Psychology 106 - Developmental Psychology » Fall 2020 » Final Exam

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Question #1
What did Piaget call the cognitive structures for processing, organizing, and interpreting information?
A.   assimilation
B.   active processing
C.   schemes
D.   accommodation
Question #2
____ is when new information is altered to fit an existing scheme, whereas ____ is when a scheme is changed to adapt to new information.
A.   Accommodation; assimilation
B.   Retrieval; encoding
C.   Encoding; retrieval
D.   Assimilation; accommodation
Question #3
Cognitive development in this stage involves changing from reflex behavior to intentional action and the attainment of object permanence.
A.   pre-operations
B.   formal operations
C.   concrete operations
D.   sensorimotor
Question #4
Your niece loves to play peek-a-boo. The way that you like to play is to put your blanket over your face and after a few seconds abruptly remove the blanket. Each time that you remove the blanket, your niece acts like she is very surprised to see you. According to Piaget, what concept does your niece lack?
A.   object continuance
B.   object discovery
C.   object permanence
D.   object memory
Question #5
Which of the following are components of the microsystem from Bronfenbrenner's ecological theory?
A.   time and historical change
B.   cultural beliefs and values, and economic and governmental systems
C.   parents, siblings, peers and friends, and teachers
D.   schools, religious institutions, and the media
Question #6
What is Bronfenbrenner's term for the broad system of cultural beliefs and values and the economic and governmental systems that are built on those beliefs and values?
A.   mesosystem
B.   macrosystem
C.   exosystem
D.   chronosystem
Question #7
Many theories of development do not address culture. Why does Bronfenbrenner's theory think that culture is so important? He recognizes that ______.
A.   nearly everyone lives in a very similar culture
B.   cultural beliefs are the basis for many other conditions of children's development
C.   culture should be factored out to determine what really influences development
D.   culture is damaging and can be devastating to a young child's development
Question #8
Piaget's stages views cognitive growth as ____, whereas the information-processing approach views cognitive changes as ____.
A.   internal; external
B.   external; internal
C.   discontinuous; continuous
D.   continuous; discontinuous
Question #9
____ is the difference between skills or tasks that children can accomplish alone and those they are capable of performing if guided by an adult or a more competent peer.
A.   Zone of proximal development
B.   Deferred imitation
C.   Self efficacy
D.   Animism
Question #10
What concept would accurately describe teaching your daughter how to dress herself? You first dressed her, indicating what you were doing and why, then you had her help as you dressed her, and lastly allowed her to dress herself as you watched and helped if needed?
A.   framing
B.   zone of proximal development
C.   guided instruction
D.   scaffolding
Question #11
____ is an emotional bond that promotes the protection and survival of children during the years they are most vulnerable.
A.   A secure base
B.   Home base
C.   Imprinting
D.   Attachment
Question #12
According to Bowlby, what loss would be catastrophic for children's development?
A.   the mother
B.   the siblings
C.   the primary attachment figure
D.   the father
Question #13
In this type of attachment, toddlers show little or no interaction with the mother when she is present and no response to the mother's departure or return.
A.   disorganized–disoriented attachment
B.   insecure–avoidant attachment
C.   insecure–resistant attachment
D.   secure attachment
Question #14
According to attachment theory, what type of attachment leads to children who are able to love and trust others?
A.   secure attachment
B.   insecure–avoidant attachment
C.   insecure–resistant attachment
D.   disorganized–disoriented attachment
Question #15
_____ is the inability to distinguish between your own perspective and another person's perspective.
A.   Egocentrism
B.   Intuitive thought
C.   Conservation
D.   Reversibility
Question #16
You are visiting your sister and she has a 4-year old daughter. You have not been around young children very much except for your niece and you are fascinated with her. You notice that while she plays, she acts like her dolls are real. What type of thinking is your niece demonstrating?
A.   egocentrism
B.   humanitarianism
C.   animism
D.   socialism
Question #17
Coach Paige has clear guidelines and rules for his players. He wants them to try their hardest to give 100% all the time. But, Coach Paige also cares for his players and tends to understand each player's individual needs. Which of the following best describes Coach Paige's coaching style?
A.   authoritative
B.   permissive
C.   disengaged
D.   authoritarian
Question #18
A drill sergeant who expects his or her subordinates to follow commands without questioning their authority is more similar to which of the following parenting styles?
A.   permissive
B.   authoritarian
C.   disengaged
D.   authoritative
Question #19
What type of parent requires little of their children, rarely bothers to correct their behavior, and shows very little love or concern for them?
A.   authoritative
B.   authoritarian
C.   permissive
D.   disengaged
Question #20
During this stage, Piaget proposes, children become capable of using mental operations, which allow them to organize and manipulate information mentally instead of relying on physical and sensory associations.
A.   concrete operations
B.   preoperations
C.   sensorimotor
D.   formal operations
Question #21
According to Piaget, the advances of concrete operations are evident in new abilities for performing tasks of ____.
A.   conservation, classification, and seriation
B.   hypothetical, deductive reasoning, and hypothesis testing
C.   the development of motor skills and hand-eye coordination
D.   egocentrism, animism, and language development
Question #22
Your sister-in-law is amazed at her 9-year-old son. She can remember when her son was not able to sit and listen to a story for very long and now he is able to listen intently and remember the story in very good detail. What two advances occur during middle childhood in information processing abilities that assist with his newly developed abilities?
A.   motivation and diligence
B.   decentering and critical processing
C.   visual scanning and search routines
D.   attention and memory
Question #23
In Gardner's view, only two types of intelligence are measured by traditional intelligence tests: ____.
A.   spatial and naturalistic
B.   linguistic and logical–mathematical
C.   interpersonal and intrapersonal
D.   musical and bodily–kinesthetic
Question #24
Great inventors such as Leonardo da Vinci, Benjamin Franklin, and Alexander Graham Bell all possess which of Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence?
A.   analytical intelligence
B.   logical–mathematical intelligence
C.   creative intelligence
D.   practical intelligence
Question #25
Which of the following makeup Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence?
A.   analytical, creative, and practical intelligence
B.   intrapersonal, interpersonal, and naturalistic
C.   linguistic, musical, and bodily–kinesthetic
D.   sensorimotor, preoperational, and concrete operations
Question #26
____ is the ability to think scientifically and apply the rigor of the scientific method to cognitive tasks.
A.   Hypothetical-deductive reasoning
B.   Creative reasoning
C.   Formal reasoning
D.   Concrete-formal reasoning
Question #27
Children who use hypothetical-deductive reasoning to solve Piaget's pendulum problem and can provide a rationale for their solution are closer to ____ stage of cognitive development.
A.   sensorimotor
B.   formal operations
C.   concrete operations
D.   preoperational
Question #28
You are studying the summary for chapter 8 of your developmental textbook while you are listening to music. What skill are you utilizing?
A.   divided attention
B.   selective attention
C.   focused attention
D.   ignoring
Question #29
According to the text, what component of the memory system is limited such that the more information that is contained in the system, the less effectively new information can be added?
A.   episodic memory
B.   short-term memory
C.   long-term memory
D.   iconic memory
Question #30
What is the capacity of long-term memory?
A.   seven plus or minus two items
B.   essentially unlimited
C.   dependent upon the ability of the person to process relevant information
D.   limited neurologically to 4 billion engrams
Question #31
Which of the following best describes selective attention?
A.   the ability to focus on relevant information from two or more independent sources
B.   the ability to focus on relevant information while screening out information that is irrelevant
C.   the ability to filter out or ignore all environmental stimuli and to focus on one's own thoughts
D.   organizing information into coherent patterns
Question #32
Which of the following best describes divided attention?
A.   the ability to focus on relevant information from two or more independent sources
B.   organizing information into coherent patterns
C.   the ability to filter out or ignore all environmental stimuli and to focus on one's own thoughts
D.   the ability to focus on relevant information while screening out information that is irrelevant
Question #33
Your 14-year-old nephew just walked in the door from school and told you that he is not going to go back to school. You ask why and he tells you that everyone laughed at him because he dropped his tray full of food as he sitting down during lunch. Although you tried to help, he was inconsolable. Why? Your nephew was experiencing what David Elkind regarded as ____.
A.   the personal fable
B.   the adolescent growth spurt
C.   the imaginary audience
D.   egocentrism
Question #34
Your younger brother's best friend is a huge risk-taker. Even though he is 15 years old, he has already exhibited some very dangerous behaviors. One of his favorite activities is to run across a highway in the early evening when there is quite a bit of traffic. What concept helps to explain this risky behavior?
A.   egocentrism
B.   the adolescent growth spurt
C.   the personal fable
D.   the imaginary audience
Question #35
Which of the following best describes Kohlberg's postconventional level of moral reasoning?
A.   Rules should be obeyed to avoid punishment from those in authority.
B.   What is right is whatever agrees with the rules established by tradition and by authorities.
C.   Moral reasoning is based on perceptions of the likelihood of external rewards and punishments.
D.   Moral reasoning is based on the individual's own independent judgments rather than on what others view as wrong or right.
Question #36
Kohlberg's claims of a universal theory of moral development have been challenged, most notably by Richard Shweder, who believes that it is impossible to understand moral development unless you understand the individual's ____.
A.   intellectual abilities
B.   personality factors
C.   cultural worldview
D.   social context
Question #37
In Erikson's theory each stage of life has a central crisis. What is the central crisis for adolescents?
A.   industry versus inferiority
B.   identity versus identity confusion
C.   intimacy versus isolation
D.   Generativity versus stagnation
Question #38
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 categorized as?
A.   moratorium
B.   achievement
C.   diffusion
D.   foreclosure
Question #39
In Erik Erikson's theory of the lifespan, what is the central emotional and psychosocial issue of young adulthood?
A.   ego-integrity vs. despair
B.   intimacy vs. isolation
C.   generativity vs. stagnation
D.   identity vs. role confusion
Question #40
From the triangular theory of love, ____ involves physical attraction and sexual desire, whereas ____ is a feeling of closeness and emotional attachment.
A.   intimacy; passion
B.   commitment; intimacy
C.   passion; intimacy
D.   passion; commitment
Question #41
Your grandparents have been married for 50 years. They go everywhere together. You have caught them kissing when they thought they were alone and they hold hands quite a bit in public. They rarely make a move without asking the other his or her opinion. You hope to have that type of relationship some day. According to Sternberg, what type of love do you think they are experiencing?
A.   consummate love
B.   companionate love
C.   romantic love
D.   fatuous love
Question #42
What type of intelligence involves information processing abilities such as short-term memory, ability to discern relations between visual stimuli, and speed of synthesizing new information?
A.   verbal intelligence
B.   fluid intelligence
C.   crystallized intelligence
D.   performance intelligence
Question #43
What type of intelligence represents the accumulation of a person's culturally based knowledge, language, and understanding of social convention?
A.   verbal intelligence
B.   performance intelligence
C.   fluid intelligence
D.   crystallized intelligence
Question #44
From an Eriksonian perspective, the desire to "live on" after we have died and to help those younger than ourselves so that the effects of our time on earth will be evident when we are gone best describes the psychosocial crisis of ____.
A.   trust vs. mistrust
B.   integrity vs. despair
C.   generativity vs. stagnation.
D.   identity vs. confusion.
Question #45
____ is memory for how to perform tasks or activities involving motor skills, such as playing a musical instrument, typing on a keyboard, or sewing a button.
A.   Episodic memory
B.   Sensory memory
C.   Procedural memory
D.   Long-term memory
Question #46
Your grandmother describes countless recollections of her life such as her 16th birthday, the first time she drove a car, and the birth of her children. Your grandmother is providing you with ____.
A.   unconscious memories
B.   procedural memories
C.   working memories
D.   autobiographical memories
Question #47
Your grandfather explains to you how to use his new multifunctional phone. You ask him where he learned to use his new phone but he cannot recall. Trying his best, he can only tell you how it works. It is clear that your grandfather has limited ____.
A.   working memory
B.   source memory
C.   episodic memory
D.   procedural memory
Question #48
According to Erikson, ego ___ involves looking back on one's life and accepting the outcome of it; whereas, ego ____ entails regrets and bitterness about the course of one's life, and a conclusion that it has not gone well and now cannot be changed.
A.   despair; integrity
B.   mistrust; inferiority
C.   integrity; despair
D.   inferiority; mistrust
Question #49
According to Kübler-Ross, in what stage do people who are facing imminent death refuse to believe that they are terminally ill?
A.   denial
B.   anger
C.   bargaining
D.   depression
Question #50
According to Kübler-Ross, in what stage would a person who is facing imminent death find a feeling of peace as resistance to death is abandoned, or no feeling at all, but only a sense of disengagement and a desire to be with only a few people most valued?
A.   bargaining
B.   depression
C.   anger
D.   acceptance

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