Chapter 5 Flashcards
Dr. Matsuko’s major research interest is the long-term effects of child-rearing practices on the psychological adjustment of offspring. It is most likely that Dr. Matsuko is a _____ psychologist.
- social
- cognitive
- developmental
- school
developmental
_______________: a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information.
schema
____________________: in Piaget’s theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities.
sensorimotor stage
______________: the awareness that things continue to exist even when not perceived
object permanence
________________: in Piaget’s theory, the preoperational child’s difficulty taking another’s point of view.
egocentrism
________________: in Piaget’s theory, the stage (from about 2 to about 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic.
preoperational stage
________________: people’s ideas about their own and others’ mental states—about their feelings, perceptions, and thoughts, and the behaviors these might predict.
theory of mind
_____________________: in Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive development (from about 6 or 7 to 11 years of age) during which children gain the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events.
concrete operational stage
________________: in Piaget’s theory, the stage of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts.
formal operational stage
According to Jean Piaget, during this stage of cognitive development, object permanence and stranger anxiety are the developmental phenomena that occur.
- formal operational
- sensorimotor
- preoperational
- concrete operational
sensorimotor
Beginning at around _____ months, children may greet strangers by crying and reaching for their familiar caregivers.
8
You just found out that your sister conceived about seven days ago. You rush to find a book on pregnancy so that you can learn more about it. What will the book say is happening around the seventh day of pregnancy?
- The fetus has tripled its size.
- The cells of the fetus are beginning to differentiate.
- The cells of the zygote are beginning to differentiate.
- The embryo has doubled its size.
The cells of the zygote are beginning to differentiate.
Carolyn Rovee-Collier’s research on infants revealed specific, but not generalized, _____ learning.
motor
The importance of schemas was most clearly highlighted by _____ and his cognitive development theory.
Paiget
A researcher secretly puts a dab of rouge on a child’s nose before placing him in front of a mirror. The child points to the rouge on the mirror’s reflected image. From this example we can conclude that the child lacks self-_____.
awareness
Jake is a 3-month-old baby who is no longer as interested in a puppet head as he once was. What has happened here?
- He has an inborn preference for the new stimulus.
- He has developed a visual preference
- He has categorized the new stimuli.
- He has become habituated.
He has become habituated.
Tommy was at the park with his father and excitedly pointed to the squirrel and exclaimed, “Kitty, kitty.” His father pointed out that this was a squirrel, not a kitty. This best illustrates the process of:
- accommodation.
- conservation.
- assimilation.
- habituation.
assimilation.
Ferris is the son of a teenage mother. She could not handle taking care of him and put him up for adoption when he was 4 weeks old. Ferris was moved from one foster family to another. He was never adopted. It is most likely that Ferris will:
- have a great drive to succeed, but avoid attachments.
- become an abusive parent with aggressive tendencies.
- become a normal adult with average intelligence.
- have anxiety and lower intelligence.
have anxiety and lower intelligence.
A school psychologist works with a teenage student who has lower intelligence, is hyperactive, and has behavior problems. What other problems might the psychologist suspect?
- drinking
- sexual orientation
- drug use
- smoking
drinking
Ten-year old Marie is sad. She is crying. Her older brother Paul looks at her and then continues watching TV. Paul may be showing signs of _____.
autism
A game of peek-a-boo with his dad excites Finn during the first six months of his life because Finn actually thinks his dad has disappeared. This is because Finn lacks _____.
object permanence
Noah is a 3-month-old baby who is staring intently at the new person who just came in to visit his parents. What has happened here?
- He has remembered the original stimulus.
- He has an inborn preference for the new stimulus.
- He has categorized the new stimulus.
- He has become habituated.
He has an inborn preference for the new stimulus.
Every time 2-year old Rosa goes near the stove, her mother stops her and says, “No, hot!” Rosa’s mother is:
- helping her learn object permanence.
- providing her with a scaffold.
- teaching her to think abstractly.
- showing her how to conserve.
- providing her with a scaffold.
Hussein is concerned because he cannot remember events before he was about 4 years old. What is the most likely cause for this infantile amnesia?
- His hippocampus was not developed enough.
- He suffered a traumatic event that erased his memory.
- His earliest memories were erased due to maturation.
- The pruning process did not allow him to retain his memories.
- His hippocampus was not developed enough.
Mary’s inability to toilet train her 10-month-old infant is most likely due to:
- use of punishment instead of rewards.
- the pruning process.
- maturation.
- infantile amnesia.
- maturation.
Imagine that 10-year-old children were shown photographs of 3-year-old preschoolers and asked to spot former classmates. What were the probable results?
- They remember the children with whom they were still friendly.
- They recognized one out of three former classmates.
- They were accurate 90 percent of the time.
- They forgot all of their classmates.
They forgot all of their classmates.
_____ are the body structures that make sexual reproduction possible.
- Mature sex characteristics
- Pubescent sex characteristics
- Secondary sex characteristics
- Primary sex characteristics
Primary sex characteristics
During adolescence, according to Jean Piaget, most individuals achieve the ____ operations stage of intellectual development.
formal
Another word for a sense of self is _____.
identity
_____ sex characteristics are the body structures that make sexual reproduction possible.
Primary
Jarrud thinks he should obey his teachers only if they are carefully watching him. Lawrence Kohlberg would suggest that Jarrud demonstrates a(n) _____ morality.
- postconventional
- unconventional
- conventional
- preconventional
preconventional
Wilbur is 68 years old and is sitting in his recliner reflecting on the mistakes he made in his life as well as the dreams that went unfulfilled. According to Erik Erikson, Wilbur is in the stage of development called _____ vs. despair.
integrity
_____ is to a girl’s sexual development as _____ is to a boy’s sexual development.
- Adolescence; menarche
- Menarche; spermarche
- Secondary sex characteristic; primary sex characteristic
- Testosterone; progesterone
Menarche; spermarche