom lessons quickly.
Enrichment activities
Cognitive learning theory
Standard deviation
Verbal learning
28. Stages 3 and 4 in Kohlberg's model of moral development - in which individuals make moral judgments in consideration of others.
Information-processing theory
Integrated learning system
Early intervention
Conventional level of morality
29. A characteristic conversational pattern of preschoolers who are unable to take the perspective of others and thus make little effort to modify their speech for their listener so that remarks to each other seem unrelated.
Common School Movement
collective monologue
Middle Colonies
Describes the consequences of having the disability.
30. Assessments that rate how thoroughly students have mastered specific skills or areas of knowledge
Criterion-Referenced Tests
Identity diffusion
Computer-based instruction(CBA)
Intrapersonal Intelligence
31. Diagramming main ideas and connections between them.
autism
Progressivism
inside-outside circle
Mapping
32. Hypothesis that language acquisition is related directly to the student's attitude about learning. (Krashen's Theory)
Asperger's Syndrome
affective filter hypothesis
Engaged time
Norm-Referenced Tests
33. Event that comes before a behavior.
learning assessment
Antecedent stimulus
propositional logic
Working memory
34. The period of life from birth to 2 years old when children acquire what Piaget believed are the building blocks of symbolic thinking and human intelligence-schemes for two basic competencies - goal-directed behavior and object permanence.
Middle Colonies
Fixed-interval schedule
Fair & ethical testing procedures
sensorimotor stage
35. Mental retardation.
Seatwork
Defines special education as specially designed instruction.
The normalization principle was a major factor in the development of community-based services for individuals with
Characteristics of LD (may not have all)
36. (Cognitive) a developmental view of how moral reasoning evolves from a low to a high level. Argues that people with low moral level are unable to conceive acts of aggression as being immoral.
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37. Mental patterns that guide behavior.
Schemes
Multiple-choice item
Robert J. Breckenridge
Metacognition
38. Stage at which children think that rules are unchangeable and that breaking them leads automatically to punishment.
comprehensible input hypothesis
Heteronomous morality
Variable-interval schedule
Intellectual Disability
39. An approach to learning which purports that children must construct their own understandings of the world in which they live. Teachers guide this process through focusing attention - posing questions - and stretching children's thinking; information
Wait time
Deafness and Hard of Hearing
Educational Implications of Social Learning Theory
constructivist approach
40. A focus on having students in mixed-ability groups and holding them to high standards but providing many way to reach those standards.
Rote learning
Stage 4: Law and Order Orientation
Least restrictive environment
Untracking
41. A model based on the idea that information is processed simultaneously in the sensory register - short-term memory - and long-term memory.
Logico-mathematical knowledge
Dartmouth College Case
Parallel distributed processing
Independent practice
42. A statement of information or tasks that students should master after one or more lessons.
assimilation
Behavioral learning theory
Instructional objective
Benjamin Rush
43. Person defines her own values in terms of the ethical principles she has elected to follow.
Post-Conventional Level
Massed practice
Perception
Multicultural education
44. People who are equal in age or status.
Peers
Metacognitive skills
Applied behavior analysis
Group contingency program
45. Students who have abilities or problems so significant that the students require special education or other services to reach their potential.
Exceptional learners
Vision Loss
Mastery criterion
Valid reasons for assessing students
46. Wanted public funding in 1840s for Catholic schools. Helped the secularization of American public schools.
Essentialism
Independent practice
John Joseph Hughes
Mock participation
47. Reinforcement schedule in which desired behavior is rewarded following a constant amount of time.
autism
Intelligence quotient (IQ)
Lloyd P. Jorgensen
Fixed-interval schedule
48. The ability to think and solve problems without the help of others.
Control Group
Use for Standardized tests
Associative play
Self-regulation
49. Play in which children join together to achieve a common goal.
Characteristics of Autism
Identity diffusion
Cooperative play
Functional fixedness
50. Cognitive style of responding quickly but often without regard for accuracy.
Lloyd P. Jorgenson
Impulsivity
Classical conditioning
Middle Colonies