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Elementary Teaching
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Study First
Subject
:
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. Inborn - automatic responses to stimuli (e.g. - eyeblinking in response to bright light.
Heteronomous morality
attention deficit hyperactive disorders
Reflexes
Calling order
2. Programs that address the needs of students with mental - emotional - or physical disabilities.
Marcia's Theory of Four Adolescent Identity Statuses
Special education
Outcomes-based education
Identity Achievement Status
3. Procedures based on both behavioral and cognitive learning principles for changing your own behavior by using self-talk and self-instruction.
Cognitive behavior modification
Special education
Short-term memory
Typical of 5 year olds
4. Evaluating conclusions by logically and systematically examining the problem - the evidence - and the solution.
Learned helplessness
Multicultural education
Robert J. Breckenridge
Critical Thinking
5. A system of accommodating student differences by dividing a class of students into two or more ability groups for instruction in certain subjects.
Stage 5: Social Contract Orientation
Mapping
Within-class ability grouping
Percentile score
6. Evaluations designed to determine whether additional instruction is needed
Bernard Bailyn
Motivation
metacognition
Formative Assessment
7. Educational Implications (1) Learner-centered curricula. (2) hands-on learning activities where students collaborate. (3) Teacher guides students through learning process. (4) Constructivist in nature.
knowledge of students
Loci method
Progressivism
ransitvity
8. A question or a partial statement in a test item that is completed by one of several choices.
Short essay item
Stem
Moratorium
Perennialism
9. A program that provides one-to-one tutoring from specially trained teachers to first-graders who are not reading adequately.
extinction
The first special classes were established in 1869 in Boston for
Reading Recovery
Where the school accountability movement comes from
10. Orientation for approaching learning tasks and processing information in certain ways.
Autism
Perennialism
Learning styles
Portfolio assessment
11. A person's perception of his or her own strengths and weaknesses.
Erik Erickson Foreclosure
Autonomy v. Doubt and Shame Stage
Self-concept
unconditioned responce
12. In Piaget's theory - a concept achieved during the concrete operational stage that involves ordering items by two or more attributes - such as by both size and color.
Variable-ratio schedule (VR)
matrix classification
Working with students with speech disorders
Attention deficit disorder (ADD)
13. Body quadruples in weight and the brain triples in weight - neurons branch & grow into dense connective networks between the brain & the rest of the body
Achievement batteries
Birth - Age 2
Metacognition
extinction
14. The motivation or will to make something happen - to reach one's goal.
Volition
Full inclusion
giftedness
Inferred reality
15. Sensitivity to natural objects - like plants/animals; making fine sensory discrimination.
Summarization
Naturalist Intelligence
concrete operational stage
Noah Webster
16. Learning of words or facts under various conditions.
Loci method
Verbal learning
change agents
Conditioned stimulus
17. Bloom's ordering of objectives from simple learning tasks to more complex ones.
Deaf-Blindness
Taxonomy of educational objectives
Birth - Age 2
Antecedent stimulus
18. A cognitive strategy that encourages children to use internal speech to guide them through a task in a step-by-step manner; see inner speech.
Presentation punishment
Educational Implications of Social Learning Theory
Selected Response
self-instruction
19. Tests to assess the student1s level of skills and knowledge necessary for a given activity.
Readiness tests
Intrapersonal Intelligence
Speech Disorders
Working with students with speech disorders
20. Most girls begin their growth spurt by the start of 5th grade
Growth needs
True-false item
When most girls begin their growth spurt
Group alerting
21. Rules are set down by others.
Seatwork
PQ4R method
Life Adjustment Movement
Preconventional level of moral development
22. Interaction of individual differences in learning with particular teaching methods.
Aptitude-Treatment interaction
Continuous theory of development
collaborative consultation
contrastive analysis
23. Interpreting new experiences in relation to existing schemes.
Assimilation
unconditioned stimulus
Aversive stimulus
Keller Plan
24. The ability to use the target language appropriately in various social situations. This includes knowing the target culture well enough to appreciate subtle socio-cultural differences in social interactions.
social competence
Learning together
Treatment
monitor hypothesis
25. A teaching method effective with children having an attention deficit disorder that combines educational support - psychological counseling - behavioral management at school and home - and medical management using a psychostimulant.
Autism
Collaboration
multimodal approach
Identity Diffusion Status
26. A term used by Piaget to describe how children mold new information to fit their existing schemes in order to better adapt to their environment; contrast with accommodation.
Characteristics of LD (may not have all)
Howard Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligences
assimilation
Validity
27. Belief that nature and human nature is constant. Most closely related to the Idealism and Realism schools of traditional philosophy.
Perennialism
Events of instruction
Autonomy v. Doubt and Shame Stage
Impulsivity
28. Test item usually consisting of a stem followed by choices - or alternatives.
Time on-task
Minimum competency tests
Problem solving
Multiple-choice item
29. A study strategy that requires decisions about what to write.
Why testing accommodations for students with disabilities are important
Rule-example-rule
Note-taking
Copying computer programs
30. Obtained custody of wild boy and launched an involved program to civilize and educate him; important classic in the education of individuals with mental retardation
Jean Marc Gaspard Itard
Maintenance
Emotional and Behavior Disorders (EBD)
Stage 1: Punishment and Obedience Orientation
31. Explanation of memory that links recall of a stimulus with the amount of mental processing it receives.
Perennialism
Attachment Theory
Assessment
Levels-of-processing theory
32. Mental patterns that guide behavior.
Low Vision
Problem-solving assessment
Schemes
Speech and Language Disorder
33. The period of life from 7 to 11 years old when - Piaget believed - children's thinking becomes less rigid - and they begin to use mental operations - such as classification - conservation - and seriation to think about events and objects in their env
concrete operational stage
Distributed practice
Time out
Pedagogy
34. Made an identity commitment - but not explored identity.
Learning objectives
Instrumental Enrichment
Students at risk
Erik Erickson Foreclosure
35. 3 to 6 yrs.; Goal is for child to explore her world so she can understand who she is within this context. Failure to reach this leads child to experience a sense of guilt about her desires to explore - which could limit her willingness to take chance
Initiative v. Guilt Stage
summative assessment
Conventional Level
collective monologue
36. A concept which allows children to use information they already have acquired to form new knowledge that begins to emerge during the concrete operational stage but more characteristic of adolescent thinking.
reflective abstraction
Foreclosure Status
Control Group
Minimum competency tests
37. Associating a previously neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus to evoke a conditioned response.
Valid reasons for assessing students
Classical conditioning
Fair & ethical testing procedures
Enrichment programs
38. 1965 part of Pres. Johnson's "War on Poverty.' Provides funding for special programs for children of low-income families in grades k through 12. has been reauthorized by Congress every 5 years since its inception.
Aptitude-Treatment interaction
Identity Diffusion
Down Syndrome Chromosomal
Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
39. Socioemotional and behavioral disorders indicated in individuals who - for example - are chronically disobedient or disruptive.
Secondary reinforcer
Conduct disorders
Speech Disorders
Videodisc
40. One form of multiple-choice test item - most useful when a comparison of two alternatives is called for.
change agents
Educational Psychology
True-false item
Fragile X Syndrome Chromosomal
41. Grading on the basis of how well other students performed on the same test rather than in terms of preestablished absolute standards.
Relative grading standard
The Servicemen's Readjustment Act (G.I. Bill)
Random Assignment
summative assessment
42. These determine the child's ability to reason about social situations. Development occurs in predictable. before age 6 - child plays by her own idiosyncratic rules.
Piaget's Theory of Moral Development Cognitive stuctures/abilities develop first
Grade-equivalent scores
Common School Movement
Self-actualization
43. Instruction felt to be adapted to the current developmental status of children (rather than their age alone).
Progressivism
Language Disorders
Direct instruction
Developmentally appropriate education
44. Stimuli that do not naturally prompt a particular response.
meaningful learning
Intrapersonal Intelligence
Fetal Alcohol Effect (FAE)
Neutral stimuli
45. Teachers should expose students to a variety of other models - students must believe that they are capable of accomplishing school tasks
Educational Implications of Social Learning Theory
Use for Standardized tests
Emotional or Behavioral Disorder
Authentic assessment
46. A psychological movement - started in Germany - that advanced the understanding of perception.
Learning styles
Gestalt psychology
self-instruction
Speech disorders
47. Release from an unpleasant situation to strengthen behavior
Simulation software
Starting in 1983 - this was amended several times and expanded its range of programs to include early intervention programs for infants/toddlers with disabilities and transition programs.
negative reinforcer
Postmodernism
48. Decreasing the chances that a behavior will occur again by removing a pleasant stimulus following the behavior.
Perennialism
Removal punishment
zone of proximal development
Intrinsic incentive
49. A mental operation in the concrete operational stage that involves the understanding that an entity remains the same despite superficial changes in its form or physical appearance.
metacognition
Achievement batteries
conservation
propositional logic
50. A subconscious process in which learners develop competence by using language for 'real communication.' This is often contrasted with taking courses to learn language.
positive reinforcer
language acquisition hypothesis
Pedro Ponce de Leon
Proactive facilitation
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