Weeks 7 & 8 - Young & middle adulthood Flashcards
The changes that occur in vision during middle adulthood make it necessary that most adults ____.
a. take the visual test each time they renew their licences
b. get reading glasses
c. never drive at night
d. are no longer able to read
b. get reading glasses
In regards to cognitive processing in mid-adulthood, automaticity makes problem-solving fast and efficient, and ____ do not have to sort consciously through every alternative but are very quick to problem-solve.
a. novices
b. beginners
c. experts
d. greenhorns
c. experts
Compared to childhood, self-esteem ____ during adolescence, then ____ during emerging adulthood.
a. plateaus; declines
b. rises; plateaus
c. declines; rises
d. rises; declines
c. declines; rises
Jacob has been pressured by his father to take over the family farm. Reluctantly, Jacob has agreed to this identity status because that is what is best for his parents. He has not explored his options, but has passively accepted the identity his father imposed on him. From James Marcia’s model, which of the following identity statuses can Jacob’s be categorised as?
a. Foreclosure
b. Moratorium
c. Achievement
d. Diffusion
a. Foreclosure
____ involves leaving behind the ways of one’s ethnic group and adopting the values and way of life of the majority culture, whereas ____ involves rejecting one’s culture of origin but also feeling rejected by the majority culture.
a. Marginality; assimilation
b. Assimilation; marginality
c. Separation; biculturalism
d. Biculturalism; separation
b. Assimilation; marginality
One of the most important physical changes of midlife occurs in the reproductive system. What is the term used to indicate a decline in fertility?
a. Cacography
b. Cochlea
c. Climatology
d. Climacteric
d. Climacteric
Anthropologists have found that in virtually all traditional cultures, the transition to adulthood is clearly and explicitly marked by ____.
a. leaving the parental household
b. completing secondary education
c. financial independence
d. marriage
d. marriage
What are the major health risks for emerging adults?
a. Cardiovascular disease and diabetes
b. Sexually transmitted infections
c. Hypertension
d. Car accidents and substance abuse
d. Car accidents and substance abuse
People like to find in others a match that reaffirms their own way of looking at the world. This is referred to as ____.
a. commonality
b. consensual validation
c. re-invention
d. recalibrating
b. consensual validation
Which of these measures of fluid intelligence decline steeply throughout adulthood?
a. Perceptual speed
b. Numeric ability
c. Spatial orientation
d. Vocabulary
a. Perceptual speed
According to the text, societies are willing to make large financial investments in tertiary education because an educated population ____.
a. is a key to economic growth in a world economy that is increasingly based on information, technology and services
b. is a key to military defence and cybersecurity
c. is a key to a democratic government and buffers a nation from radical thought
d. allows for a greater degree of homogeneity, unity and an appreciation of diversity
a. is a key to economic growth in a world economy that is increasingly based on information, technology and services
Two of the most notable aspects of post-formal thinking in emerging adulthood are ____.
a. animism and personal fables
b. egocentrism and reality testing
c. hypothetical and deductive reasoning
d. pragmatism and reflective judgment
d. pragmatism and reflective judgment
When asked about their goals, midlife adults tend to mention _______.
a. goals that are unreasonable
b. lofty goals
c. goals regarding fame
d. fulfilling roles as parents, spouses or friends
d. fulfilling roles as parents, spouses or friends
Osgood and others have found that there is a relationship between risky behaviour such as crime and dangerous driving and ____.
a. structured socialisation
b. older age
c. social investment
d. unstructured socialising
d. unstructured socialising
In the United States, the divorce risk peaks in young adulthood, 5–10 years after marriage, which suggests that ____.
a. the self-concepts of each partner become established and are incongruent
b. the financial strain has become too unbearable
c. the strains of caring for young children may make maintaining marital intimacy more problematic
d. the careers of each partner begin to interfere with the amount of time they have to spend with each other
c. the strains of caring for young children may make maintaining marital intimacy more problematic
Which of the following is an environmental cause for decreased auditory acuity during middle adulthood?
a. The eardrum and other structures in the inner ear become less flexible.
b. In the brain, the auditory cortex becomes less efficient in processing information from the inner ear.
c. The cilia in the inner ear begin to thin, making it more difficult to hear.
d. Having a history of working within a factory or a job that exposes a person to chronically loud noises.
d. Having a history of working within a factory or a job that exposes a person to chronically loud noises.
A number of studies of persons with outstanding accomplishments have found that their creative achievements rise during young adulthood and peak in the ____ then gradually decline.
a. 30s and early 40s
b. 40s and early 50s
c. 50s and early 60s
d. 60s and early 70s
a. 30s and early 40s
According to the text, when is marriage satisfaction generally at its lowest?
a. During the first year
b. During the second year
c. During child raising
d. When the last child has left
c. During child raising
Erikson used the term identity crisis to describe the process through which young people construct their identity, but Marcia and other current scholars prefer what term?
a. Confusion
b. Exploration
c. Emergency
d. Selection
b. Exploration
Kulika is a Cambodian Australian in his early 30s. For the last 5 years he has provided for and taken care of his mother, who was unemployed due to an economic recession. Being recently married, he is ready to begin his new life as a husband and father. It is quite clear that he is torn between his old life, which involved his mother, and his new life, which involves his wife. From Jennifer Tanner’s (2006) stance on emerging adulthood, which of the following best describes Kulika’s situation?
a. Re-centring
b. Re-negotiating
c. Re-evaluating
d. Re-assessing
a. Re-centring
Levinson found that during the transition to early adulthood, most young people __________.
a. constructed a dream that guided their decision making
b. became reflective about the meaning of life
c. became “keepers of meaning,” or guardians of their culture
d.focused on finding a life partner
a. constructed a dream that guided their decision making
When asked about their goals, midlife adults tend to mention _______.
a. goals that are unreasonable
b. lofty goals
c. goals regarding fame
d. fulfilling roles as parents, spouses or friends
d. fulfilling roles as parents, spouses or friends
Cate, age 49, acknowledges that she has both good and bad qualities, yet she feels positively about herself and life. Cate exhibits __________.
a. assimilation
b. self-acceptance
c. autonomy
d. the personal fable
b. self-acceptance
You overhear your brother, who is 32, talking to his friends who are about the same age as he is. They are speaking about how they feel about adulthood. The consensus is that they all felt like adults around what age?
a. When they were in their late teens
b. They still do not feel like adults
c. When they were in their early twenties
d. When they were in their late twenties
d. When they were in their late twenties
in the United States, nearly all 18- to 29-years olds (89%) agreed with the statement, ______________
a) ‘I have chosen a career path that brings satisfaction and stability to my life.’
b) ‘I am confident that eventually I will get to where I want to be in life.’
c ‘I am who I am, and that is never going to change.’
d ‘It’s a relief to finally be financially independent.’
b) ‘I am confident that eventually I will get to where I want to be in life.’
According to Arnett, four revolutionary changes took place in the ______________ that laid the foundation for the new life stage of emerging adulthood.
a) 1960s and 1970s
b) 1980s and 1990s
c) 1990s and 2000s
d) past decade
a) 1960s and 1970s
An emerging adult answered the question ‘What is the most important criterion for becoming an adult?’ with the response of ‘becoming capable of supporting my parents financially’. This person is most likely from ______________.
a) Germany
b) France
c) Australia
d) Japan
d) Japan
When asked about the most important criteria for becoming an adult, an emerging adult from a Western country is most likely to say ______________.
a) getting married
b) having a child
c) being financially independent
d) moving out of their parents’ house
c) being financially independent
Research has shown that in developing countries, ______________ are more likely to experience emerging adulthood.
a) young people in urban areas
b) females
c) young people from divorced families
d) young people who are true to their traditional heritage
a) young people in urban areas
Grip strength, cardiac output, maximum oxygen uptake and bone density all peak during what time period?
a) The early teen years
b) The 20s
c) The 30s
d) The 40s
b) The 20s
Which of the following statements about the health of emerging adults is most accurate?
a) most emerging adults experience an increased susceptibility to physical illness due to the increased stressors associated with this developmental period.
b) Exercise tends to decline from adolescence to emerging adulthood, but overall this is a healthy stage of life.
c) Emerging adults are at a high risk of getting cancer and heart disease.
d) The immune system is least effective during emerging adulthood.
b) Exercise tends to decline from adolescence to emerging adulthood, but overall this is a healthy stage of life.
According to research (Brown et al., 2002), university students are more than twice as likely as other adults to report ______________.
a) taking naps
b) insomnia
c) delayed sleep phase syndrome
d) restless leg syndrome
c) delayed sleep phase syndrome
Which of the following statements best summarises the current research on sleep patterns of emerging adults?
a) Preference for being a morning person versus a night person changes with age due to increased levels of cortisol.
b) Students who stayed up all night before exams thought they did worse than their peers who got a full night’s sleep.
c) The peak of eveningness comes at around ages 20–21.
d) Research showing delayed sleep phase syndrome and sleep debt is based mostly on emerging adults who work full time, rather than those who attend university, because their lives are so hectic.
c) The peak of eveningness comes at around ages 20–21.
Which of the following statements best summarises the current research on university students’ sleep patterns?
a) Although they cause a number of ailments, sleep problems are relatively rare among university students.
b) Preferences for morningness and eveningness change with age.
c) Although incurring a sleep debt can result in changes in mood, it does not affect cognitive functioning.
d) most emerging adults tend towards morningness after their first year of university.
b) Preferences for morningness and eveningness change with age.
1 Several interventions have been developed to reduce car injuries and fatalities for young drivers. Which of the following approaches has been shown to be most effective?
a) mandatory drivers’ education
b) graduated driver licensing programs
c) increasing the minimum driving age
d) Safe-driving pledges
b) graduated driver licensing programs
Across developed countries, the most serious threat to the lives and health of adolescents and emerging adults comes from ______________.
a) accidental overdoses
b) car driving
c) homicide
d) suicide
b) car driving
Researchers who study young drivers have found that ______________.
a) as a result of campaigns to increase the use of seat belts, young people are now as likely as older drivers to wear seat belts
b) rates of accidents and fatalities are low in the early months of driving, but increase steadily as new drivers gain confidence
c) young drivers are no more likely to drive at excessive speeds compared to their older counterparts, but are more likely to report driving under the influence of alcohol
d) young drivers are more likely than older drivers to believe their friends would approve of risky driving behaviour, such as speeding
d) young drivers are more likely than older drivers to believe their friends would approve of risky driving behaviour, such as speeding
Data from the US Monitoring the Future study has shown that substance use of all kinds peaks in the ______________.
a) early teens
b) mid-teens
c) 20s
d) 30s
c) 20s
The relationship between unstructured socialising and deviance applies to ______________.
a) both genders
b) substance abuse, but not other types of risk behaviour
c) only those in developed countries
d) only those from Caucasian backgrounds
a) both genders
Two of the most notable aspects of ______________ in emerging adulthood concern advances in pragmatism and reflective judgment.
a) concrete thought
b) post-formal thought
c) hypothetical and deductive reasoning
d) metacognition
b) post-formal thought
According to Labouvie-Vief, how would an adolescent who is in formal operations respond to the following scenario? ‘A man who was a heavy drinker, especially at parties, was warned by his wife that if he came home drunk one more time, she would leave him and take the children. Some time later he went to an office party and came home drunk. What will she do?’
a) ‘did he apologise and beg her not to leave? did she really mean it when she said she would leave him?’
b) ‘She said she would leave if he came home drunk once more, he came home drunk, therefore she will leave.’
c) ‘does she have some place to go?’
d) ‘does she really want to leave? it was most likely just a threat.’
b) ‘She said she would leave if he came home drunk once more, he came home drunk, therefore she will leave.’
Bianca, a third-year university student, has developed a type of thinking that would be characterised as relativism. This means that she ______________.
a) is able to perform mental operations on tangible problems, but lacks abstract thought
b) is able to understand the laws of relativity
c) is able to recognise the legitimacy of competing points of view
d) has metacognitive awareness
c) is able to recognise the legitimacy of competing points of view
According to Perry, adolescents tend to engage in ______________: an act is either right or wrong, with no in-between; a statement is either true or false, regardless of the nuances of the situation.
a) concrete thinking
b) relative hypothesis testing
c) dualistic thinking
d) rigid thinking
c) dualistic thinking
According to Perry, reflective judgment ______________.
a) refers to a type of dualistic thinking
b) is more common when the educational system promotes tolerance of diverse points of view
c) is less likely to develop in cultures that value pluralism
d) is more characteristic of first-year university students than those in their final year because first-year university students are more open to new ideas
b) is more common when the educational system promotes tolerance of diverse points of view
You are talking to a person from another country. She told you that when she was admitted to university in her native country, she studied in only one topic area, rather than taking courses in various disciplines as part of general education requirements. On which of the following continents is she most likely to have attended university?
a) United States
b) Europe
c) Canada
d) Japan
b) Europe
What is the main reason it takes much longer to complete an undergraduate degree now compared to a few decades ago?
a) Students are not academically prepared for university training and must take remedial coursework.
b) Financial concerns require that students also work, which increases the time to complete the degree.
c) Students lack focus and change their majors quite a few times, which adds time on to their academic programs.
d) more students transfer to different institutions that do not accept all of their previous credits.
b) Financial concerns require that students also work, which increases the time to complete the degree.
A student from _______________ would be most likely to describe their university experience as a relatively relaxed time to think and explore.
a) Canada
b) England
c) Japan
d) China
c) Japan
Which of the following is one of the largest factors explaining the high rates of unemployment among minority groups?
a) A resurgence of growth in manufacturing jobs
b) minority group members’ unwillingness to look for jobs
c) Shifting employment patterns in the economy
d) A strong allegiance to family that results in either not applying for the job or leaving it when it requires relocating
c) Shifting employment patterns in the economy
Which of the following individuals is most likely to be unemployed in emerging adulthood?
a) Simon, an indigenous Australian
b) liam, a European Australian
c) Jon, an Asian Australian
d) As a result of the struggling economy, rates of unemployment are equally high among all ethnic groups.
a) Simon, an indigenous Australian
What happens to self-esteem for most people during emerging adulthood?
a) it remains at about the same level as it did in adolescence.
b) it increases for females, but declines slightly for males.
c) it increases.
d) it declines gradually until rising again in middle adulthood.
c) it increases.
According to Erikson’s theory, ______________.
a) identity develops in emerging adulthood
b) failure to establish commitments in the key areas of identity results in role confusion
c) the search for identity is better described as exploration rather than crisis
d) adolescents can be classified into one of four identity statuses based on an interview measure
b) failure to establish commitments in the key areas of identity results in role confusion
Jacob, an only child, has been pressured by his father to take over the family car business. Reluctantly, Jacob has agreed to this because his father told him that he wanted to be able to pass on the fruits of his labour and Jacob doesn’t think he can earn a better salary doing anything else. He has not explored his options, but has passively accepted the identity his father has imposed on him. According to Marcia’s model, Jacob would be described as ______________.
a) identity achieved
b) diffused
c) foreclosed
d) in moratorium
c) foreclosed
Which of the following ethnic identity statuses is reflected in the idea of the ‘melting pot’?
a) Biculturalism
b) Separation
c) Assimilation
d) marginality
c) Assimilation
Shakira and Jerome are in an argument over child care. Rather than put their two children in day care, Jerome would like to be a stay-at-home father. Shakira thinks that because Jerome is a man, he will not be able to nurture and care for their two children as well as she would. Shakira is exhibiting concerns rooted in ______________.
a) gender stereotypes
b) a separated identity status
c) prejudice
d) egocentrism
a) gender stereotypes
Doug refers to himself as a ‘cafeteria Catholic’ because he believes in God and follows some of the practices of his religion, but ignores the rest. According to Smith and Snell (2010), Doug would be categorised as ______________.
a) an agnostic
b) a deist
c) a liberal believer
d) a conservative believer
c) a liberal believer
Research on the religious beliefs and practices of emerging adults has shown that ______________.
a) number of risk behaviours, as well as higher wellbeing
b) most are categorised as agnostic or atheist
c) White emerging adults are more likely than African Americans to cope with stress by relying on their religious beliefs
d) virtually al individuals in this developmental
period attend religious services at least once a month
a) number of risk behaviours, as well as higher wellbeing
Which of the following statements best describes political development during emerging adulthood?
a) Emerging adults tend to have higher political participation in comparison to adults.
b) This generation of emerging adults tends to have higher political participation compared to previous generations of young people.
c) Emerging adults tend to be sceptical of the motivations of politicians.
d) Emerging adults tend to be less likely than older adults to be involved in organisations devoted to particular issues, such as efforts against war and racism.
c) Emerging adults tend to be sceptical of the motivations of politicians.
Which of the following is TRUE regarding political involvement in emerging adulthood?
a) Emerging adults are especially likely to be involved in extreme political movements.
b) most emerging adults lack interest in improving the state of their communities because they are so self-focused at this time of life.
c) Emerging adults tend to be most interested in conventional politics rather than special topics.
d) in Australia and New Zealand, emerging adults’ involvement in political parties is relatively high.
a) Emerging adults are especially likely to be involved in extreme political movements.
in the United States, ______________ are least likely to be living at home with their parents in their early 20s.
a) Latino Americans
b) White Americans
c) African Americans
d) Asian Americans
b) White Americans
Which of the following people would most likely willingly and happily live with his or her parents until his or her late 20s or early 30s?
a) Brice, an emerging adult from the United States
b) Antonio, an emerging adult from Italy
c) Hector, an emerging adult from Canada
d) Matthias, an emerging adult from Germany
b) Antonio, an emerging adult from Italy
When it comes to friendship in emerging adulthood, ______________.
a) there is a steady increase in the time spent in leisure activities in the 20s as these friendships become increasingly important
b) much of their time together is spent in structured activities
c) intimacy continues to be an important component
d) both men and women reported that self-disclosure was what promoted the feeling of emotional closeness
c) intimacy continues to be an important component