Deck 8: Cognitive Development in Early Childhood

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Question
During what age range are children typically in the stage of preoperational thought?

A) birth to 2 years
B) 3 to 6 years
C) 7 to 10 years
D) 10 to 14 years
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Question
The stage in Piaget's theory during which children's thought is characterized by the use of mental representations and intuitive thought is called

A) preoperations.
B) concrete operations.
C) sensorimotor.
D) formal operations.
Question
Kwame is a normally developing 4-year-old. He remembers playing with a toy fire engine at his cousin's house the previous day. Although he didn't have his favorite stuffed animal with him when he played with the fire engine, Kwame can imagine putting the bear on the fire engine and giving it a ride. These thoughts and memories demonstrate

A) conservation.
B) egocentrism.
C) preoperational thought.
D) scaffolding.
Question
Piaget called logical processes that can be reversed

A) operations.
B) animism.
C) egocentrism.
D) all of the above
Question
Language development, according to Piaget, is based on what ability in young children?

A) egocentrism
B) intuitive thought
C) metacognition
D) mental representation
Question
There is an explosive increase in children's language ability after the age of

A) 1.
B) 2.
C) 3.
D) 4.
Question
Piaget viewed language as a(n) ________ system.

A) conservation
B) symbol
C) operational
D) animism
Question
Tiffani, age 4, drew a circle with eyes, nose and a mouth. She made 4 lines coming out of the circle for arms and legs. Tiffani proudly presented it to her father, saying "I drew a picture of you!" Her art is evidence that she has developed

A) egocentrism.
B) animism.
C) mental representation.
D) sensorimotor skills.
Question
Piaget believed children demonstrated mental representation by what kind of play?

A) sensorimotor
B) sociocultural
C) conservation
D) symbolic
Question
Three-year-old Isabella is pretending to feed her doll. She puts three wooden blocks on a toy plate. Using the blocks as food demonstrates

A) symbolic play.
B) sensorimotor play.
C) animism.
D) intuitive play.
Question
Thought and logic based on one's personal experience is called

A) conservation.
B) intuitive thought.
C) concrete operations.
D) scaffolding.
Question
The text gives an example of a boy of 3½ years describing a foggy morning as "froggy." Their child explained that "when all the frogs breathe out they make the air froggy." This is an example of

A) egocentrism.
B) conservation.
C) private speech.
D) intuitive thinking.
Question
Which of the following is a characteristic of preoperational thought?

A) operations
B) animism
C) conservation
D) mediation
Question
The term Piaget used to refer to a young child's inability to take another person's perspective is

A) egocentrism.
B) animism.
C) artificialism.
D) conservation.
Question
Four-year-old Clinton is talking to his grandmother on the phone. He looks out of the window as he talks and sees a bird in a tree. Clinton says "Look at the bird, Granny! What kind is it?" His belief that his grandmother sees what he sees is called

A) processing capacity.
B) egocentrism.
C) private speech.
D) animism.
Question
Piaget used the three-mountain task to demonstrate which characteristic of preoperational thought?

A) artificialism
B) conservation
C) animism
D) egocentrism
Question
After a windy night, 5-year-old Tori notices a broken branch on a tree. She says "The tree is crying because its branch got broke." This is an example of

A) conservation.
B) artificialism.
C) animism.
D) private speech.
Question
A child who believes that rain is caused by God crying demonstrates which characteristic of preoperational thinking?

A) artificialism
B) conservation
C) egocentrism
D) metacognition
Question
The three basic properties of an object are volume, weight, and

A) liquid.
B) number.
C) mass.
D) height.
Question
In Piaget's theory, the understanding that basic properties of objects remain the same even when their physical appearance changes is called

A) preoperations.
B) conservation.
C) overregularization.
D) animism.
Question
Four-year-old Jacob is shown two identical glasses of juice. While he watches, one glass of juice is poured into a short, wide glass. Piaget used this to test children's understanding of

A) animism.
B) accommodation.
C) assimilation.
D) conservation.
Question
In Piaget's classic test of conservation of liquid, preoperational children focus on either the height or the width of the liquid in the container. This focus shows

A) lack of reversible thinking.
B) centration.
C) egocentrism.
D) metacognition.
Question
With Joshua watching, an experimenter pours the contents of one beaker into a taller and skinnier beaker. When asked if the two beakers have the same amount, Joshua, age 4, would say

A) they are the same.
B) the first one holds more.
C) the taller one holds more.
D) there is not as much liquid.
Question
When young children focus on the static end points in a conservation task rather than the transformation itself, they are demonstrating

A) operations.
B) reversibility.
C) preoperational thinking.
D) animism.
Question
Ms. Chen, a kindergarten teacher, shows her students two identical balls of Play Dough. She then flattens one into a "pancake" and asks them whether the ball or pancake has more Play Dough. Some say the pancake because it is wider; some say the ball because it's taller. All of the children's answers exhibit

A) lack of reversibility.
B) zone of proximal development.
C) egocentrism.
D) metacognition.
Question
Four-year-olds generally can't understand that subtraction undoes addition, as in 2 + 3 = 5 and 5 - 2 = 3. This is because their cognitive structures are

A) artificial.
B) assimilated.
C) not reversible.
D) internalized.
Question
First graders think more concretely, and it would be unrealistic to ask them to tackle national abstract issues. Which topic would work best with this age group?

A) family
B) other cultures
C) the jungle
D) the desert
Question
In "Professional Perspective: Meet a Constructivist Teacher," which theory does the teacher use in her teaching?

A) Abecedarian
B) Vygotsky's
C) ZPD
D) Piaget's
Question
Which of the following statements about Piaget's legacy is FALSE?

A) Piaget's theory led to more passive types of teaching and learning.
B) Piaget changed psychology's view of young children.
C) Piaget influenced education to be more active and "hands on."
D) Piaget's stages have shaped guidelines for when certain types of learning should be introduced.
Question
Mr. Sanchez teaches second grade. He presents his students with puzzles and conflicting answers to challenge their cognitive structures. Mr. Sanchez is using

A) scaffolding.
B) Piaget's theory.
C) Vygotsky's theory.
D) information processing.
Question
What kind of theory did Vygotsky have?

A) sociocultural
B) metacognitive
C) information processing
D) scaffolding
Question
What is the central theme in Vygotsky's theory?

A) Children go through distinct stages in their cognitive development.
B) Children learn from their culture and from social interactions.
C) Children learn from a theory of mind.
D) Children process information like a computer.
Question
A young Vygotsky faced prejudice, discrimination, and strict governmental restrictions because his family was ______.

A) Russian
B) Jewish
C) Marxist
D) wealthy
Question
Vygotsky called what we hear as people talk around us

A) overregularized speech.
B) private speech.
C) social speech.
D) the ZPD.
Question
Vygotsky received his early education from

A) the University of Moscow.
B) a private tutor.
C) his father.
D) Moscow's Psychological Institute.
Question
The Soviet government saw the influence of foreigners as

A) competition.
B) undesirable.
C) desirable.
D) inaccurate.
Question
Vygotsky's ideas were heavily influenced by

A) his family background.
B) his level of education.
C) his religion.
D) his belief in the philosophy of the communist Soviet Union.
Question
Tony, who is 3, often talks to himself while playing with his toys. Vygotsky called this

A) private speech.
B) social speech.
C) internalization.
D) conservation.
Question
When young children are learning new or difficult tasks, they often use

A) conservation.
B) theory of mind.
C) the ZPD.
D) private speech.
Question
Rachel is learning to tie her shoes. As she tries to tie her sneaker laces, she says out loud, "cross over and pull-now make bunny ears and put one under the other." Rachel is using

A) conservation.
B) processing capacity.
C) private speech.
D) overregularized speech.
Question
It is language (speech) that carries the concepts and cognitive structures to the child, and these concepts become the _____ that the child will use.

A) psychological tools
B) physical tools
C) emotional tools
D) social skills
Question
As children grow older, their private speech is not out loud, but in their mind. This process is called

A) theory of mind.
B) internalization.
C) egocentrism.
D) ZPD.
Question
Children who use private speech _____ tend to be the ones who perform best in difficult tasks.

A) the least
B) the most
C) selectively
D) not at all
Question
Which of the following is a function of private speech?

A) to distract their attention
B) to help them be hands-on
C) planning problem solving
D) to assist intuitive thought
Question
The process whereby adults or more advanced peers introduce new concepts, knowledge, and skills to a child is called

A) processing efficiency.
B) fast mapping.
C) information processing.
D) mediation.
Question
Sam is helping his younger brother put a puzzle together. He teaches him strategies such as matching colors and starting with the corners. The process Sam is using to teach his brother is called

A) mediation.
B) theory of mind.
C) centration.
D) private speech.
Question
When a skilled teacher works with a child learning to read, the teacher typically highlights reading strategies such as sounding out the letters in a word. In Vygotsky's theory, this teaching process is

A) metacognition.
B) internalization.
C) mediation.
D) animism.
Question
The key to making mediation effective is

A) using processing capacity.
B) tailoring it to the learner.
C) focusing on overregularization.
D) introducing all of the strategies right in the beginning.
Question
Vygotsky termed the distance between a learner's maximum independent performance and the tasks the learner can perform with assistance

A) internalization.
B) processing efficiency.
C) mediation.
D) the ZPD.
Question
You volunteer as a tutor with your college's community outreach program. Before you try to tutor the child assigned to you, Vygotsky would advise you to

A) determine the child's ZPD.
B) assess the child's stage of cognitive development.
C) see if the child has developed theory of mind.
D) test the child's processing efficiency.
Question
The bottom level of the ZPD is

A) the easiest problems a child can solve alone.
B) the problems a child cannot solve, even with help.
C) the most challenging problems a child can already solve independently.
D) a measure of their processing efficiency.
Question
Six-year-old Seamus is learning addition and subtraction. No matter how much his mother explains it, Seamus does not understand division, however. Division would be at what part of Seamus' ZPD?

A) bottom
B) top
C) middle
D) not there at all
Question
Tasks inside a child's ZPD require mental functions that the child has

A) not yet mediated.
B) completely internalized.
C) no sociocultural experiences of.
D) not yet completely internalized.
Question
When children have effective mediation in learning a new skill,

A) they acquire conservation.
B) they stop using social speech.
C) the boundaries of their ZPD move up.
D) the boundaries of their ZPD move down.
Question
Which of the following, according to Vygotsky's theory, would be the most effective way to teach children?

A) Give them challenging tasks and help.
B) Give them easy material to start with.
C) Make them work independently.
D) Partner them with someone else just learning the material.
Question
The most informative assessments are

A) written tests.
B) demonstrations.
C) tests of independent performance.
D) tests of assisted performance.
Question
The support given to children as they learn a new skill is called

A) processing capacity.
B) scaffolding.
C) centration.
D) executive processes.
Question
Ms. Miller is teaching Joseph to play the clarinet. At his first lesson, she places his finger in the proper position on the clarinet. This is an example of

A) internalization.
B) scaffolding.
C) fast mapping.
D) social speech.
Question
Children working together to help each other solve problems is called

A) collaborative learning.
B) internalization.
C) executive processes.
D) ZPD.
Question
An example of scaffolding is

A) doing part of the task for the child.
B) simplifying difficult parts.
C) talking the child through the task.
D) all of the above
Question
Your child development instructor breaks the class down into small groups and assigns each child in the group to teach the rest of the group a section of Chapter 8. What technique is your instructor using?

A) encoding
B) theory of mind
C) collaborative learning
D) metacognition
Question
Vygotsky emphasized that cognitive development is driven by

A) social interaction.
B) parental encouragement.
C) physical growth.
D) emotional growth.
Question
The information processing theory of cognitive development is based on comparing thinking processes to

A) the ZPD.
B) computers.
C) code switching.
D) synaptogenesis.
Question
The approach to cognitive development that looks at how individuals store, retrieve, and transfer information is the

A) theory of mind.
B) collaboration approach.
C) information processing approach.
D) Vygotskyian computer model.
Question
The "software" that an individual uses to transform information is/are

A) automatic.
B) social rules of discourse.
C) strategies.
D) scaffolds.
Question
Which of the following is an important assumption of the information processing approach?

A) Humans are limited in their capacity to process information.
B) Human thought is as accurate as a computer.
C) Short-term memory is comparable to a CD-ROM or hard drive on a computer.
D) Cognitive development progresses in stages.
Question
According to the information processing theorists, most of the cognitive development

A) is limited to short-term memory.
B) consists of developing strategies to maximize processing capacity.
C) consists of fast mapping of the social rules of discourse.
D) is a balance of assimilation and accommodation.
Question
Both computers and humans are systems that manipulate

A) sounds.
B) symbols.
C) letters.
D) pictures.
Question
At which of the following mental activities are older children better than young children?

A) processing small amounts of information
B) processing information slower
C) controlling their attention
D) egocentrism
Question
The amount of information a person can remember or think about at one time is what type of processing?

A) efficiency
B) automaticity
C) capacity
D) scaffolding
Question
What cognitive function is measured by presenting a series of bits of information quickly and counting how many items the person can remember in exact order?

A) processing efficiency
B) automaticity
C) metacognition
D) processing capacity
Question
Pablo is taking a test with a cognitive researcher. The researcher says a series of numbers and Pablo is to repeat them in the exact order they were presented. What is the researcher measuring?

A) Pablo's processing capacity
B) Pablo's processing efficiency
C) Pablo's cognitive scaffolding
D) Pablo's metacognition
Question
"Operating space" is an area where

A) storage of information occurs.
B) actual manipulation of information takes place.
C) automaticity occurs.
D) leftover processing efficiency takes place.
Question
Adults remember about _____ times as much as 2-year-olds when asked to recall numbers in a specific order.

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
Question
The place for storing and remembering the information we are manipulating is called

A) operating space.
B) emotional space.
C) storage space.
D) efficiency.
Question
Zach is a teenager. His ability to listen to his iPod, do his homework, and watch TV at the same time demonstrates that he has achieved ________ in many of his activities.

A) automaticity
B) metacognition
C) collaborative learning
D) theory of mind
Question
The speed and accuracy with which a person can process information is referred to as

A) metacognition.
B) processing capacity.
C) scaffolding.
D) processing efficiency.
Question
The ability to focus on a specific piece of information without distraction is called

A) bootstrapping.
B) overregularization.
C) attention.
D) metacognition.
Question
Marta is able to focus for a longer period of time than her younger sister. Her ability is based on development of which skill?

A) metacognition
B) attention
C) mediation
D) conservation
Question
Neuroscience research with adults has identified specific brain areas (specifically, the anterior cingulated gyrus and the lateral _____ areas) that are involved in being alert to stimuli.

A) Broca's area
B) cortex
C) dendrite
D) prefrontal
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Deck 8: Cognitive Development in Early Childhood
1
During what age range are children typically in the stage of preoperational thought?

A) birth to 2 years
B) 3 to 6 years
C) 7 to 10 years
D) 10 to 14 years
3 to 6 years
2
The stage in Piaget's theory during which children's thought is characterized by the use of mental representations and intuitive thought is called

A) preoperations.
B) concrete operations.
C) sensorimotor.
D) formal operations.
preoperations.
3
Kwame is a normally developing 4-year-old. He remembers playing with a toy fire engine at his cousin's house the previous day. Although he didn't have his favorite stuffed animal with him when he played with the fire engine, Kwame can imagine putting the bear on the fire engine and giving it a ride. These thoughts and memories demonstrate

A) conservation.
B) egocentrism.
C) preoperational thought.
D) scaffolding.
preoperational thought.
4
Piaget called logical processes that can be reversed

A) operations.
B) animism.
C) egocentrism.
D) all of the above
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k this deck
5
Language development, according to Piaget, is based on what ability in young children?

A) egocentrism
B) intuitive thought
C) metacognition
D) mental representation
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k this deck
6
There is an explosive increase in children's language ability after the age of

A) 1.
B) 2.
C) 3.
D) 4.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Piaget viewed language as a(n) ________ system.

A) conservation
B) symbol
C) operational
D) animism
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Tiffani, age 4, drew a circle with eyes, nose and a mouth. She made 4 lines coming out of the circle for arms and legs. Tiffani proudly presented it to her father, saying "I drew a picture of you!" Her art is evidence that she has developed

A) egocentrism.
B) animism.
C) mental representation.
D) sensorimotor skills.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Piaget believed children demonstrated mental representation by what kind of play?

A) sensorimotor
B) sociocultural
C) conservation
D) symbolic
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Three-year-old Isabella is pretending to feed her doll. She puts three wooden blocks on a toy plate. Using the blocks as food demonstrates

A) symbolic play.
B) sensorimotor play.
C) animism.
D) intuitive play.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Thought and logic based on one's personal experience is called

A) conservation.
B) intuitive thought.
C) concrete operations.
D) scaffolding.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The text gives an example of a boy of 3½ years describing a foggy morning as "froggy." Their child explained that "when all the frogs breathe out they make the air froggy." This is an example of

A) egocentrism.
B) conservation.
C) private speech.
D) intuitive thinking.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which of the following is a characteristic of preoperational thought?

A) operations
B) animism
C) conservation
D) mediation
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The term Piaget used to refer to a young child's inability to take another person's perspective is

A) egocentrism.
B) animism.
C) artificialism.
D) conservation.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Four-year-old Clinton is talking to his grandmother on the phone. He looks out of the window as he talks and sees a bird in a tree. Clinton says "Look at the bird, Granny! What kind is it?" His belief that his grandmother sees what he sees is called

A) processing capacity.
B) egocentrism.
C) private speech.
D) animism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Piaget used the three-mountain task to demonstrate which characteristic of preoperational thought?

A) artificialism
B) conservation
C) animism
D) egocentrism
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
After a windy night, 5-year-old Tori notices a broken branch on a tree. She says "The tree is crying because its branch got broke." This is an example of

A) conservation.
B) artificialism.
C) animism.
D) private speech.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
A child who believes that rain is caused by God crying demonstrates which characteristic of preoperational thinking?

A) artificialism
B) conservation
C) egocentrism
D) metacognition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The three basic properties of an object are volume, weight, and

A) liquid.
B) number.
C) mass.
D) height.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In Piaget's theory, the understanding that basic properties of objects remain the same even when their physical appearance changes is called

A) preoperations.
B) conservation.
C) overregularization.
D) animism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Four-year-old Jacob is shown two identical glasses of juice. While he watches, one glass of juice is poured into a short, wide glass. Piaget used this to test children's understanding of

A) animism.
B) accommodation.
C) assimilation.
D) conservation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
In Piaget's classic test of conservation of liquid, preoperational children focus on either the height or the width of the liquid in the container. This focus shows

A) lack of reversible thinking.
B) centration.
C) egocentrism.
D) metacognition.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
With Joshua watching, an experimenter pours the contents of one beaker into a taller and skinnier beaker. When asked if the two beakers have the same amount, Joshua, age 4, would say

A) they are the same.
B) the first one holds more.
C) the taller one holds more.
D) there is not as much liquid.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
When young children focus on the static end points in a conservation task rather than the transformation itself, they are demonstrating

A) operations.
B) reversibility.
C) preoperational thinking.
D) animism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Ms. Chen, a kindergarten teacher, shows her students two identical balls of Play Dough. She then flattens one into a "pancake" and asks them whether the ball or pancake has more Play Dough. Some say the pancake because it is wider; some say the ball because it's taller. All of the children's answers exhibit

A) lack of reversibility.
B) zone of proximal development.
C) egocentrism.
D) metacognition.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Four-year-olds generally can't understand that subtraction undoes addition, as in 2 + 3 = 5 and 5 - 2 = 3. This is because their cognitive structures are

A) artificial.
B) assimilated.
C) not reversible.
D) internalized.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
First graders think more concretely, and it would be unrealistic to ask them to tackle national abstract issues. Which topic would work best with this age group?

A) family
B) other cultures
C) the jungle
D) the desert
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In "Professional Perspective: Meet a Constructivist Teacher," which theory does the teacher use in her teaching?

A) Abecedarian
B) Vygotsky's
C) ZPD
D) Piaget's
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following statements about Piaget's legacy is FALSE?

A) Piaget's theory led to more passive types of teaching and learning.
B) Piaget changed psychology's view of young children.
C) Piaget influenced education to be more active and "hands on."
D) Piaget's stages have shaped guidelines for when certain types of learning should be introduced.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Mr. Sanchez teaches second grade. He presents his students with puzzles and conflicting answers to challenge their cognitive structures. Mr. Sanchez is using

A) scaffolding.
B) Piaget's theory.
C) Vygotsky's theory.
D) information processing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What kind of theory did Vygotsky have?

A) sociocultural
B) metacognitive
C) information processing
D) scaffolding
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
What is the central theme in Vygotsky's theory?

A) Children go through distinct stages in their cognitive development.
B) Children learn from their culture and from social interactions.
C) Children learn from a theory of mind.
D) Children process information like a computer.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
A young Vygotsky faced prejudice, discrimination, and strict governmental restrictions because his family was ______.

A) Russian
B) Jewish
C) Marxist
D) wealthy
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Vygotsky called what we hear as people talk around us

A) overregularized speech.
B) private speech.
C) social speech.
D) the ZPD.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Vygotsky received his early education from

A) the University of Moscow.
B) a private tutor.
C) his father.
D) Moscow's Psychological Institute.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
The Soviet government saw the influence of foreigners as

A) competition.
B) undesirable.
C) desirable.
D) inaccurate.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Vygotsky's ideas were heavily influenced by

A) his family background.
B) his level of education.
C) his religion.
D) his belief in the philosophy of the communist Soviet Union.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Tony, who is 3, often talks to himself while playing with his toys. Vygotsky called this

A) private speech.
B) social speech.
C) internalization.
D) conservation.
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39
When young children are learning new or difficult tasks, they often use

A) conservation.
B) theory of mind.
C) the ZPD.
D) private speech.
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40
Rachel is learning to tie her shoes. As she tries to tie her sneaker laces, she says out loud, "cross over and pull-now make bunny ears and put one under the other." Rachel is using

A) conservation.
B) processing capacity.
C) private speech.
D) overregularized speech.
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41
It is language (speech) that carries the concepts and cognitive structures to the child, and these concepts become the _____ that the child will use.

A) psychological tools
B) physical tools
C) emotional tools
D) social skills
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42
As children grow older, their private speech is not out loud, but in their mind. This process is called

A) theory of mind.
B) internalization.
C) egocentrism.
D) ZPD.
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43
Children who use private speech _____ tend to be the ones who perform best in difficult tasks.

A) the least
B) the most
C) selectively
D) not at all
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44
Which of the following is a function of private speech?

A) to distract their attention
B) to help them be hands-on
C) planning problem solving
D) to assist intuitive thought
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45
The process whereby adults or more advanced peers introduce new concepts, knowledge, and skills to a child is called

A) processing efficiency.
B) fast mapping.
C) information processing.
D) mediation.
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46
Sam is helping his younger brother put a puzzle together. He teaches him strategies such as matching colors and starting with the corners. The process Sam is using to teach his brother is called

A) mediation.
B) theory of mind.
C) centration.
D) private speech.
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47
When a skilled teacher works with a child learning to read, the teacher typically highlights reading strategies such as sounding out the letters in a word. In Vygotsky's theory, this teaching process is

A) metacognition.
B) internalization.
C) mediation.
D) animism.
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48
The key to making mediation effective is

A) using processing capacity.
B) tailoring it to the learner.
C) focusing on overregularization.
D) introducing all of the strategies right in the beginning.
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k this deck
49
Vygotsky termed the distance between a learner's maximum independent performance and the tasks the learner can perform with assistance

A) internalization.
B) processing efficiency.
C) mediation.
D) the ZPD.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
50
You volunteer as a tutor with your college's community outreach program. Before you try to tutor the child assigned to you, Vygotsky would advise you to

A) determine the child's ZPD.
B) assess the child's stage of cognitive development.
C) see if the child has developed theory of mind.
D) test the child's processing efficiency.
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k this deck
51
The bottom level of the ZPD is

A) the easiest problems a child can solve alone.
B) the problems a child cannot solve, even with help.
C) the most challenging problems a child can already solve independently.
D) a measure of their processing efficiency.
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Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
52
Six-year-old Seamus is learning addition and subtraction. No matter how much his mother explains it, Seamus does not understand division, however. Division would be at what part of Seamus' ZPD?

A) bottom
B) top
C) middle
D) not there at all
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k this deck
53
Tasks inside a child's ZPD require mental functions that the child has

A) not yet mediated.
B) completely internalized.
C) no sociocultural experiences of.
D) not yet completely internalized.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
When children have effective mediation in learning a new skill,

A) they acquire conservation.
B) they stop using social speech.
C) the boundaries of their ZPD move up.
D) the boundaries of their ZPD move down.
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55
Which of the following, according to Vygotsky's theory, would be the most effective way to teach children?

A) Give them challenging tasks and help.
B) Give them easy material to start with.
C) Make them work independently.
D) Partner them with someone else just learning the material.
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k this deck
56
The most informative assessments are

A) written tests.
B) demonstrations.
C) tests of independent performance.
D) tests of assisted performance.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
The support given to children as they learn a new skill is called

A) processing capacity.
B) scaffolding.
C) centration.
D) executive processes.
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58
Ms. Miller is teaching Joseph to play the clarinet. At his first lesson, she places his finger in the proper position on the clarinet. This is an example of

A) internalization.
B) scaffolding.
C) fast mapping.
D) social speech.
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k this deck
59
Children working together to help each other solve problems is called

A) collaborative learning.
B) internalization.
C) executive processes.
D) ZPD.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
60
An example of scaffolding is

A) doing part of the task for the child.
B) simplifying difficult parts.
C) talking the child through the task.
D) all of the above
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k this deck
61
Your child development instructor breaks the class down into small groups and assigns each child in the group to teach the rest of the group a section of Chapter 8. What technique is your instructor using?

A) encoding
B) theory of mind
C) collaborative learning
D) metacognition
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k this deck
62
Vygotsky emphasized that cognitive development is driven by

A) social interaction.
B) parental encouragement.
C) physical growth.
D) emotional growth.
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63
The information processing theory of cognitive development is based on comparing thinking processes to

A) the ZPD.
B) computers.
C) code switching.
D) synaptogenesis.
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k this deck
64
The approach to cognitive development that looks at how individuals store, retrieve, and transfer information is the

A) theory of mind.
B) collaboration approach.
C) information processing approach.
D) Vygotskyian computer model.
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65
The "software" that an individual uses to transform information is/are

A) automatic.
B) social rules of discourse.
C) strategies.
D) scaffolds.
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k this deck
66
Which of the following is an important assumption of the information processing approach?

A) Humans are limited in their capacity to process information.
B) Human thought is as accurate as a computer.
C) Short-term memory is comparable to a CD-ROM or hard drive on a computer.
D) Cognitive development progresses in stages.
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67
According to the information processing theorists, most of the cognitive development

A) is limited to short-term memory.
B) consists of developing strategies to maximize processing capacity.
C) consists of fast mapping of the social rules of discourse.
D) is a balance of assimilation and accommodation.
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68
Both computers and humans are systems that manipulate

A) sounds.
B) symbols.
C) letters.
D) pictures.
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69
At which of the following mental activities are older children better than young children?

A) processing small amounts of information
B) processing information slower
C) controlling their attention
D) egocentrism
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70
The amount of information a person can remember or think about at one time is what type of processing?

A) efficiency
B) automaticity
C) capacity
D) scaffolding
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71
What cognitive function is measured by presenting a series of bits of information quickly and counting how many items the person can remember in exact order?

A) processing efficiency
B) automaticity
C) metacognition
D) processing capacity
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72
Pablo is taking a test with a cognitive researcher. The researcher says a series of numbers and Pablo is to repeat them in the exact order they were presented. What is the researcher measuring?

A) Pablo's processing capacity
B) Pablo's processing efficiency
C) Pablo's cognitive scaffolding
D) Pablo's metacognition
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73
"Operating space" is an area where

A) storage of information occurs.
B) actual manipulation of information takes place.
C) automaticity occurs.
D) leftover processing efficiency takes place.
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74
Adults remember about _____ times as much as 2-year-olds when asked to recall numbers in a specific order.

A) 2
B) 3
C) 4
D) 5
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75
The place for storing and remembering the information we are manipulating is called

A) operating space.
B) emotional space.
C) storage space.
D) efficiency.
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76
Zach is a teenager. His ability to listen to his iPod, do his homework, and watch TV at the same time demonstrates that he has achieved ________ in many of his activities.

A) automaticity
B) metacognition
C) collaborative learning
D) theory of mind
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77
The speed and accuracy with which a person can process information is referred to as

A) metacognition.
B) processing capacity.
C) scaffolding.
D) processing efficiency.
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78
The ability to focus on a specific piece of information without distraction is called

A) bootstrapping.
B) overregularization.
C) attention.
D) metacognition.
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79
Marta is able to focus for a longer period of time than her younger sister. Her ability is based on development of which skill?

A) metacognition
B) attention
C) mediation
D) conservation
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k this deck
80
Neuroscience research with adults has identified specific brain areas (specifically, the anterior cingulated gyrus and the lateral _____ areas) that are involved in being alert to stimuli.

A) Broca's area
B) cortex
C) dendrite
D) prefrontal
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 194 flashcards in this deck.