Human Development and Learning

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Psychology Quiz on Human Development and Learning, created by Nuria Nácher Soler on 27/12/2019.
Nuria Nácher Soler
Quiz by Nuria Nácher Soler, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
Claudia Simpson
Created by Claudia Simpson about 8 years ago
Nuria Nácher Soler
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
What theorist designed the Reciprocal Determinism/Causation model?
Answer
  • B. F. Skinner
  • Albert Bandura
  • Jean Piaget
  • Lev Vygotsky

Question 2

Question
What are the factors that make up Bandura's Reciprocal Determinism/Causation model?
Answer
  • Self, Behaviour, and Environment
  • Friends, Family, and Self
  • Attention, Retention, Reproduction, and Motivation
  • Environment, Age, and Relationships

Question 3

Question
Check the four key developmental issues in theories of human development.
Answer
  • Activity vs Passivity
  • Environment vs Self
  • Universality vs Context-Specificity
  • Nature vs Nurture
  • Cognition vs Environment
  • Identity vs Societal Constructs
  • Continuity vs Discontinuity

Question 4

Question
The Schema Theory was developed by Lev Vygotsky.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 5

Question
What metaphorical object can be used to help remember and explain how Piaget's Schema Theory works?
Answer
  • An empty box
  • A car engine
  • A hot air balloon
  • A filing cabinet

Question 6

Question
In order from infancy to maturity, what are Piaget's four stages of cognitive development? Stage 1: [blank_start]Sensorimotor[blank_end] (birth - 2 years old) Stage 2: [blank_start]Pre-Operational[blank_end] (2 - 7 years old) Stage 3: [blank_start]Concrete Operational[blank_end] (7 - 11 years old) Stage 4: [blank_start]Formal Operational[blank_end] (adolescence to adulthood)
Answer
  • Sensorimotor
  • Pre-Operational
  • Concrete Operational
  • Formal Operational

Question 7

Question
Sir Frederic Bartlett continued Piaget's studies into the Schema Theory through an experiment that introduced people of Western culture to a Native American folk tale. The tale was different to many stories that the audience had heard before. In this story a man's face contorts at the result of an encounter with supernatural beings. The people undertaking the experiment were then asked at different intervals in time, ranging from immediately after reading it to a year later, to draw a diagram of what the face looked like (being mindful of the context and language used in the story). Bartlett had found that:
Answer
  • The people's diagrams gradually changed over time to reflect the aspects of the story that made the most sense to them.
  • All of the above.
  • Only using the main points of the story made it more memorable to the reader, as finer details of the story were forgotten over time.
  • People have Schemas that represent their knowledge about the world.
  • Through Schema, a persons prior knowledge will influence their new knowledge.

Question 8

Question
In Freud's Psychoanalytic Theory there are three elements that make up a person's cognition. Match each of these with the descriptions provided. [blank_start]The Id[blank_end]: The instinctive, selfish and impulsive thought which is the first stage of thought in an infant. It is linked to an individual's basic needs. [blank_start]The Ego[blank_end]: The rational part of expressing instincts. This stage builds upon the Id and gives an individual some agency in their actions and fulfilment of needs. [blank_start]The Superego[blank_end]: Internalised moral standards.
Answer
  • The Id
  • The Superego
  • The Ego
  • The Ego
  • The Superego
  • The Id
  • The Superego
  • The Id
  • The Ego

Question 9

Question
Who's work did Erik Erikson build upon in his own research and theories?
Answer
  • Bandura
  • Skinner
  • Freud
  • Vygotsky

Question 10

Question
Organise each of Erikson's Psychosocial stages to match each age range. Birth - 1 year old: [blank_start]Trust vs Mistrust[blank_end] 1 - 3 years old: [blank_start]Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt[blank_end] 3 - 6 years old: [blank_start]Initiative vs Guilt[blank_end] 6 - 12 years old: [blank_start]Industry vs Inferiority[blank_end] 12 - 20 years old: [blank_start]Identity vs Role Confusion[blank_end] 20 - 40 years old: [blank_start]Intimacy vs Isolation[blank_end] 40 - 65 years old: [blank_start]Generativity vs Stagnation[blank_end] 65 years and older: [blank_start]Integrity vs Despair[blank_end]
Answer
  • Trust vs Mistrust
  • Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt
  • Initiative vs Guilt
  • Industry vs Inferiority
  • Identity vs Role Confusion
  • Intimacy vs Isolation
  • Generativity vs Stagnation
  • Integrity vs Despair

Question 11

Question
Freud and Erikson describe human development through their Psychoanalytic and Psychosocial theories, exploring especially the details of how this development originates.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 12

Question
Which of these theorists studied Conditioning?
Answer
  • Skinner, Watson and Pavlov
  • Skinner, Vygotsky and Bruner
  • Piaget and Vygotsky
  • Pavlov, Freud and Bandura

Question 13

Question
Which of the following clearly illustrates Piaget's concept of assimilation?
Answer
  • Five-year-old Harvey draws on the chalkboard with a large white crayon instead of with chalk.
  • Eight-year-old Rowena develops the necessary eye-hand coordination for writing letters in cursive.
  • Eleven-year-old Mary Lou moves to a different school and purchases new clothes to fit the local fashions.
  • A language arts teacher asks 13-year-old Reynold to think about the possible adjectives other than 'awesome' that he might use in his writing to describe interesting and enjoyable activities.

Question 14

Question
Which one of the following best illustrates Piaget's concept of accommodation?
Answer
  • After Amanda solves a set of 10 addition problems carelessly and incorrectly, she is given 10 more problems to solve.
  • Betsy writes down her definition of a mollusk - something she learned word for word from her textbook.
  • Carol copies what her teacher writes on the blackboard.
  • Donna revises her understanding of what clouds are like when she studies them in science.

Question 15

Question
Which one of the following teachers is definitely keeping in mind Piaget's idea that assimilation and accommodation are both necessary for learning and cognitive development to occur?
Answer
  • Mr. Baretta shows students how a new topic is similar to the things they already know, but also different in certain ways.
  • Mr. Ames presents brand new topics every day, expecting the continual novelty to keep students interested and motivated.
  • Ms. Chang makes sure that students have learned one topic very, very well before moving on to another
  • Ms. Doherty uses a lot of drill and practice exercises, encouraging students to work faster every time.

Question 16

Question
From Piaget's perspective, children are:
Answer
  • Eager to interact with and make sense of their world
  • Most likely to learn things that bring about desirable consequences
  • Most likely to learn when parents and teachers entice them to do so
  • More likely to develop cognitively in a formal school setting than at home

Question 17

Question
Which statement best describes the idea that cognitive development involves a process of construction?
Answer
  • Children must know simple things very well before they can begin to understand other, more complex things
  • Children must learn ideas in a concrete form before learning them as abstractions
  • Children pull together pieces of information about a topic to create their own understandings
  • Children's thought processes become increasingly complex and sophisticated as they grow older

Question 18

Question
In Piaget's theory, a schema can best be described as:
Answer
  • An organised group of similar thoughts or actions
  • A set of motor skills that preschoolers develop
  • A lifestyle or family pattern
  • A mental picture of oneself

Question 19

Question
Louis receives a new soccer ball and begins to dribble it in the same way he dribbles his basketball. His dribbling of the new ball reflects Piaget's concept of:
Answer
  • Concrete operations
  • Accommodation
  • Equilibrium
  • Assimilation

Question 20

Question
Imagine that you are a third grade teacher. If you were to make predictions based on Piaget's stages of cognitive development, you would expect most or all of your students to exhibit _________ thinking.
Answer
  • Sensorimotor
  • Preoperational
  • formal operational
  • concrete operational

Question 21

Question
Carl can correctly answer a question such as, 'If all flegs are blats, and if all blats are dulms, are all flegs also dulms?'. From Piaget's perspective, Carl is most likely in the ___________ stage of cognitive development.
Answer
  • sensorimotor
  • preoperational
  • formal operational
  • concrete operational

Question 22

Question
Central to Vygotsky's theory of cognitive development is the idea that children make sense of their world:
Answer
  • Through the mental processes of assimilation and accommodation
  • By repeatedly encountering both pleasant and unpleasant events in their daily lives
  • Through their independent explorations of their physical and social environments
  • By interacting with more experienced people who mediate their understandings

Question 23

Question
Vygotsky proposed that thought and language are:
Answer
  • Closely connected at all stages of life
  • Largely independent at all stages of life
  • Closely connected early in life and become increasingly independent with age
  • Largely independent until the primary school years and closely connected thereafter

Question 24

Question
Vygotsky's concept of the Zone of Proximal Development refers to:
Answer
  • Children's ability to estimate how much they know
  • The range of tasks children can perform by themselves
  • The range of tasks children can accomplish only with support
  • The degree of maturation necessary to accomplish complex physical tasks

Question 25

Question
Which statement most accurately describes Lev Vygotsky's view of how cognitive development occurs?
Answer
  • Children's cognitive growth is best judged on the basis of their actual development level, not on the basis of their level of potential development.
  • Cognitive development progresses through four distinct stages; each stage is characterised by increasingly more complex thought and language.
  • Children develop by working on challenging tasks with the assistance of more competent individuals.
  • Language and thought, although closely intertwined in the first few years of life, become increasingly distinct entities over time.

Question 26

Question
If you were to criticise Vygotsky's theory of cognitive development in a way that contemporary theorists sometimes do, what would you be most likely to say?
Answer
  • 'It's a bit vague in its explanations of how development occurs.'
  • 'It ignores the effects that formal education has on cognitive development.'
  • 'It disregards the important roles that peers play in children's development.'
  • 'It places heavy emphasis on drill and practice as factors promoting development.'

Question 27

Question
Which of the following pairs of concepts reflects the general idea that challenge is important for cognitive development?
Answer
  • Disequilibrium and ZPD
  • Self-talk and inner speach
  • Conservation and internalisation
  • Working memory and central conceptual structure

Question 28

Question
If we consider Erikson's theory of psychosocial development, then which issue would we expect high school students to be most concerned about?
Answer
  • Wanting to form a close and intimate relationship with another human being
  • Trying to decide who they really are and what role they will play in adult society
  • Needing to gain the recognition of parents and teachers through their academic activities and achievements
  • Finding a way to wiggle out of doing difficult tasks

Question 29

Question
Which one best illustrates Erikson's stage of 'identity versus role confusion'?
Answer
  • Arnold is always wishing things were different than they are
  • Beth can't keep a steady boyfriend
  • Craig is trying to decide what career he wants to persue
  • Dawn underestimates her ability to learn mathematics

Question 30

Question
Which one best describes attachment in the early years?
Answer
  • An enduring emotional bond between an infant and a caregiver
  • A mother's innate tendency to protect her young offspring
  • A predisposition by infants to behave in certain ways and not in others
  • An affectionate relationship between marital partners, thought by ethological theorists to be important for young children's emotional well-being

Question 31

Question
Which scenario is most consistent with the 'Strange Situation'?
Answer
  • A mother and her young child enter a playroom, where the child encounters a variety of new toys and other objects. Some of the objects (e.g. a jack-in-the-box, a picture of a ferocious dinosaur) are intentionally scary and anxiety-arousing.
  • A mother and her young child come to a preschool class for the first time. The child's social behaviours are observed and recorded, with a particular focus on how often the child initiates interactions with unfamiliar peers.
  • A mother and her young child are in a playroom. Soon after, an unknown adult joins them, and then the Mum leaves the room for a few minutes. The child's behaviours are observed through a one-way mirror.
  • A baby lies in a specially designed infant seat where they see a variety of visual displays on a screen. By sucking on a plastic nipple, the infant can control which displays appear most frequently.

Question 32

Question
While Mother fills out an application form at a new preschool, 18-month-old Colin happily explores a few toys nearby. When Mum momentarily steps out to use the washroom, Colin becomes upset, but he quickly calms down and smiles upon her return. Colin's behaviour is most consistent with a(n):
Answer
  • Secure attachement
  • Insecure-resistant attachment
  • Insecure-avoidant attachment
  • Disorganised and disorientated attachment

Question 33

Question
Children are likely to form secure attachments to teachers when:
Answer
  • They don't have secure attachments with their parents.
  • Student and teacher are both emotionally invested in the relationship.
  • They are approaching adolescence and need additional adult guidance.
  • The teacher is female.

Question 34

Question
Which one best illustrates self-efficacy rather than self-concept or self-esteem?
Answer
  • Anne is pretty sure she can win a spot on the school's dance squad if she practices her routine every day until the try-outs
  • Brandi thinks of herself as being more intelligent than most of her classmates
  • Connor has little faith in his academic abilities, and so he does whatever he can to avoid doing assigned classroom tasks
  • Darvin is convinced that no one likes him, even though most people do

Question 35

Question
As children grow older, many of their neurons begin to transmit messages more rapidly than they did previously, thanks to:
Answer
  • Synaptic pruning
  • Synaptogenesis
  • Myelination
  • A rapid reduction in glial cells

Question 36

Question
Three-month-old Amy can hold her head up in the arms of an adult, but she doesn't have much control of what her legs do. Which one best describes Amy's progression in muscular control?
Answer
  • It shows a definite delay in fine motor skills
  • It shows a cephalocaudal trend, which is typical
  • It shows a proximodistal trend, which is not typical
  • It suggests that Amy will probably be a good student but a poor athlete

Question 37

Question
The 'false belief task' is used to assess:
Answer
  • The difference between a sensorimotor and a pre-operational thinker
  • The understanding that people may hold incorrect personal beliefs that influence their behaviours
  • A person's level of religiousity
  • How a person would reason about a moral

Question 38

Question
The emphasis in Erikson's stage theory is on:
Answer
  • Behaviours and their consequences
  • The formation of a personal identity
  • The development of moral values
  • The process of acculturation in school settings

Question 39

Question
The development of young people's self-concept evolves by means of:
Answer
  • Gauging the verbal reactions of significant others
  • Contrasting themselves with their peers
  • Constant self-evaluation in many different situations
  • Differentiating between their skills and those of their peers

Question 40

Question
Mr Lynch always uses his 'mean' face to stop undesirable behaviour in his first-period class. However, even though he looks at Steve with this mean face each time Steve talks out of turn, Steve is talking out of turn more and more frequently. For Steve, the mean face apparently a:
Answer
  • Cue
  • Positive reinforcer
  • Model
  • Negative reinforcer

Question 41

Question
Given current research findings, Piaget's theories seem to have ________ infant's cognitive abilities and ________ adolescent's cognitive abilities.
Answer
  • underestimated; overestimated
  • overestimated; underestimated
  • accurately assessed; overestimated
  • overestimated; accurately assessed

Question 42

Question
Compared to the behaviouristic orientation, the cognitive perspective recognises people as what type of learners?
Answer
  • Egocentric
  • Passive
  • Social
  • Active

Question 43

Question
Mr. Mac uses a token economy system in his history class. Whenever Jimmy breaks a rule, he loses a 'chip'. If the infraction is major, Jimmy loses several chips. This is an example of:
Answer
  • Cueing
  • Negative punishment
  • Positive punishment
  • Satiation

Question 44

Question
Which of the following best summarises the effects of parent-child attachments on later development?
Answer
  • Insecurely attached infants have lifelong emotional problems, even if the attachment style improves after infancy
  • A secure relationship with one's father cannot compensate for an insecure mother-child attachment relationship
  • A secure attachment may become insecure as a result of major stresses in the family, such as divorce or a mother returning to work
  • An infant who is securely attached to its mother at age one appears to be invulnerable to later socio-emotional difficulties

Question 45

Question
In which type of attachment does a child use a caregiver as a base, become somewhat upset when separated from the caregiver, and is fairly outgoing with a stranger if the caregiver is present?
Answer
  • Secure
  • Disorganised-disoriented
  • Resistant
  • Avoidant

Question 46

Question
Which of the following definitions best describes 'development' in the context of human development and learning? Hint: it's in the Week 1 lecture.
Answer
  • A process in which an individual grows in stages, both emotionally and cognitively, from infancy to adolescence.
  • The continuous physical changes that an individual experiences throughout their lifetime, and how these physical can affect a person's mental and social wellbeing.
  • Systematic changes and continuities in an individual occurring between conception and death.

Question 47

Question
What are the three domains of development?
Answer
  • Physical
  • Behavioural
  • Psychosocial
  • Environmental
  • Societal
  • Cognitive
  • Social-Emotional
  • Nature/Nurture

Question 48

Question
Match the Key Developmental Stages with the age groups that define them: Conception to birth: [blank_start]Prenatal Period[blank_end] 6 to 12 years old (until onset of puberty): [blank_start]Middle Childhood[blank_end] 65 years and older: [blank_start]Late Adulthood[blank_end] Approximately 12 to 18/20 years old: [blank_start]Adolescence[blank_end] 40 to 65 years old: [blank_start]Middle Adulthood[blank_end] The first 2 years of life (where the first month is neonatal): [blank_start]Infancy[blank_end] 2 to 5/6 years old: [blank_start]Early Childhood[blank_end] 20 to 40 years old: [blank_start]Early Adulthood[blank_end]
Answer
  • Prenatal Period
  • Middle Childhood
  • Late Adulthood
  • Adolescence
  • Middle Adulthood
  • Infancy
  • Early Childhood
  • Early Adulthood

Question 49

Question
Match each of the following examples of Skinner's Operant Conditioning with their correct label of either reinforcement or punishment. [blank_start]Positive Reinforcement[blank_end]: A child cleans their room, receives a hug from their parent for doing so, and as a result continues to clean their room in the future. [blank_start]Negative Punishment[blank_end]: Bob returns his library book after the date that it was due, as a result he must now pay a $5 late fee to cover the time that the library has not had access the book. [blank_start]Positive Punishment[blank_end]: A child throws a book across a classroom and as a result the teacher tells the student that they are to stay inside on detention after school hours. [blank_start]Negative Reinforcement[blank_end]: Stacey's mum asks her if she has cleaned her room, to which Stacey replies that she has. However, Stacey knows that despite telling her mum one thing, she has in actuality not tidied her bedroom. She has lied to her mum to avoid getting a lecture about being messy and has got away with this behaviour, therefore being more likely to lie to her mother in the future.
Answer
  • Positive Reinforcement
  • Negative Punishment
  • Positive Punishment
  • Negative Reinforcement

Question 50

Question
Match each of Bronfenbrenner's physical and social contexts of the Bioecological Model of Development with their descriptions. [blank_start]Microsystem[blank_end]: Immediate environment (face to face interactions) [blank_start]Mesosystem[blank_end]: The linkage/connection between 2 or more microsystems [blank_start]Exosystem[blank_end]: Linkages between social systems that have an indirect influence (e.g. children can be affected by how their parent's day at work went) [blank_start]Macrosystem[blank_end]: A larger cultural context (beliefs, cultures, and societal values) [blank_start]Chronosystem[blank_end]: Changes that occur within a lifetime - a continual flux of changes (e.g. war, economic crisis, etc.)
Answer
  • Microsystem
  • Mesosystem
  • Exosystem
  • Macrosystem
  • Chronosystem

Question 51

Question
Pavlov used the neutral stimulus of a tuning fork during his classical conditioning experiments. The subject of these experiments, a dog, learned to salivate at the sound of the tuning fork with the anticipation of receiving a piece of meat that usually comes along with the sound. What has the tuning fork now become?
Answer
  • an unconditioned stimulus
  • a conditioned stimulus
  • an unconditioned response
  • a conditioned response

Question 52

Question
Place the following conditions for effective modelling in the appropriate order: 1. [blank_start]Attention[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]Retention[blank_end] 3. [blank_start]Reproduction[blank_end] 4. [blank_start]Motivation[blank_end]
Answer
  • Attention
  • Retention
  • Reproduction
  • Motivation

Question 53

Question
How is information transmitted in the nervous system?
Answer
  • Neurotransmitters jump across synapses from the dendrites of one neuron to the axon of another
  • Neurotransmitters race trough myelin to and from the brain
  • Neurotransmitters jump across synapses from the axon of one neuron to the dendrites of another
  • Nerve cells connect to each other and send messages to and from the brain

Question 54

Question
Match the growth principle to its definition. [blank_start]Cephalocaudal.[blank_end] Growth occurs n a head to tail direction. [blank_start]Proximodistal.[blank_end] Growth occurs from the centre outwards. [blank_start]Othogenetic.[blank_end] Growth starts out as globally / undifferentiated, then moves towards differentiated
Answer
  • Cephalocaudal.
  • Proximodistal.
  • Othogenetic.

Question 55

Question
Persistence of primitive reflexes throughout development can suggest problems.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 56

Question
Name the five signs that indicate the presence of a theory of mind.
Answer
  • Imitation
  • Self-efficacy
  • Understanding intention
  • Sensorimotor
  • Joint attention
  • Pretend play
  • Abstract thinking
  • Emotional understanding

Question 57

Question
Match the experiment with the theory it supports. [blank_start]The Sally-Anne test[blank_end] Theory of Mind [blank_start]The 'Strange Situation[blank_end] Attachment Theory [blank_start]Rats in a box[blank_end] Operant Conditioning [blank_start]Tuning fork / Dog / Meat[blank_end] Classical Conditioning
Answer
  • The Sally-Anne test
  • The 'Strange Situation
  • Rats in a box
  • Tuning fork / Dog / Meat

Question 58

Question
Place in order Maslow's hierarchy of needs (low to high). 1. [blank_start]Physiological[blank_end] 2. [blank_start]Safety[blank_end] 3. [blank_start]Love[blank_end] 4. [blank_start]Self-esteem[blank_end] 5. [blank_start]Self actualisation[blank_end]
Answer
  • Physiological
  • Safety
  • Love
  • Self-esteem
  • Self actualisation

Question 59

Question
Situated Learning is based on which topic?
Answer
  • Behaviourism
  • Constructivism
  • Social development

Question 60

Question
Name the theorist who created each specific Professional Learning Community model. Joint enterprise; shared repertoire; mutual engagement: [blank_start]Wengar[blank_end] Ensuring that students learn; a culture of collaboration; a focus on results: [blank_start]DuFour[blank_end] Supporting and shared leadership; shared values and vision; collective learning and application; shared personal practise; supporting conditions: [blank_start]Hord[blank_end]
Answer
  • Wengar
  • Hord
  • DuFour
  • DuFour
  • Wengar
  • Hord
  • Hord
  • DuFour
  • Wengar

Question 61

Question
The concept of 'Childhood' was not developed until the 17th century, before which children were dressed and treated as adults in many cultures, with the same duties and responsibilities. This concept of childhood recognised the innocence of children and the distinct difference in behaviour between themselves and adults.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 62

Question
The developmental stage of 'Adolescence' was acknowledged by theorists in the 17th century and was described as the period of an individuals life between the ages of roughly 12 years old (pre-pubescent) and 25 years old.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 63

Question
'Emerging Adulthood' is one of the more recently defined developmental stages being used by theorists, and is described as the time from 18 to 25 years when a person is exploring their identity, relationships, financial stability, independence, psychological needs, and so on.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 64

Question
'Middle Age' is a developmental stage that emerged in the 20th century. It describes a time in adulthood when individuals are generally financially stable, have meaningful relationships and responsibilities, and are beginning to see their children move out of home or gain more independence of their own.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 65

Question
What are the three goals of studying development?
Answer
  • Optimisation
  • Research
  • Description
  • Creating new theories
  • Awareness
  • Explanaition
  • Hypotheses
  • Publication
  • Experimentation

Question 66

Question
Theories of development and developmental stages are tested in the hopes that they not only describe how we change as humans over time, but also how these stages can be optimised to encourage positive growth. The three goals of studying development are description, explanation and optimisation. Match each of the following definitions with their corresponding goal: [blank_start]Explanation[blank_end] - The developmental stages theorised are either typical to development or are individually different dependant on who they are applied to. This goal discusses theory universality and WHY developmental stages either do or do not apply to real life. [blank_start]Description[blank_end] - This goal recognises specific developmental stages and how they are applied to individuals. [blank_start]Optimisation[blank_end] - This goal recognises the stages of development that people undertake, and hence aims to devise ways that these stages may be used to encourage the best possible development in people.
Answer
  • Explanation
  • Description
  • Optimisation
  • Description
  • Optimisation
  • Explanation
  • Optimisation
  • Explanation
  • Description

Question 67

Question
Are each of the following definitions correct or incorrect? The definition of 'Nature': The influences of the environment on development, emphasis on learning, and the idea that experiences cause change. The definition of 'Nurture': Development is influenced by heredity, the process of maturation and biological factors.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 68

Question
Who is considered to be the founder of developmental studies?
Answer
  • Albert Bandura
  • G. Stanley Hall
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • Sigmund Freud

Question 69

Question
Check all of the following that belong to the Key Assumptions of Development in regards to having a modern day life-span perspective. Development:
Answer
  • is a life long process
  • is multidirectional
  • involves both gain and loss
  • is characterised by lifelong plasticity
  • is shaped by historical-cultural contexts
  • is multiply influenced
  • must be studied by multiple disciplines

Question 70

Question
THE SCIENTIFIC METHOD is a process of generating ideas and testing them. It states that preliminary observations should provide ideas for a theory, and that these theories should in turn generate hypotheses and predictions. In order to test the functionality of a theory, there are three elements that a good theory should be:
Answer
  • Original, falsifiable, published
  • Thoroughly researched, falsifiable, applicable to real life
  • Internally consistent, falsifiable, supported by data
  • Internally consistent, related to existing theories, thoroughly researched

Question 71

Question
3 critical features of a true experiment is that there is a random assignment of participants, a manipulation of the independent variable, and that the experiment is controlled.
Answer
  • True
  • False

Question 72

Question
Match each of the following methods of experimentation with their descriptions. [blank_start]The Correlation Method[blank_end]: Aims to discover whether two variables are related in a systematic fashion. For example, the correlation between a child's viewing of violent TV shows and their level of aggressive behaviour 15 years later as an adult. [blank_start]Cross-Sectional Design[blank_end]: Explores the performance of and provides a comparison for different cohorts or age groups who complete the same experiment. E.g. a 5 year old and a 15 year old complete the same puzzle in a test to compare the differences in their cognitive abilities. [blank_start]Longitudinal Design[blank_end]: One cohort repeat a study over time, for example a memory test is administered to Year 12 students every 2 months to measure changes over time in the same age group. These studies tend to be time consuming, as participants must be contacted at each interval of the testing. [blank_start]Sequential Design[blank_end]: A combination of the cross sectional and longitudinal design, where a wide range of participants from different age ranges/cohorts undertake a study on multiple occasions. These tests are generally time consuming and can be expensive, but are proven to be the most effective at collecting accurate or useful data.
Answer
  • The Correlation Method
  • Cross-Sectional Design
  • Longitudinal Design
  • Sequential Design

Question 73

Question
What are the ethical responsibilities that are expected to be carried out during experimentation?
Answer
  • All of the following answers.
  • Informed consent of the participant.
  • A debriefing of what will happen during the experiment.
  • Protection from physical, psychological, emotional and any other kind of harm.
  • Confidentiality/anonymity.
  • Participants must be over the age of 16.

Question 74

Question
Match each of the four key developmental issues with their appropriate descriptions. [blank_start]Continuity and discontinuity[blank_end] - To what extent do humans change gradually and in quantitative ways - or progress through qualitatively different stages and change dramatically into different beings? [blank_start]Nature and nurture[blank_end] - To what extent is development primarily the product of genes, biology and maturation - or of experience, learning and social influences? [blank_start]Activity and passivity[blank_end] - How much do humans do to actively shape their own environments and contribute to their own development - or are they more passive and shaped by forces beyond their control? [blank_start]Universality and context specificity[blank_end] - In what ways is development similar from person to person and from culture to culture, and in what ways do pathways of development vary considerably depending on the social context?
Answer
  • Continuity and discontinuity
  • Nature and nurture
  • Activity and passivity
  • Universality and context specificity

Question 75

Question
Match each of the theorists with their theories. Psychoanalytic Theory: Psychosexual Stages - [blank_start]Freud[blank_end] Psychosocial Stages - [blank_start]Erikson[blank_end] Behaviourism: Classical Conditioning (dog and tuning for experiment) - [blank_start]Pavlov[blank_end] Classical Conditioning (baby and rat experiment) - [blank_start]Watson[blank_end] Operant Conditioning (rat in box with button for food) - [blank_start]Skinner[blank_end] Social Cognitive Theory and the Reciprocal Causation/Determinism Model - [blank_start]Bandura[blank_end] Humanistic Theories: Hierarchy of Needs - [blank_start]Maslow[blank_end] Humanistic Theory of Personality - [blank_start]Rogers[blank_end] Attachment Theory (monkey experiments) - [blank_start]Harlow[blank_end] Constructivist Theories: Sociocultural Theory - [blank_start]Vygotsky[blank_end] Cognitive Developmental Theory - [blank_start]Piaget[blank_end] Spiral Education - [blank_start]Bruner[blank_end] Systems Theories: Bioecological Model of Development - [blank_start]Bronfenbrenner[blank_end] Epigenetic Psychobiological Systems Perspective - [blank_start]Gottlieb[blank_end]
Answer
  • Freud
  • Erikson
  • Pavlov
  • Watson
  • Skinner
  • Bandura
  • Maslow
  • Rogers
  • Harlow
  • Vygotsky
  • Piaget
  • Bruner
  • Bronfenbrenner
  • Gottlieb

Question 76

Question
Match each of the theorists with their theories. Psychoanalytic Theory: Psychosexual Stages - [blank_start]Freud[blank_end] Psychosocial Stages - [blank_start]Erikson[blank_end] Behaviourism: Classical Conditioning (dog and tuning for experiment) - [blank_start]Pavlov[blank_end] Classical Conditioning (baby and rat experiment) - [blank_start]Watson[blank_end] Operant Conditioning (rat in box with button for food) - [blank_start]Skinner[blank_end] Social Cognitive Theory and the Reciprocal Causation/Determinism Model - [blank_start]Bandura[blank_end] Humanistic Theories: Hierarchy of Needs - [blank_start]Maslow[blank_end] Humanistic Theory of Personality - [blank_start]Rogers[blank_end] Attachment Theory (monkey experiments) - [blank_start]Harlow[blank_end] Constructivist Theories: Sociocultural Theory - [blank_start]Vygotsky[blank_end] Cognitive Developmental Theory - [blank_start]Piaget[blank_end] Spiral Education - [blank_start]Bruner[blank_end] Systems Theories: Bioecological Model of Development - [blank_start]Bronfenbrenner[blank_end] Epigenetic Psychobiological Systems Perspective - [blank_start]Gottlieb[blank_end] Schema Theory (aside from Piaget, story about American Indians) - [blank_start]Bartlett[blank_end]
Answer
  • Freud
  • Erikson
  • Pavlov
  • Watson
  • Skinner
  • Bandura
  • Maslow
  • Rogers
  • Harlow
  • Vygotsky
  • Piaget
  • Bruner
  • Bronfenbrenner
  • Gottlieb
  • Bartlett
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