Term
a person's age according to date of birth |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
a person’s level of maturation relative to his/her peer group |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
changes in physical growth over time found in general populations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
refers to a slower pace of physical development as compared to preceding or following periods; it’s slow, steady development for five years |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
hardening of bones with maturation |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
middle childhood has _____ vision than in early childhood; _____ visual aculty/convergence; _____ binocular control |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in middle childhood, children's hearing _____ significantly and they have _____ ear infections |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
in middle childhood, their _____ tubes mature |
|
Definition
Eustachian (tubes bend more so its safer) |
|
|
Term
in middle childhood, the children's general health _____; _____ illnesses; _____ deaths (lowest of lifespan); over _____ have no tooth decay; general facial changes in maturation |
|
Definition
improves; fewer; fewer; half |
|
|
Term
in middle childhood, children have a _____ rate of growth (physical maturation) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Do girls ever catch or pass boys in height and weight? |
|
Definition
Yes. Around age 11. But then boys take back over around age 14 |
|
|
Term
Both boys and girls decrease in growth of _____ tissue |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is sexual dimorphism? |
|
Definition
The differences in form and structure between boys and girls |
|
|
Term
Name some differences between boys and girls |
|
Definition
size, strength, metabolic rate, adipose tissue, center of gravity (remember nose demonstration) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
How fast your oxygen is used to burn calories |
|
|
Term
How do motor skills differ in boys and girls? |
|
Definition
Strength, speed, and fine motor skills increase for boys more than girls. |
|
|
Term
Who is more flexible, boys or girls? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who retains thicker layers of fat throughout development, boys or girls? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
_____ children mature faster than _____ children |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Economically advantaged children of different ethnic groups show _____ differences |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
_____ children grow slower/smaller |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
_____ children grow slightly more rapidly than _____ children |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Children of today are less _____, have more _____, and are less _____. |
|
Definition
active; body fat; physically fit |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Onset of menstruation: overall:_____ whites:_____ African Americans:_____ |
|
Definition
12.5 (overall) 12.8 (whites) 12.2 (A.A.) |
|
|
Term
3/4 of African American girls and 1/3 of white girls develop breast and pubic hair by age _____ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Asian American girls develop _____ and _____ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is acute and what is chronic? |
|
Definition
Acute = severe and Chronic = long lasting |
|
|
Term
What are the three leading chronic illnesses in middle childhood? |
|
Definition
Asthma, Allergies, and Heart Conditions |
|
|
Term
What is the fastest increasing chronic illness in middle childhood? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What are the 4 leading causes of death in middle childhood? |
|
Definition
1. Unintentional injury (1,634) 2. Malignant neoplasm's (722) 3. Congenital anomalies (273) 4. Homicide (238) (U.S. 2006, all races, both sexes) |
|
|
Term
What is malignant neoplasm's? |
|
Definition
Cancer (it is the 2nd leading cause of death in middle childhood) |
|
|
Term
In 2006, what were the three leading causes of unintentional deaths of adolescence (total deaths: 1634) |
|
Definition
1. Motor vehicle accidents (51.9%) 2. Drowning (11.9%) 3. Fire/burn (9.7%) |
|
|
Term
What does it mean/what are the qualifications for someone to be considered overweight? Obese? |
|
Definition
If an individual is 10-20% above the suggested body weight, that person is overweight; 20% or over are considered obese. |
|
|
Term
What are 7 causes of obesity? |
|
Definition
1.Heredity 2. Early growth pattern (early maturers are more likely to be obese) 3. Family eating habits (make favorite meal, go out to eat when you get good grades) 4. Responsiveness to food cues (smelling it and desire to eat) 5. Physical activity 6. Television viewing 7. Traumatic events (comfort food) |
|
|
Term
Explain how heredity is a very common cause of obesity? |
|
Definition
Neither of your parents are obese: less than 10% of becoming obese. One of your parents is obese: 40% chance of becoming obese. Both your parents or your grandparents are obese: 80% chance of becoming obese |
|
|
Term
Is obesity more common among lower or higher economic groups? |
|
Definition
Lower (can't afford to eat healthy/pay for gym memberships etc.) |
|
|
Term
What are 4 associated problems with obesity? |
|
Definition
1. Fewer friends 2. Poorer body image 3. Lower self-esteem (after 5th grade, more self consciousness - mothers are the #1 criticizers) 4. Increased risk of heart problems (high fat content/distribution; high blood pressure; high cholesterol etc.) |
|
|
Term
_____ girls and _____ boys have been sexually abused/traumatized by the age of 18 |
|
Definition
One out of every four girls; one out of every eight boys |
|
|
Term
Name and describe (give examples of) two types of sexual trauma |
|
Definition
1. Covert (non touching): witnessing sexual acts, being subjected to sexual comments or innuendo 2. Overt: experiencing inappropriate kissing, touching, fondling, simulated intercourse or penetration |
|
|
Term
Extreme forms of sexual trauma include _____ and _____ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
When girls are molested _____% are molested by males and _____% are molested by females |
|
Definition
94% by males and 6% by females |
|
|
Term
When boys are molested, _____% are molested by males and _____% are molested by females |
|
Definition
80% by males and 20% by females |
|
|
Term
Most commonly, sexual abusers are _____ and _____ of them have some type of substance abuse. |
|
Definition
adolescent-middle aged men; 1/3 of them |
|
|
Term
Sexual abusers within families are (in order): _____, _____, grandfathers, _____, _____, _____ |
|
Definition
fathers; stepfathers; cousins; uncles; brothers |
|
|
Term
Within families, _____ are much more likely to be molested |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Name three common types of abusers and their motivations for abusing them. |
|
Definition
1. Pedophiles (attracted to children sexually and receive gratification by their actions/seducers - usually offers something like drugs, "being a member of an elite club") 2. Sociopaths (motivation is more an issue of power than sexual desire; target weakest: who is not very confident) 3. Profiteers (interested in child pornography or child prostitution) |
|
|
Term
What is cognitive development? |
|
Definition
Growth of those mental processes by which one gains knowledge (not necessarily what you got but how you came up with it) |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A concept arrived at by comparing one person's score with the average scores of others within specific age groups. |
|
|
Term
|
Definition
A general term for a person's abilities in a wide range of tasks (it may also include the ability to profit from experience, to learn new information, and to adjust to new situations) |
|
|
Term
What is achievement motivation? |
|
Definition
Behavior that enhances competence or judgments of competence; a desire to strive for some high by reasonable standard of excellence in a skill or area of knowledge |
|
|
Term
What are two types of achievement motivations? |
|
Definition
Learning Orientation and Performance Orientation |
|
|
Term
A type of achievement motivation; intrinsic motivation, coming from within the learner and the task; learner is trying to satisfy self (do well because it gives you a good feeling and happy with yourself) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A type of achievement motivation; extrinsic motivation, coming from the evaluations of other individuals; learner is trying to satisfy others |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Working space for new and/or current info - has limited storage and a limited life span |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Stores committed information for extended time - has virtually no limits of space or duration |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The simplest form of memory, which involves noticing whether a new experience is similar to a previous one (has some memory but maybe not specifics) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The type of memory that involves remember something (detail) in the absence of perceptual support |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
The number of items an individual can remember at one time |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Name 4 common strategies for remembering something |
|
Definition
1. Rehearsal 2. Clustering 3. Elaboration 4. Systematic Searching |
|
|
Term
A common strategy for remembering; involves either mental or vocal repetition or repetition of movement |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A common strategy for remembering; grouping ideas, objects, or words into groups to help in remembering them |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A common strategy for remembering; finding shared meaning or a common referent for two or more things to be remembered |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A common strategy for remembering; scanning the memory for the whole domain in which something might be found |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Name 5 styles of thinking/use of reasoning |
|
Definition
1. Convergent learning 2. Divergent learning 3. Field dependent thinking 4. Field independent thinking 5. Mnemonic device |
|
|
Term
A style of thinking; focused, deductive reasoning that leads to one specific solution to a problem |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A style of thinking; production of a wide variety of ideas, inductive reasoning |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A style of learning; tend to see things in relatively large, connected patterns (global) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A style of learning; tend to see things more as discrete, independent/autonomous parts (analytical) |
|
Definition
Field independent thinking |
|
|
Term
A style of thinking; using a specific cue in order to stimulate memory recall (ex: HOMES) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Forgetting refers to the inability to _____, _____, or _____ info that was stored or is still stored in long-term memory (in order to forget information, you have to remember it and it must have been in long term memory) |
|
Definition
retrieve, recall, or recognize info |
|
|
Term
A theory that says memories fade away and disappear across time if they are not used |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A mental process that automatically hides emotionally threatening or anxiety producing information in the unconscious (ex: abuse) |
|
Definition
Repression (repressed - to push or hold down) |
|
|
Term
The retrieval of some particular memory is blocked or prevented by other related memories (ex: the bones; equations b/c they are similar) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Information cannot be retrieved because it was a poorly encoded or stored with few associations or reminders |
|
Definition
Inadequate Retrieval Cues |
|
|
Term
Says that there are other kinds of smarts besides book smarts. Students can reveal their smarts in multiple ways. |
|
Definition
Gardiner's Multiple Intelligences (Part one and two) (in text book pg 290's) |
|
|
Term
Name some characteristics of concrete operational thought (7) |
|
Definition
Classification, seriation, de-centering, reciprocity, class inclusion, reversibility, and conservation |
|
|
Term
Sorting objects into related divisions |
|
Definition
Classification (like clustering) |
|
|
Term
Ordering a group of objects in succession by size |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ability to consider more than one characteristic of an event/object at one time (can be more descriptive-looking at more than one aspect) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ability to understand corresponding complementary inverse relationships (if A=B then B=A) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Knowledge that a basic class (such as flowers) is always greater than any of its subordinate classes (such as roses or lilacs) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ability to affect change and then go back to the original condition by a reversal of the change |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Understanding that irrelevant changes in the physical appearance of objects do not affect their quantity (amount), mass (density), weight (heaviness), or volume (space occupied) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
How an individual feels about him/herself; an ongoing evaluation of self-worth (affective) |
|
Definition
Self-esteem (can be changed very quickly by what's going on in the environment) |
|
|
Term
The manner a person thinks of him/herself and believes others view him/her (cognitive) |
|
Definition
Self-concept (established over a period of time; hard to change; not as bothered by a bad hair day or a bad grade) |
|
|
Term
The way an individual sees him/herself |
|
Definition
Self-image (mental picture of what he/she looks like) |
|
|
Term
What an individual wants to be or become; the zenith that he/she desires |
|
Definition
Ideal-self ("Ok, I think I look like this but I really want to look like this." Usually compared to other people) |
|
|
Term
A sense of being; a sense of oneself as an entity (uniqueness) |
|
Definition
Identity (a sense of who you are as compared to other people) |
|
|
Term
Acquiring of behaviors that conform to social expectations |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Process used to acquire social skills |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Refers to an awareness of others as selves that, like ourselves, are also capable of feeling intentions, motives, etc. (a self preservation; me me me) (ability to understand what others are feeling) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Ability to recognize and share the feelings of others (even if you don't know exactly; ex: losing a mother) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Skills that result in successful social functioning with peers (ex: knowing you should not poke people you like) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Who said that Industry versus Inferiority coincides with Freud's Period of Latency (Says that if people are industrious (and have a sense of industry - being busy with working, school, hobbies) then they will be successful and happy) |
|
Definition
Erikson's Psychosocial Development |
|
|
Term
What are the two highest sources of stress for middle-childhood children? |
|
Definition
Parent dies and parents divorce |
|
|
Term
Name some types of families |
|
Definition
nuclear, blended, step-parent, single parent, grandparent, extended (living together), formal adoptive, informal adoptive, same-sex, foster, communal/religious grouping, fictive kinfolk (uncle, neighbor, friends in church), surrogate (someone who is appointed to raise the child) |
|
|
Term
Sibling de-identification: _____ to _____ relationships and _____ have the most problems |
|
Definition
Brother to brother and closer in age relationships |
|
|
Term
A process through which children develop identities different from their siblings |
|
Definition
Sibling de-identification |
|
|
Term
Sibling rivalry/jealousy: when children compete with one another for _____, _____, or _____ of parents/significant others |
|
Definition
attention, affection, or praise |
|
|
Term
Destructive form of sibling rivalry (this one is not normal!) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Tell the demandingness level and responsiveness level of each parenting style (there are 4) |
|
Definition
1. Authoritarian: high demanding, low responsiveness 2. Permissive: low demanding, high responsiveness 3. Neglecting/Rejecting: low demanding, low responsiveness 4. Authoritative: high demanding, high responsiveness |
|
|
Term
What do we mean by demandingness level? Responsiveness level? (when talking about parenting styles) |
|
Definition
Demandingness level: how much control a parent has over a child Responsiveness level: how much love a parent exhibits towards their child |
|
|
Term
In this parenting style, parents try to control their children's conduct by using rules and regulations; obedience is greatly valued; use threat of force to correct behavior; their word is law (decisions cannot be questioned) |
|
Definition
Authoritarian (does not mean they are not loving, they just don't show their love as much) |
|
|
Term
In this parenting style, parents make few demands on their children; nonpunishing; do not shape their childrens behavior but children regulate their own activities, little emphasis on rules but use reason (rather than power) to control children when necessary |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In this parenting style, parents are not engaged with their children; do not monitor children's activities; provide little or no structure |
|
Definition
Neglect/Uninvolved (these children are perhaps the words off) |
|
|
Term
In this parenting style, parents encourage verbal give-and-take and explain the reason behind family policies; limits set but child's individuality taken into consideration; demanding but warm; parents still have final authority |
|
Definition
Authoritative (most desired model) |
|
|
Term
Children under this parenting style score the poorest on measures of adjustment, psychosocial competence, and show psychological and behavior dysfunction |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Children under this parenting style are the most self-reliant, self-controlled, explorative, and contented and exhibit higher levels of self-esteem and better impulse control |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Parents often _____ parenting styles |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
1. Incongruous Action 2. Incongruous Labeling 3. Conceptual Incongruity 4. Multiple Meaning and Adult-Like Humor |
|
|
Term
A type of humor in which one is engaging in behavior that is inconsistent with reality (examples: using a doll as a phone or pretending to eat a child's toes) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A type of humor in which one simply gives the wrong names/titles to known objects, events, people, etc. (examples: referring to Winnie the Pooh as Big Bird or calling a dog a cat) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A type of humor in which distortion of a reality (that children understand is a distortion) is heavily influenced by development of language and cognition (ex: "Look mom that man only has one leg!", responding to puppets, enjoying bathroom humor) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
A type of humor that includes riddles (a notion of how things are expected to work or be; ex: what has eyes that cannot see, a tongue that cannot taste...a shoe), language ambiguity jokes (double meanings; ex: how do you get a hanky to dance? Put a little boogie in it) , and absurdity riddles (a silly question with a silly answer; ex: why won't cannibals eat clowns? because they taste funny.) |
|
Definition
Multiple Meaning and Adult-Like Humor |
|
|
Term
Measures potential at a specific point in time (give and example) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Measures performance (or what can be accomplished) at a specific point in time; it is what you are able to do and how you can perform in different situations, etc. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the type of humor that little kids can understand first and the best |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
What is the Flynn Effect? |
|
Definition
Says that IQ scores are on the rise (people are scoring better). Why? Better schools, better health care, smaller families |
|
|
Term
An IQ score of _____ and higher means that the taker is gifted. If they score _____ and below, they are considered mentally retarded (mild/moderate/severe/profound) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
EXPECTATIONS among educators (IQ tests "gifted" or "mentally retarded") |
|
|
Term
Adaptation to life is now measured/considered in interpreting _____ |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Cultural bias: _____/_____/_____ populations have lower IQ scores on average which can cause disproportionate number to be labeled mentally retarded |
|
Definition
minority/low-SES/immigrant populations |
|
|
Term
What are two problems with IQ testing and labeling? |
|
Definition
1. Intelligence potential can change over lifespan (influenced by experiential, environmental, and genetic factors, and are only a static snapshot of potential in a specific moment and place in time) 2. There is not intelligence but INTELLIGENCES |
|
|
Term
STERNBERG identifies 3 types of intelligences: |
|
Definition
Academic, creative, practical |
|
|
Term
GOLEMAN identifies the importance of _____ (a certain type of intelligence) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
GARDINER identifies 8 kinds of intelligences: |
|
Definition
linguistic, logical-mathematical, musical, kinesthetic, spatial, intrapersonal, interpersonal, and naturalistic |
|
|
Term
GARDINER identified 8 types of intelligences, but which ones did he say were the most important? |
|
Definition
None! He believed they have equal value. Except, Western-influenced schools and governments value some more than others... |
|
|
Term
Looking at developmental patterns in individuals and what causes them to make achievement or progresses (studies nature, origin, and consequences of individual patterns of adaptation and maladaptation over time) |
|
Definition
Developmental Psychopathology |
|
|
Term
What are 4 universal findings of developmental psychopathologists concerning all people (not just students identified with special needs)? |
|
Definition
1. Abnormal is normal 2. Disability changes year by year 3. Adulthood may be better or worse 4. Diagnosis depends on social context (i.e. what is accepted where and by when) |
|
|
Term
When referring to children with special needs, language matters. What do we mean by this? |
|
Definition
We mean they are human first, disability second: "Children with autism" not "autistic kids" |
|
|
Term
There are 4 ranges of special needs: |
|
Definition
1. Physical (Down's syndrome) 2. Social (anxiety, conduct disorders) 3. Emotional 4. Co-morbid disordered (i.e. multiple disorders at once) |
|
|
Term
What are the three types of disorders? |
|
Definition
1. ADD and ADHD (brain issues) (5% of US children have it) 2. Learning Disabilities 3. Autistic Spectrum Disorders |
|
|