Ch1 | History, Theory & Research – Test Bank 9e - Infants and Children 9e | Test Bank with Answer Key by Laura E. Berk by Laura E. Berk. DOCX document preview.

Ch1 | History, Theory & Research – Test Bank 9e

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Chapter 1
HISTORY, THEORY, AND RESEARCH sTRATEGIES

MULTIPLE CHOICE

1) Child development is a field of study devoted to ________.

A) determining the relative contributions of genetic and environmental influences to human behavior

B) describing historical perspectives on issues related to rearing children

C) understanding constancy and change from conception through adolescence

D) analyzing the changes people experience in every stage of their lives

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 4; screen 1.1

Objective: 1.1a Describe the field of child development, along with factors that stimulated its expansion.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

2) The central questions addressed by the field of child development ________.

A) have little impact on the choices parents make to promote their children’s well-being

B) have applied, or practical, importance

C) are based exclusively on research conducted by psychologists

D) involve all changes a person experiences throughout the lifespan

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 4; screen 1.1

Objective: 1.1a Describe the field of child development, along with factors that stimulated its expansion.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

3) Child development is an interdisciplinary field, meaning it ________.

A) pertains to children from diverse cultures and backgrounds

B) has grown through the combined efforts of many different fields of study

C) produces theories that can be applied in the same way to every culture in the world

D) is a body of knowledge that is relevant and useful but not scientifically important

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 5; screen 1.1

Objective: 1.1a Describe the field of child development, along with factors that stimulated its expansion.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

4) Child development is often divided into three broad domains: ________.

A) physical, cognitive, and emotional and social

B) biological, psychological, and sociological

C) applied, interdisciplinary, and holistic

D) infancy, childhood, and adolescence

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 5; screen 1.1.1

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

5) In Akhil’s short story, which he is writing by hand, he makes predictions about how love and loss will affect members of his family over time. By doing this, Akhil is demonstrating ________.

A) capacities in each of the three broad domains of child development

B) the primary importance of the cognitive domain

C) that new capabilities are the product of exactly one of the three broad domains of child development

D) that he is aware of the developmental events that make these actions possible

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 5; screen 1.1.1

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

6) A teacher concludes that improvements in a particular student’s academic ability were caused by a change in that student’s cognitive abilities. This conclusion is vulnerable to criticism because ________.

A) changes in academic ability have no relationship to changes in cognitive development

B) the definitions of the different domains of child development are too vague to support any conclusions about improved abilities

C) all improvements in academic ability are the product of changes in social and emotional development

D) the improvements could have been influenced by changes in physical or social and emotional development

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 5; screen 1.1.1

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

7) The emotional and social domain of child development includes changes in ________.

A) perceptual and motor capacities

B) attention and memory

C) moral reasoning and behavior

D) problem solving and language

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 5; screen 1.1.1

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Easy

8) During which period of development are the first intimate ties to others formed?

A) infancy and toddlerhood

B) early childhood

C) middle childhood

D) adolescence

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 6; screen 1.1.2

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Easy

9) The developmental period of early childhood spans the approximate age range from ________.

A) conception to birth

B) birth to 2 years

C) 2 to 6 years

D) 4 to 8 years

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 6; screen 1.1.2

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

10) Which statement about emerging adulthood is true?

A) It is a period of development that extends from age 15 to 21.

B) It is a period of development unique to developing nations.

C) Although emerging adults have moved beyond adolescence, they have not yet fully assumed adult roles.

D) It is a period of development mostly limited to young people in developing nations.

Topic: The Field of Child Development

Content Ref: p. 6; screen 1.1.2

Objective: 1.1b Explain how child development is typically divided into domains and periods.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

11) Theories are vital tools because they ________.

A) provide organizing frameworks for our observations of children.

B) provide the ultimate truth about child development.

C) do not require scientific verification.

D) are not influenced by cultural values and belief systems.

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 7; screen 1.2

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

12) Theories that have been verified by research can serve as a sound basis for practical action by ________.

A) eliminating the influence of cultural values and belief systems

B) illustrating the ultimate truth about child behavior

C) providing conclusions that do not need to be replicated over time

D) describing, explaining, and predicting behavior

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 7; screen 1.2

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

13) Theories differ from mere opinion or belief because theories ________.

A) are influenced by cultural values

B) depend on scientific verification

C) explain all aspects of development

D) cannot be tested using research procedures

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 7; screen 1.2

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

14) Reid believes that the difference between the immature and the mature being is simply one of amount or complexity. Reid views development as ________.

A) continuous

B) discontinuous

C) determined by nature

D) determined by nurture

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 7; screen 1.2.1

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

15) Jessica believes that development takes place in stages in which children change rapidly as they progress to a new level and then change very little for a while. Jessica views development as ________.

A) continuous

B) discontinuous

C) determined by nature

D) determined by nurture

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 8; screen 1.2.1

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

16) The discontinuous view of development holds that ________.

A) infants and preschoolers respond to the world in much the same way adults do

B) growth is the process of gradually augmenting the skills that were present from birth

C) infants and children have ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving that differ qualitatively from those of adults

D) development is a smooth process limited only by a lack of information and precision

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 8; screen 1.2.1

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

17) Contemporary theorists regard the contexts that shape development as ________.

A) less important in adolescence than in early childhood

B) entirely dependent on an individual’s genetics

C) uniform across different individuals

D) many-layered and complex

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 8; screen 1.2.2

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

18) New evidence about child development increasingly emphasizes that ________.

A) there is very little cultural diversity in child development

B) environmental but not personal contexts shape development

C) development occurs in a predictable, orderly sequence of stages unaffected by distinct contexts

D) children not only are affected by but also contribute to the contexts in which they develop

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.2

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

19) The field of child development is becoming increasingly aware that differences in personal and environmental circumstances ________.

A) cause children to follow the same sequence of development

B) make it more difficult for children to contribute to the contexts in which they develop

C) change the order in which children pass through developmental stages

D) foster different intellectual abilities, social skills, and feelings about the self and others

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

20) Researchers who have different views of the nature–nurture controversy most likely disagree about ________.

A) whether nature includes the hereditary information children receive from their parents

B) whether nurture includes social forces as well as physical forces

C) the relative influence of genetic and environmental factors in development

D) which influences other than nature and nurture best explain differences in developmental outcomes

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

21) Charlene believes that her daughter’s ability to think in complex ways is largely the result of a genetically determined timetable of growth. Charlene’s view emphasizes the role of ________ in developmental processes.

A) nurture

B) nature

C) plasticity

D) early experiences

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

22) Theorists who believe that children who are high or low in a characteristic will remain so at later ages typically stress the importance of ________.

A) heredity

B) stages

C) nurture

D) plasticity

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

23) Theorists who emphasize plasticity argue that ________.

A) early experiences establish a lifelong pattern of behavior

B) heredity has the most influence on behavior

C) children who are high or low in a characteristic will remain so at later ages

D) development is open to change in response to influential experiences

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Easy

24) Theorists who see development as having substantial plasticity would likely ________.

A) believe that children who start high in a characteristic are likely to remain that way

B) support interventions in adolescence but not earlier

C) be skeptical about early childhood interventions

D) be optimistic about the potential positive impact of interventions

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

25) Justin spent his first 18 months in an orphanage. Justin’s adoptive mother believes sensitive caregiving will help him overcome his early stressful experiences. She is emphasizing the role of ________ in development.

A) nature

B) nurture

C) stability

D) stages

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

26) People who conclude that the course of development is largely due to ________ would be likely to ________.

A) nature; support interventions throughout the course of development

B) nurture; oppose early childhood interventions

C) early experiences; believe that stimulation and support would help children develop at their best

D) heredity; believe that negative early experiences can be overcome by later, positive experiences

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 9; screen 1.2.3

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

27) The most consistent asset of resilient children is ________.

A) high self-esteem

B) access to high-quality child care

C) a strong bond with a competent, caring adult

D) being identified as gifted

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 10 Box: Biology and Environment: Resilient Children; screen 1.2.4

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

28) According to research on resilience, which characteristic is most likely to increase the chances that a child will be able to offset the impact of a stressful home life?

A) being easily irritated

B) being emotionally reactive

C) having musical talent

D) associating with rule-breaking peers

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 10 Box: Biology and Environment: Resilient Children; screen 1.2.4

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

29) Research demonstrates that children’s parental relationships and personal characteristics are ________.

A) interrelated; each is a factor that can influence the other

B) distinct; each has a separate impact that can be isolated

C) the most important factors influencing the ability to adapt effectively

D) the only factors that consistently offer protection from the damaging effects of stressful life events

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 10 Box: Biology and Environment: Resilient Children; screen 1.2.4

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

30) A developmental systems perspective envisions the process of development as ________.

A) the product of hereditary influences along with other biological factors

B) a challenge to the view that theories should describe, explain, and predict behavior

C) best understood by isolating the effects of many contributing factors

D) a perpetually ongoing process that is molded by a complex network of influences

Topic: Basic Issues

Content Ref: p. 11; screen 1.2.4

Objective: 1.2 Identify three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

31) In medieval times, ________.

A) children dressed and acted like adults

B) children and adults were treated equally by the courts

C) children were viewed as blank slates

D) childhood was regarded as a separate period of life

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 11; screen 1.3.1

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

32) In medieval times, religious writings ________.

A) gave rise to the view that children are born evil

B) viewed children’s characters as being entirely shaped by experience

C) contained contradictory depictions of children’s basic nature

D) portrayed children as being equivalent to adults in most respects

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.1

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

33) During the Reformation, the Puritans ________.

A) characterized children as innocent and close to angels

B) regarded children as fully mature by the time they were 7 or 8 years old

C) recommended permissive child-rearing practices

D) believed that children were born evil and had to be civilized

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.2

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

34) John Locke viewed the child as a tabula rasa, meaning that children ________.

A) are not capable of making ethical decisions

B) have characters that are shaped entirely by experience

C) are resistant to any attempts to shape their characters

D) are born evil and needed purification

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.3

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

35) John Locke opposed the use of ________.

A) praise as a reward

B) adult attention as a reward

C) physical punishment

D) any form of discipline

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.3

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

36) Which developmental proposal held by John Locke is best supported by present-day research?

A) the notion that the child is a blank slate

B) the conception of children as “noble savages”

C) believing that children do little to influence their destinies

D) using adult attention and approval as a reward for desired behaviors

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.3

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

37) All contemporary child development theories view children as ________.

A) naturally endowed with a sense of right and wrong

B) passive and emotionally fragile

C) shaped entirely by experience

D) active, purposeful beings

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12; screen 1.3.3

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

38) Jean-Jacques Rousseau saw children as ________.

A) determining their own destinies

B) blank slates to be filled by adult instruction

C) tainted by original sin

D) passive and highly plastic

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12-13; screen 1.3.3

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

39) According to Charles Darwin’s view of evolution, ________.

A) physical characteristics and behavior can help individuals survive and pass on their characteristics

B) only the physically strongest members of a species are likely to survive and produce offspring

C) adaptations eventually produce individuals that are essentially identical

D) early prenatal growth has a limited role in the environmental fitness of individuals

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 13; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

40) Charles Darwin influenced the scientific study of children by ________.

A) proving that the development of the human child follows the same general plan as the evolution of the human species

B) documenting observations about the prenatal development of many species

C) arguing that human development is the product of a series of events that unfolds automatically

D) creating the first successful intelligence test

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 12-13; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Difficult

41) G. Stanley Hall and his student Arnold Gesell ________.

A) were major proponents of the mental testing movement

B) devised theories of child development based on evolutionary ideas

C) emphasized environmental influences in producing developmental advances

D) rejected the normative approach to studying development

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 13; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

42) Arnold Gesell ________.

A) was among the first researchers to make knowledge about child development meaningful to parents

B) is generally regarded as the founder of the child study movement

C) proposed the principle of natural selection on which Darwin based his theory of evolution

D) constructed the first successful intelligence test

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 13; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

43) Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon ________.

A) wrote the first widely accepted book on sanitary childbirth practices

B) were the first researchers to make knowledge about child development meaningful to parents

C) regarded development as a maturational process

D) constructed the first successful intelligence test

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 14; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

44) The first successful intelligence test was originally constructed to ________.

A) measure individual differences in IQ

B) document age-related improvements in children’s intellectual functioning

C) identify children with learning problems for placement in special classes

D) compare the scores of children who varied in gender, ethnicity, and birth order

Topic: Historical Foundations

Content Ref: p. 14; screen 1.3.4

Objective: 1.3 Describe major early influences on the scientific study of child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

45) According to __________, children move through a series of stages in which they confront conflicts between biological drives and social expectations.

A) the normative approach

B) behaviorism

C) social learning theory

D) the psychoanalytic perspective

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 14; screen 1.4.1

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

46) Sigmund Freud constructed his psychosexual theory ________.

A) on the basis of his adult patients’ memories of painful childhood events

B) by conducting studies of animal behavior

C) on the basis of interviews with institutionalized children and adolescents

D) by carefully observing his own children

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 14; screen 1.4.1

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

47) Unlike Freud, Erikson ________.

A) viewed children as taking an active role in their own development

B) argued that normal development must be understood in relation to each culture’s life situation

C) minimized the role of culture in individual development

D) primarily focused on the importance of early life experiences

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 16; screen 1.4.1

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

48) One reason that the psychoanalytic perspective is no longer in the mainstream of child development research is that ________.

A) many psychoanalytic ideas, such as ego functioning, are too vague to be tested empirically

B) psychoanalytic theorists accept the clinical method in which age-related averages represent typical development

C) modern researchers have demonstrated that personality development does not take place in stages

D) it failed to consider the early parent–child relationship, which is central to modern theories

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 16; screen 1.4.1

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

49) Ivan Pavlov taught dogs to salivate at the sound of a bell by using ________.

A) operant conditioning

B) classical conditioning

C) punishment

D) modeling

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: pp. 16-17; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

50) On a few occasions, Jack’s mother gave him candy to keep him quiet when she took him to the doctor’s office. Now every time Jack goes to the doctor’s office, he asks his mother for candy. This is an example of ________.

A) classical conditioning

B) operant conditioning

C) observational learning

D) modeling

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 17; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

51) In a historic experiment with an 11-month-old called Albert, John Watson demonstrated that ________.

A) children cannot be conditioned to fear a formerly neutral stimulus

B) infants as young as a few months old will repeat a behavior to obtain a desirable reward

C) adults can mold children’s behavior by carefully controlling stimulus–response associations

D) children have an innate, inborn fear of rats

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 17; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

52) At his preschool, Paul sees a child hit someone else to get a desired toy. Later, Paul hits another child and takes the child’s cookies. According to social learning theory, why would Paul do what he did?

A) Through classical conditioning, Paul has learned to associate violence with acquiring desired objects.

B) Paul is currently in the sensorimotor stage and is incapable of making moral decisions.

C) The frequency of this behavior was increased through reinforcement.

D) Observational learning taught him that an aggressive response was appropriate.

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 17; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

53) Aurelia tells her daughter, “I know you can do a good job on that homework” because she believes that if she encourages persistence, her daughter will start to view herself as hardworking and high-achieving. Aurelia is ________.

A) using behavior modification

B) promoting psychosocial thinking

C) applying a cognitive-developmental approach

D) encouraging self-efficacy in her daughter

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 17; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

54) Both behaviorism and social learning theory have been criticized for ________.

A) emphasizing nature over nurture

B) presenting ideas that are too vague to test empirically

C) overestimating children’s contributions to their own development

D) underestimating children’s contributions to their own development

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 18; screen 1.4.2

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

55) According to Jean Piaget’s cognitive-developmental theory, ________.

A) development must be understood in relation to each child’s culture

B) adult teaching is the best way to foster development

C) children actively construct knowledge as they manipulate and explore their world

D) children’s learning depends on reinforcers, such as rewards from adults

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 18; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

56) According to Piaget’s theory, during the sensorimotor stage, children ________.

A) can think of all possible outcomes in a scientific problem

B) organize objects into hierarchies of classes and subclasses

C) “think” by acting on the world with their eyes, ears, hands, and mouth

D) can evaluate the logic of verbal statements without referring to real-world circumstances

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 19; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

57) Four-year-old Ingo engages in make-believe play, stirring beads in a bowl and saying, “Soup is ready!” According to Piaget, this kind of play is indicative of the ________ stage of cognitive development.

A) sensorimotor

B) preoperational

C) concrete operational

D) formal operational

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 19; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

58) Sydney, when faced with a problem, starts with a hypothesis, deduces testable inferences, and isolates and combines variables to see which inferences are confirmed. Sydney is in Piaget’s ________ stage of development.

A) sensorimotor

B) preoperational

C) concrete operational

D) formal operational

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 19; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

59) Jamar understands that a certain amount of liquid or clay remains the same even after its appearance changes, and can organize objects into hierarchies of classes and subclasses. Nonetheless, Jamar may not be in the concrete operational stage because ________.

A) children in the concrete operational stage usually do not have those abilities

B) the concrete operational stage comes after the formal operational stage

C) children in the sensorimotor stage also possess those abilities

D) children in the formal operational stage also possess those abilities

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 19; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

60) Research on Piaget’s cognitive-developmental theory indicates that ________.

A) he overestimated the competencies of infants and young children

B) children generally reach their full intellectual potential, regardless of education and experience

C) children’s performance on Piagetian problems can be improved with training

D) his stagewise account overemphasizes social and cultural influences on development

Topic: Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories

Content Ref: p. 20; screen 1.4.3

Objective: 1.4 Describe theories that influenced child development research in the mid-twentieth century.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

61) The information-processing approach views the human mind as a ________.

A) product of socially mediated processes

B) combination of the id, ego, and superego

C) system of genetically programmed behaviors and processes

D) symbol-manipulating system through which information flows

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 21; screen 1.5.1

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

62) Lillian uses flowcharts to map the precise steps individuals use to solve problems and complete tasks. Lillian is most likely a(n) ________ theorist.

A) psychoanalytic

B) information-processing

C) psychosocial

D) social learning

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 21.; screen 1.5.1

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

63) Both Piaget’s theory and the information-processing approach ________.

A) regard children as active beings who modify their own thinking in response to environmental demands

B) focus on the development of imagination and creativity

C) regard perception, memory, and problem solving as similar at all ages

D) emphasize the importance of developmental stages

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 22; screen 1.5.1

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

64) Ishika studies the relationship between changes in the brain and the developing child’s cognitive processing and behavior patterns. She is part of a group of researchers drawing inspiration from the fields of psychology, biology, neuroscience, and medicine. Ishika would most likely consider herself to be a(n)________.

A) behaviorist

B) developmental cognitive neuroscientist

C) evolutionary developmental psychologist

D) information-processing researcher

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 22; screen 1.5.2

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

65) The field of developmental neuroscience is yielding practical applications by ________.

A) identifying experiences that support or undermine brain development

B) cataloging the relative influence of parents, education, and economic inequality on human growth

C) attributing psychological outcomes entirely to genetic causes

D) examining the adaptive value of physical characteristics and behavior

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 22; screen 1.5.2

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

66) Which recent theoretical perspective is concerned with the adaptive, or survival, value of behavior?

A) information processing

B) ethology

C) sociocultural theory

D) ecological systems theory

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 23; screen 1.5.3

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

67) The term “sensitive period” applies better to human development than the strict notion of a critical period because ________.

A) the boundaries of a sensitive period are less well-defined than are those of a critical period

B) the capacity to acquire certain skills cannot occur later than a well-defined optimal period

C) there are more sensitive periods than critical periods in human development

D) sensitive periods, but not critical periods, have been empirically tested

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: pp 23-24.; screen 1.5.3

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

68) According to Vygotsky’s theory, ________.

A) today’s lifestyles differ so radically from those of our evolutionary ancestors that certain evolved behaviors are no longer adaptive

B) children shape their own development during both sensitive and critical developmental periods

C) children revise incorrect ideas in their ongoing efforts to achieve equilibrium between internal structures and everyday information

D) social interaction is necessary for children to acquire the ways of thinking and behaving that make up a community’s culture

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 24; screen 1.5.4

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

69) Which statement provides an explanation of behavior that illustrates Vygotsky’s theory?

A) When his mother takes him to the grocery store, Tom is well-behaved because he knows that his mother will reward him with candy.

B) When playing on the beach, Kehaulani builds the same sort of sand castle that she observed her younger sister building a few days ago.

C) Yesica, a Brazilian child candy seller with no schooling, develops sophisticated mathematical abilities .

D) When trying to solve a math equation, Otto tries several formulas before he stumbles on the correct one.

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 25; screen 1.5.4

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

70) Vygotsky’s emphasis on culture and social experience led him to ________.

A) neglect the biological side of development

B) overemphasize the role of heredity in cognitive change

C) emphasize children’s independent efforts to make sense of their world

D) place too much emphasis on children’s capacity to shape their own development

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 25; screen 1.5.4

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

71) Ecological systems theory views the child as ________.

A) a blossoming flower whose development is a genetically determined series of events that unfold automatically

B) developing within a complex system of relationships affected by multiple levels of the surrounding environment

C) a social being influenced primarily by observational learning or adult modeling

D) a computer-like system that actively codes, transforms, and organizes information

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 25; screen 1.5.5

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

72) According to ecological systems theory, interactions between a mother and her child occur in the ________.

A) microsystem

B) mesosystem

C) exosystem

D) macrosystem

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 26.; screen 1.5.5

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

73) According to ecological systems theory, a parent’s workplace is in the ________.

A) microsystem

B) mesosystem

C) exosystem

D) macrosystem

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 27; screen 1.5.5

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

74) Theorists who adopt the dynamic systems perspective argue that a change in any part of the integrated system of mind, body, and physical and social worlds ________.

A) leads to an increase in mental-processing power of the person experiencing the change

B) causes a child to stagnate at a particular developmental stage

C) disrupts the current organism–environment relationship for the child

D) leads to a return to less-complex and less-effective patterns of behavior

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 27-28; screen 1.5.6

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

75) Family chaos is especially prevalent among ________.

A) dual-earner parents with three or more children

B) single mothers with unstable child-care arrangements

C) single fathers who use firm discipline with their children

D) single mothers who rely on multiple sources of social support

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 28 Box: SOCIAL ISSUES: Family Chaos Undermines Parents’ and Children’s Well-Being; screen 1.5.6

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

76) Family chaos ________.

A) is limited to economically disadvantaged households

B) does not occur when families engage in joint activities

C) induces in children feelings of powerlessness

D) is an unavoidable byproduct of modern hectic social structures

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 28 Box: SOCIAL ISSUES: Family Chaos Undermines Parents’ and Children’s Well-Being; screen 1.5.6

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

77) According to the dynamic systems perspective, development of a more effectively functioning system results from ________.

A) the child actively reorganizing her or his behavior

B) parental training of more complex behaviors in the child

C) allowing the child to overcome environmental risks independently

D) exposing the child to conflicts between biological drives and social expectations

Topic: Recent Theoretical Perspectives

Content Ref: p. 28; screen 1.5.6

Objective: 1.5 Describe recent theoretical perspectives on child development.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

78) Both __________ and __________ emphasize many possible courses of development.

A) the psychoanalytic perspective; ethology

B) ethology; ecological systems theory

C) cognitive-developmental theory; behaviorism

D) behaviorism; Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory

Topic: Comparing Child Development Theories

Content Ref: p. 31; screen 1.6

Objective: 1.6 Identify the stand taken by each major theory on the three basic issues of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

79) Piaget’s cognitive-developmental theory and the psychoanalytic perspective view development as ________.

A) continuous

B) discontinuous

C) culturally determined

D) determined by heredity

Topic: Comparing Child Development Theories

Content Ref: p. 31; screen 1.6

Objective: 1.6 Identify the stand taken by each major theory on the three basic issues of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

80) Which pair of theories differ the most in their stances on the relative influence of nature and nurture?

A) behaviorism and evolutionary developmental psychology

B) Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory and ecological systems theory

C) information processing and cognitive-developmental theory

D) ethology and Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory

Topic: Comparing Child Development Theories

Content Ref: p. 31; screen 1.6

Objective: 1.6 Identify the stand taken by each major theory on the three basic issues of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Difficult

81) Which pair of theories adopts the same perspective on whether development is continuous or discontinuous?

A) the psychoanalytic perspective and the information processing perspective

B) behaviorism and cognitive-developmental theory

C) ethology and Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory

D) social learning theory and the dynamic systems perspective

Topic: Comparing Child Development Theories

Content Ref: p. 31; screen 1.6

Objective: 1.6 Identify the stand taken by each major theory on the three basic issues of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Difficult

82) In general, theories that have been developed more recently are more likely than earlier theories to claim that ________.

A) development is continuous

B) development is discontinuous

C) there is one course of development

D) there are many courses of development

Topic: Comparing Child Development Theories

Content Ref: p. 31; screen 1.6

Objective: 1.6 Identify the stand taken by each major theory on the three basic issues of child development.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Difficult

83) Which statement describes a unique strength of naturalistic observation?

A) Investigators can see directly the everyday behaviors they hope to explain.

B) It permits comparisons of participants’ responses to the same conditions.

C) Great depth and breadth of information can be obtained in a short time.

D) It grants each participant an equal opportunity to display the behavior of interest.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 32; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

84) Kai-ming observes children’s responses to bullying by watching them interact with one another in a park. One major limitation in Kai-ming’s study is that ________.

A) children are unlikely to respond similarly when faced with bullying in other environments

B) not all children will face the same bullying behaviors and have the same opportunity to respond

C) some children will report made-up thoughts and feelings in hopes of pleasing Kai-ming

D) Kai-ming has no reliable way to record his observations

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 32; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

85) A major advantage of structured observations is that they ________.

A) are useful for studying behaviors that investigators rarely have an opportunity to see in everyday life

B) permit participants to display their thoughts in terms that are as close as possible to the way they think in everyday life

C) yield richly detailed narratives that offer valuable insights into the many factors that affect development.

D) allow researchers to see the behavior of interest as it occurs in natural settings

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 33; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

86) One limitation of systematic observation as a general research strategy is that it ________.

A) provides little information about how participants actually behave

B) tells investigators little about the reasoning behind behaviors

C) underestimates the capacities of individuals who have difficulty putting their thoughts into words

D) is inappropriate for participants with poor memories, who may have trouble recalling exactly what happened

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 33; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

87) One major strength of the clinical interview is that it ________.

A) makes comparing individuals’ responses very easy

B) can provide a large amount of information in a fairly brief period

C) is directed toward understanding a culture or distinct social group

D) allows researchers to see the behavior of interest as it occurs in everyday life

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 34; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

88) One major limitation of research methods that rely on self-reports is that ________.

A) the manner of interviewing, more than participants’ true thoughts on a topic, tends to shape responses

B) the process of interviewing participants is time-consuming and expensive

C) participants may knowingly or unknowingly give false reports of their thoughts and experiences

D) these methods cannot allow for differences in participants’ ability to express themselves

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 34; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

89) Which statement about the clinical, or case study, method, is true?

A) It involves bringing together a wide range of information about many people at a single point in time.

B) It involves bringing together a wide range of information about many people over a long period of time.

C) Its aim is to obtain as complete a picture as possible of one child’s psychological functioning and the experiences that led up to it.

D) It is especially inappropriate when studying the development of individuals who are few in number but vary widely in characteristics.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 34; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

90) Natasha spent three years in Botswana, participating in the daily life of a community there. She gathered extensive field notes, consisting of a mix of self-reports from members of the community and her own observations. Which research method did Natasha most likely use in her research?

A) ethnography

B) structured observation

C) questionnaires and tests

D) the clinical, or case study, method

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 35; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

91) What is one limitation of the ethnographic method?

A) Investigators’ cultural values sometimes lead them to misinterpret what they see.

B) It provides little information on how people actually behave.

C) It requires technology such as surveillance cameras and one-way mirrors.

D) It cannot provide information about the reasoning behind participants’ responses.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 35; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

92) Compared to their agemates, adolescents from immigrant families are __________ likely to __________.

A) more; have early sex

B) more; use drugs and alcohol

C) less; do well academically

D) less; commit delinquent and violent acts

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 36 Box: CULTURAL INFLUENCES: Immigrant Youths: Adapting to a New Land; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

93) Immigrant parents of successful youths typically ________.

A) are less likely than native-born parents to view school success as important

B) develop close ties to an ethnic community

C) encourage their children to adopt all aspects of the majority culture

D) stress individualistic values over collectivist values

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 36 Box: CULTURAL INFLUENCES: Immigrant Youths: Adapting to a New Land; screen 1.7.1

Objective: 1.7a Describe research methods commonly used to study children.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

94) In a correlational design, researchers ________.

A) examine relationships between participants’ characteristics and their behavior or development

B) divide events and behaviors of interest into two types: dependent variables and independent variables

C) use a random procedure to assign people to two or more treatment conditions

D) directly control or manipulate changes in an independent variable

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

95) One major limitation of correlational studies is that ________.

A) researchers’ expectations alter the experiences of the people being studied

B) researchers do not gather information about everyday life

C) they do not provide a clear inference of cause and effect

D) the results cannot be generalized to other people and settings

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

96) Zan’s research shows that playing a musical instrument is correlated with a better academic performance. Which conclusion is most strongly supported by this study?

A) Playing a musical instrument causes increased academic performance.

B) Playing a musical instrument is related to increased academic performance.

C) Increased academic performance makes students more likely to want to play a musical instrument.

D) A third variable, such as family income, causes students to perform better academically and want to play a musical instrument.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

97) In interpreting a correlation coefficient, ________.

A) the magnitude of the number shows the direction of the relationship

B) the sign of the number shows the strength of the relationship

C) a positive sign means that as one variable increases, the other decreases

D) a zero correlation indicates no relationship

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

98) Correlations of +.77 and −.77 ________.

A) show the same direction of relationship between two variables

B) are low, because all correlations between −1.00 and +1.00 are low

C) are equally strong

D) reveal the same pattern of relationship between two variables

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

99) A researcher examining academic performance among high school students demonstrates that there is a strong positive correlation between students’ community involvement and their grade point averages. Does this correlation demonstrate that increasing community involvement will increase grade point averages?

A) Yes, because strong positive correlations demonstrate causal relationships.

B) Yes, because grade point averages are strongly correlated with academic performance.

C) No, because a negative correlation would have demonstrated that increasing community involvement will increase grade point averages.

D) No, because the findings do not rule out the possibility that a third factor could affect community involvement and grade point averages.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 37; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

100) In an experimental design, ________.

A) the events and behaviors are divided into two types: independent and dependent variables

B) investigators are unable to control for participants’ characteristics that could reduce the accuracy of their findings

C) researchers infer cause and effect by directly controlling changes in the dependent variable

D) researchers gather information on individuals, generally in natural life circumstances, and make no effort to alter their experiences

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

101) In an experiment examining how much children share when adults are and are not watching, the dependent variable would be ________.

A) whether adults are watching

B) the age of the children

C) prior behavior of the adults in the experiment

D) how much the children share

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

102) In an experiment examining whether a specific type of intervention improves the psychological adjustment of shy children, the independent variable would be the ________.

A) type of intervention

B) number of children in the sample who are already shy

C) number of shy children who benefit from the intervention

D) measure of psychological adjustment

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

103) In an experiment examining whether participation in sports increases high school graduation rates, a confounding variable would be the ________.

A) students’ participation rates in sports

B) high school graduation rates of the students

C) future college and career success of the students

D) physical health of the students being studied

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Difficult

104) The presence of confounding variables reduces the accuracy of a study’s findings because confounding variables ________.

A) make it difficult to determine what produced changes in the dependent variable

B) prevent researchers from manipulating the independent variable

C) reduce the strength of the relationship between the independent and dependent variables

D) change the sign of the relationship between the independent and dependent variables

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Difficult

105) By using ________ assignment of participants to treatment conditions, investigators increase the chances that participants’ characteristics will be equally distributed across treatment groups.

A) sequential

B) random

C) systematic

D) correlational

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

106) Henry wants to know if a teacher’s use of encouragement in the classroom affects children’s self-esteem. To increase the accuracy of his findings, Henry should ________.

A) carefully distribute the children across treatment conditions according to their academic test scores

B) divide the children so that each treatment condition has an equal number of boys and girls

C) randomly assign children to treatment conditions

D) assign all the quieter children to the same treatment condition

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 38; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

107) Researchers randomly assigned adolescents to either a single-grade classroom in their school or a mixed-grade classroom in their school and then measured several learning outcomes in each group. This is an example of ________.

A) naturalistic observation

B) a case study

C) a natural experiment

D) a field experiment

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 39; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

108) Rohan wanted to compare how children from different family environments make friends at school. He carefully chose participants to ensure that their personal characteristics, other than their family backgrounds, were as much alike as possible. Rohan then observed the participants in a school setting. Rohan used________.

A) a laboratory experiment

B) random assignment

C) a natural, or quasi-, experiment

D) a correlational design

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 39; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

109) Unlike natural experiments, field experiments ________.

A) randomly assign participants to treatment conditions

B) are conducted in laboratories

C) measure the strength of relationships

D) provide no evidence of cause and effect

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 39; screen 1.7.2

Objective: 1.7b Distinguish between correlational and experimental research designs, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

110) To examine whether interpersonal popularity was stable or unstable over time, Grayson studied a group of children at regular intervals from the time they were 5 to 18 years old. This is an example of a __________ research design.

A) sequential

B) microgenetic

C) cross-sectional

D) longitudinal

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 39; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

111) A major strength of the longitudinal research design is that researchers can ________.

A) examine relationships between early and later behaviors

B) collect a large amount of data in a short time span

C) explore similarities among children of different cohorts

D) study participants differing in age at the same point in time

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 39; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

112) Davina’s longitudinal study of the effects of subsidized child care on behavior problems was criticized because all the participants she enlisted came from families that had positive previous experiences with child care. Choosing only these participants is an example of ________.

A) cohort effects

B) selective attrition

C) practice effects

D) biased sampling

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 41; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

113) Cohort effects occur when ________.

A) participants in longitudinal studies become “test-wise” from repeated study

B) particular cultural and historical conditions influence participants born within the same general time period

C) participants in longitudinal studies move away or drop out of the research project

D) participants in a study are tipped off about the true purposes and nature of a research study

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 41; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

114) Sajish wants to study the attitudes that children of different ages have about friendship. He arranges for groups of children currently in grades 2, 6, and 10 to complete a questionnaire on forming close friendships. This is an example of a ________ study.

A) cross-sectional

B) longitudinal

C) microgenetic

D) sequential

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 42; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

115) What is one strength of the cross-sectional research design?

A) It provides evidence about individual trends.

B) It cannot be influenced by cohort effects.

C) It is not affected by participant dropout or practice effects.

D) It permits longitudinal comparisons.

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 42; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

116) A disadvantage of cross-sectional research is that ________.

A) it is more inefficient and inconvenient than longitudinal research

B) it does not provide evidence about change at the individual level

C) it can be threatened by practice effects and participant dropout

D) age-related changes cannot be examined

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 42; screen 1.7.3

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

117) One advantage of a sequential research design is that ________.

A) researchers can find out whether cohort effects are operating by comparing participants of the same age who were born in different years

B) it takes less time to complete than a longitudinal study

C) if the longitudinal and cross-sectional outcomes differ, researchers can be especially confident about their findings

D) it is especially useful for studying the strategies children use to acquire new knowledge in reading and science

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 43; screen 1.7.4

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Moderate

118) An adaptation of the longitudinal approach called the ________ design presents children with a novel task and follows their mastery over several closely spaced sessions.

A) correlational

B) sequential

C) cross-sectional

D) microgenetic

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 44; screen 1.7.4

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

119) One limitation of microgenetic studies is that ________.

A) participant dropout often distorts developmental trends

B) the time required for children to change is difficult to anticipate

C) they are more prone to sampling bias than are other types of research designs

D) cohort effects often limit the generalizability of their findings

Topic: Studying the Child

Content Ref: p. 44; screen 1.7.4

Objective: 1.7c Describe designs for studying development, noting the strengths and limitations of each.

Skill: Remember

Difficulty Level: Easy

120) An investigator wanted to gather information from high school students about their sexual experiences. He felt that the students would be more honest in their responses if their parents were unaware that they were participating in the study. If the investigator chooses to interview the students without their parents’ knowledge, he will violate which of the following children’s research rights?

A) privacy

B) protection from harm

C) informed consent

D) beneficial treatments

Topic: Ethics in Research on Children

Content Ref: p. 45; screen 1.8

Objective: 1.8 Discuss special ethical concerns that arise in research on children.

Skill: Apply

Difficulty Level: Moderate

121) The right of privacy in research means that ________.

A) children have the right to concealment of their identity on all information collected in the course of the research project

B) investigators do not have to reveal the true purpose of their study to participants under the age of 12

C) children must have access to all the data in every study in which they participate

D) researchers cannot ask children personal questions that might make the children feel uncomfortable

Topic: Ethics in Research on Children

Content Ref: p. 45; screen 1.8

Objective: 1.8 Discuss special ethical concerns that arise in research on children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

122) Ethical standards permit deception in research studies if ________.

A) the participants are young enough that they would not understand the deception

B) investigators satisfy institutional review boards that such practices are necessary

C) researchers can observe participants from behind one-way mirrors

D) the participants give informed consent and the researchers never reveal the true purpose of the study

Topic: Ethics in Research on Children

Content Ref: p. 45; screen 1.8

Objective: 1.8 Discuss special ethical concerns that arise in research on children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

123) Which statement about debriefing is correct?

A) Young children often lack the cognitive skills to understand the reasons for deceptive procedures.

B) It should be done with children, and usually works well, but it does not have to be done with adults.

C) It is most effective when it is done before the data collection begins.

D) It involves explaining to research participants that they have the right to alternative beneficial treatments.

Topic: Ethics in Research on Children

Content Ref: p. 46; screen 1.8

Objective: 1.8 Discuss special ethical concerns that arise in research on children.

Skill: Understand

Difficulty Level: Moderate

ESSAY

124) Identify the three basic issues on which theories of child development take a stand, and briefly describe the opposing views taken on each basic issue.

125) Describe the contributions and limitations of behaviorism and social learning theory to the scientific study of human development.

126) Compare the terms critical period and sensitive period, and discuss how observations of imprinting led to the development of these concepts.

127) Discuss ecological systems theory, and describe each level of the environment.

128) Two types of systematic observation used in child development research are naturalistic and structured observation. Explain the benefits and limitations of each.

129) Suppose that a study of educational outcomes in a city found that there is a positive correlation between attending a school known for its distinctive curriculum and scores on college entrance examinations. Explain why it would be premature to conclude that the school’s distinctive curriculum is responsible for students’ higher scores on college entrance examinations.

130) Describe some problems that investigators face in conducting longitudinal research.

131) Why are ethical concerns heightened when children participate in research? How is informed consent applied to children?

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
1
Created Date:
Jun 30, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 1 History, Theory, and Research Strategies
Author:
Laura E. Berk

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