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Elementary Teaching
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Study First
Subject
:
teaching
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
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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. Classes or curricula targeted for students of a specified achievement or ability level.
top-down processing
Tracks
Performance assessment
Foreclosure
2. Religion Wide variety of religious beliefs practiced
Middle Colonies
Impulsivity
error fossilization
Cognitive behavior modification
3. Students who are subject to school failure because of characteristics of the student or inadequate responses to their needs by school - family - or community.
Standard deviation
Misuses of state-mandated standardized achievement test scores
Stage 4: Law and Order Orientation
Students at risk
4. The tendency to think about - see - and understand the world from one's own perspective; an inability to see objects or situations from another's perspective.
egocentrism
Reciprocal teaching
Intelligence quotient
Cognitive development
5. Federal law P.L. 101-476 enacted in 1990 changing the name of P.L. 94-142 and broadening services to adolescents with disabilities.
accommodation
Criterion-Referenced Tests
Discovery learning
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
6. Criterion-referenced tests focusing on important skills students are expected to have mastered to qualify for promotion or graduation.
Accountability
Ages 2 - 6
role play
Minimum competency tests
7. 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;
Modeling
Ages 2 - 6
Schedule of reinforcement
BICS/CALP
8. Class rewards that depend on the behavior of all students.
Group contingencies
Primary purpose of the Woodcock Reading Mastery Exam(WRM)
Stage 4: Law and Order Orientation
Emotional and behavioral disorders
9. Refers to substantial limitations in present functioning manifests before the age of 18.
Mental Retardation
Characteristics of Autism
Deafness and Hard of Hearing
Autonomy v. Doubt and Shame Stage
10. Ability to produce and appreciate rhythm - pitch - and timbre; appreciation of the forms of musical expression
Erik Erickson moratorium
Classroom management
Standardized tests
Musical Intelligence
11. 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.
Intimacy v. Isolation Stage Young Adulthood
Instructional objective
assimilation
new age religion
12. The order in which students are called on by the teacher to answer questions asked during the course of a lesson.
Calling order
Ethology
Inattention
Characteristics of Autism
13. Activities and techniques that orient students to the material before reading or class presentations.
Advance organizers
Distributed practice
curriculum casualty
Contingent praise
14. Learning process in which individuals physically carry out tasks.
Generative learning
Constructivist theories of learning
Enactment
Middle Colonies (NY - NJ - Del. - Penn.)
15. The act of analyzing oneself and one's own thoughts.
Contingent praise
Reflectivity
Standardized tests
Preconventional level of morality
16. Assessment used throughout teaching of a lesson and/or unit to gauge students' understanding and inform and guide teaching
representational thinking
Valid reasons for assessing students
New England Colonies
formative assessment
17. Rogoff's term used to describe transferring responsibility for a task from the skilled partner to the child in a mutual involvement between the child and the partner in a collective activity. Steps include choosing and structuring activities to fit t
guided participation
Selected Response
extinction
Valentine Huay
18. The process of focusing on certain stimuli while screening others out.
Time out
Attention
Robert J. Breckenridge
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
19. Research approach in which the teaching practices of effective teachers are recorded through classroom observation.
Process-product studies
curriculum casualty
Characteristics of Asperger's Syndrome
Aversive stimulus
20. An acquired injury to the brain caused by external physical force - resulting in a total/partialfunctional disability - psychosocial impairment - or both - that adversely affects a student's educational performance.
Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI)
Whole-class discussion
metacognition
Group contingency program
21. Inability to develop a clear direction or sense of self; adolescent has few commitments to goals and values - and seems apathetic about finding an identity; if an identity crisis has been experienced - it has not been resolved
Emotional and Behavior Disorders (EBD)
Middle Colonies
Pedro Ponce de Leon
Identity Diffusion
22. The mechanism by which second language learners process - store - and retrieve conscious language rules.
monitor hypothesis
Selected Response
Cognitive dissonance theory
Norm-referenced evaluations
23. Programs designed to prepare disadvantaged children for entry into kindergarten and first grade.
Defines special education as specially designed instruction.
Compensatory preschool programs
Intellectual Disability
Robert J. Breckenridge
24. Symbols that cultures create to help people think - communicate - and solve problems.
Title I
Sign systems
Speech and Language Disorder
Compulsory Education Act of 1852 (Mass.) mandatory school attendance for children - ages 8
25. Sensitivity to the sounds - rhythms - and meanings of words; sensitivity to the different functions of language.
Antecedent stimulus
Linguistic Intelligence
Treatment
Post-Conventional Level
26. (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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27. The mental tendency to organize perceptions so they make sense.
Psychosocial crisis
Closure
Post-Conventional Level
Where the school accountability movement comes from
28. A part of long-term memory that stores images of our personal experiences.
Episodic memory
Mastery grading
Connectionist models
Juan Bonet
29. Meichenbaum's developmental program that helps children control and regulate their behavior; children are taught self-regulatory strategies to use as a verbal tool to inhibit impulses - control impulses and frustration - and promote reflection.
cognitive behavior modification
Free-recall learning
Characteristics of Autism
New England Colonies
30. An explanation of the discomfort people feel when new perceptions or behaviors clash with long-held beliefs.
Cognitive dissonance theory
Sign systems
Puberty
Reading Recovery
31. 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.
Reinforcer
Erik Erickson Identity diffusion
buy-in
Wait time
32. The ability to perform a mental operation and then reverse one's thinking to return to the starting point.
Deaf-Blindness
Instrumental Enrichment
Multiple intelligences
eversibility
33. 1962 mandated funding to educate thousands of people unemployed because of automation/technological advances so they would be marketable in these fields.
Summative evaluation
manpower Development and Training Act
Southern Colonies (MD - Virginia - NC - SC - GA)
knowledge of students
34. 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.
Race
Legally Blind
bottom-up processing
Perennialism
35. 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
Cognitive dissonance theory
constructivist approach
Preoperational stage
36. Release from an unpleasant situation to strengthen behavior
hypothetico-deductive thinking
Concrete operational stage
physical knowledge
negative reinforcer
37. Modifying existing schemes to fit new situations.
Accommodation
Refers to a condition that a person has.
Mock participation
Outlining
38. Requires student to supply rather than to select the answer
adaptation
Videodisc
scheme
Constructed Response
39. A mental operation learned during the concrete operational stage that allows children to organize concepts and objects according to how they relate to one another in a building-block fashion. For example - all matter is composed of molecules and mole
hierarchial classification
Achievement tests
Antecedent stimulus
Characteristics of Asperger's Syndrome
40. What is right is whatever satisfies one's own needs (occasionally the needs of others). Fairness/Reciprocity seen in terms of 'you scratch my back - I'll scratch yours'.
Stage 2: Instrumental Relativist Orientation
New England Colonies
Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development
Giftedness
41. 14 years - for at least 3 months each year (with 6 weeks having to be consecutive).
Percentile score
Compulsory Education Act of 1852 (Mass.) mandatory school attendance for children - ages 8
intraindividual variation
Overlapping
42. A pleasurable consequence that maintains or increases a behavior.
Individualized instruction
Reinforcer
Self-actualization
Stage 1: Punishment and Obedience Orientation
43. One of two basic principles referred to by Piaget as invariant functions; the ability of all organisms to adapt their mental representations or behavior to fit environmental demands; contrast with organization.
adaptation
Hyperactivity
Individuals with Disabilities Act
Psychosocial Crisis
44. 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.
Primacy effect
Field independence
zone of proximal development
Essentialism
45. Learned information that can be applied to only a restricted - often artificial set of circumstances.
Inert knowledge
Enrichment activities
Individualized instruction
Language Disorders
46. A test designed to measure general abilities and to predict future performance.
Aptitude test
Learning objectives
Parallel play
Teaching objectives
47. Methods for learning. studying. or solving problems.
Fetal Alcohol Effect (FAE)
Metacognitive skills
Seatwork
Descriptive Research
48. Takes coordinated - even steps - steps once on each step - alternating feet
Normal distribution
Moral dilemmas
Description of the way a child goes up & down steps at the end of early childhood
Americans with Disabilities Act
49. Livelihood Industry/Commerce = most lived in towns
Reflectivity
Generalization
New England Colonies
Assessment
50. Teacher's Role Deliver clear lectures; increase students' understanding with critical questions.
Advance organizers
Norm-referenced evaluations
Perennialism
Evaluation
Can you answer 50 questions in 15 minutes?
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