WGU EdPsych D307 Review Leave the first rating Students also studied Terms in this set (64) Save Brain Story Certification Teacher 38 terms cheruiyot_kiplangat Preview PPR Practice Questions Teacher 133 terms RESSYSHII01Preview PSYC290 Reach Your Learning Goal...Teacher 157 terms Samuel_Chris1 Preview
NSG 36
Teacher Alic What are some motor skills developed in infancy? Dozens of motor skills What motor skills do 2nd year infants develop?Increased coordination What can an 18th month old do?Stack blocks and use fingers to eat crackers What motor skills develop in early childhood?Fine motor skills What physical activities do children do in early childhood?Run, hop, tumble, play, jigsaw puzzles What happens to weight gain in middle childhood? Slow, steady weight gain What motor skills are refined in middle childhood? Fine motor skills What improves in middle childhood?Speed and coordination What happens to girls and boys during adolescence? Girls begin puberty earlier than boys, physical growth slows for both, but boys continue to grow What is the sensorimotor stage?Learning through movement and senses What are some examples of learning in the sensorimotor stage?Sucking, grabbing, looking, listening, crawling What is the preoperational stage?Play and pretend, symbolic thinking, language develops, focuses on self, focuses on one aspect at a time What is the concrete operational stage?Concrete, hands-on experiences, mental reversal, conservation
What are some examples of learning in the concrete operational stage?Balloons inflate and deflate, tall skinny glass and short fat glass hold same amount of liquid What is the formal operations stage?Higher order of thinking, abstract and critical thinking, hypothesize, predict, metaphors, systematic problem-solving What is the preconventional stage of moral development?All about me, obedience and punishment, instrumental orientation, no concept of rules, just follows them What is the conventional stage of moral development? All about rules, want approval from others (Good boy, Nice girl), law-and-order, respect authority or policy, rules are set and unchangeable What is the postconventional stage of moral development?All about others, social contract for greater good, dignity, equality, respect, universal-ethical principle, rules and laws are flexible depending on situation, own ethical principles What is the preconventional stage of Gilligan's moral development?I love myself, selfishness What are the stages of Erickson's Psychosocial Development?Trust v. Mistrust, Autonomy v Shame, Initiative v Guilt, Industry v Inferiority, Identity v Role Confusion What is the Language Acquisition Device (LAD)? Innate, instinctive, biological ability to learn language What is Universal Grammar?All languages have structures, patterns, and rules (grammar) What is Skinner's Language Development theory? Children learn language based on reinforcement What is Vygotsky's Language Development theory? Language develops through social interaction What are the stages of Language Development? Babbling, Holophrastic, Two-word, Telegraphic What are the language development milestones for 1-2 years?2-3 word sentences, has word for everything What are the language development milestones for 3-4 years?4-5 word sentences, answer simple questions What are the language development milestones for 4-5 years?Use complex sentences, understand jokes, sarcasm, and idioms What is the conventional stage of morality according to Gilligan?Needs of others come first What is the postconventional stage of morality according to Gilligan?I love you AND myself, I can take care of myself and others What is the responsibility for others?Needs of others come first
What is the exploration stage of Erickson's Psychosocial Development?Trying things on own, asking a lot of questions What is the intellectual curiosity stage of Erickson's Psychosocial Development?School performance, need positive reinforcement, avoid undue competition What is the develop sense of self stage of Erickson's Psychosocial Development?Influenced by others, peers more important than parents or teachers What is Chomsky's theory of Language Development? People are born with innate, instinctive, biological ability to learn language, all languages have structures, patterns, and rules (grammar) What is the Operant conditioning theory of Language Development?Children learn language based on reinforcement, associate words with meaning, learn language with imitating, prompting, shaping, correct utterances are positively reinforced What is the Social Cultural Approach theory of Language Development?Language develops through social interaction, culture plays a part in language development What are the words for order to sequence?Sequencing words What is the ability to follow longer multi-step instructions?Executive function What is overall intelligence?General intelligence Who proposed the concept of Spearman's single factor of intelligence?Charles Spearman What is the single factor of intelligence called? G-Factor Who proposed the concept of Primary Mental Abilities? L.L. Thurstone How many factors of mental abilities did Thurstone propose?
- factors
Who proposed the concept of 3 levels of intelligence? Robert Sternberg What are the 3 levels of intelligence proposed by Sternberg?Analytical, Creative, Practical Who proposed the concept of multiple intelligences? Howard Gardner What are the different types of learning theories? Behavioral, Humanistic, Cognitivist, Social cognitive What is the focus of behavioral learning theory? Teacher-directed, build skills and mastery, behavior modification Who proposed the concept of operant conditioning? B.F. Skinner
What is the focus of humanistic learning theory? Feelings and emotions, motivation, growth mindset What is the focus of cognitivist learning theory? Information processing, memory, attention getting, mnemonic devices What are the metacognitive skills?Thinking about thinking, planning, monitoring, evaluating Who proposed the concept of social cognitive learning theory?Albert Bandura What are the different types of assessments?Objective, Subjective, Performance-based, Competency-based What is the focus of objective assessments?One correct answer, right and wrong, multiple choice questions, fill in the blank, true/false What is the focus of subjective assessments?More than one correct answer, rubric, performance-based assessments What is the focus of competency-based assessments? Test competency, chance to improve, e.g. WGU assessments What is the focus of criterion-referenced assessments? Measures student progress, shows strengths and weaknesses What is the focus of norm-referenced assessments? Compares students' scores to others, e.g. SAT or ACT What is the trust v mistrust stage?Children need love and safety What is initiative vs. guilt?children need freedom to explore. If discouraged children will develop guilt What is industry vs. inferiority?occurs between six years and puberty. This is the period in which the child wants to enter the larger world of knowledge and work.What is Identity vs role confusion?Erikson's term for the fifth stage of development, in which the person tries to figure out "who am I?" but is confused as to which of many possible roles to adopt