Exam Questions Childhood Development Middle Ch7 - Life Span Development 6e Complete Test Bank by John Santrock. DOCX document preview.

Exam Questions Childhood Development Middle Ch7

Essentials of Life-Span Development, 6e (Santrock)

Chapter 7 Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle and Late Childhood

1) During the elementary school years, children grow an average of ________ inches a year.

A) one to two

B) two to three

C) five to seven

D) seven to ten

2) Kimberly is 7 years old. She asks her mother to buy her clothes at the start of the new academic year. However, her mother tells her that she won't buy too many clothes now as Kimberly will grow them out soon. She expects Kimberly, on an average, to gain ________ pounds per year during middle and late childhood.

A) 1 to 2

B) 2 to 3

C) 5 to 7

D) 7 to 10

3) During elementary school years, head circumference and waist circumference

A) increase in relation to body height.

B) decrease in relation to body weight.

C) increase in relation to body weight.

D) decrease in relation to body height.

4) Advances in the ________ of the brain are linked to children's ________.

A) parietal lobe; peripheral vision

B) occipital lobe; improved spatial skills

C) prefrontal cortex; improved attention, reasoning, and cognitive control

D) temporal lobe; hand-eye coordination and pincer grasp

5) The improvement of fine motor skills during middle and late childhood is due to

A) increased myelination of the central nervous system.

B) advances in the prefrontal cortex.

C) an increase in the neurotransmitter dopamine.

D) a simultaneous process in which axons in the brain die, while dendrites in the brain grow and branch out.

6) Eight-year-old Ella can use scissors to cut small paper dolls out of craft paper, something she could not do at age three. What best accounts for her improving dexterity?

A) increased cortical thickening in the temporal lobe

B) increased myelination of the central nervous system

C) increased bone ossification

D) increased muscle development

7) During a workshop for mothers, one of the topics of discussion was the increasing use of cell phones and other gadgets by children. During the session, the speaker requested parents to monitor their children's screen time and stressed the importance of exercise in a child's physical development. She requested parents to exercise more often so that their children would be encouraged to spend less time with their gadgets and more time involved in physical activities. Which of the following statements explains why the speaker put forth this request?

A) Studies show that screen time is associated with higher levels of language skills and cognitive control.

B) Studies show that a higher level of screen time increases the risk of obesity for low- and high-activity children.

C) Studies show that screen time is linked with high activity and stable sleep patterns in children.

D) Studies show that screen time is associated with higher connectivity between brain regions.

8) Sammy, a 9-year-old girl, is overweight. She is constantly teased and tormented by other children in school. Her parents try to cheer her up by telling her that they were also overweight when they were young and even now they are overweight but they don't worry about what others say about them. Based on the given information, which of the following is the primary cause for Sammy being overweight?

A) Sammy spends most of her day playing on her computer.

B) Sammy's meal times are irregular.

C) Sammy does not exercise as regularly as her parents.

D) Sammy's parents are overweight.

9) A learning disability

A) resides in a single, specific brain location.

B) is primarily the result of inadequate intellectual functioning.

C) does not involve understanding or using spoken languages.

D) is not primarily the result of visual, hearing, or motor disabilities.

10) Which of the following statements is true about learning disability?

A) Girls are more likely to be referred by teachers for treatment because of troublesome behavior.

B) About three times as many boys as girls are classified as having a learning disability.

C) Girls have a greater biological vulnerability than boys to be diagnosed with a learning disability.

D) Learning disabilities reside in a single, specific brain location in all individuals.

11) Dana and Delma are discussing gender and the identification of learning disabilities. Dana believes that there is evidence that supports that gender does play a role in identifying learning disabilities, whereas Delma opposes this view. Which of the following statements, if true, would support Dana's view?

A) Boys have a greater biological vulnerability for learning disabilities than girls.

B) Girls are more likely to be referred by teachers for treatment than boys.

C) Girls' education is given priority in schools and homes.

D) Learning disabilities are more difficult to detect in boys than in girls.

12) Sabine is in the second grade. Compared to the other kids in her class, she finds it very challenging to read or spell simple words. Which of the following learning disabilities does Sabine suffer from?

A) attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)

B) dysgraphia

C) dyslexia

D) dyscalculia

13) Marshall is in the fourth grade. He finds it hard to keep up with his classmates' writing speed. His handwriting is illegible. Therefore, neither his teachers nor his parents can read his notes. He also makes numerous spelling errors because of his inability to match sounds and letters. Marshall likely suffers from ________.

A) dyspraxia

B) dysgraphia

C) dyslexia

D) dyscalculia

14) Sandra is a nine-year-old girl. She was always the last student in class to finish assignments because she could only write slowly, and even then, her writing would be virtually illegible and riddled with spelling mistakes. Her teacher referred her to a psychologist who diagnosed her with a learning disability called

A) ADHD.

B) dysgraphia.

C) ASD.

D) dyscalculia.

15) Terence has a learning disability that involves difficulty in math computation. This disability is also known as developmental arithmetic disorder. On the other hand, Mindy, his classmate, finds it extremely challenging to read or spell simple words. Based on the given information, which of the following statements is true?

A) Both Terence and Mindy have ADHD.

B) Terence has dysgraphia, whereas Mindy has dyscalculia.

C) Terence has ADHD, whereas Mindy has dysgraphia.

D) Terence has dyscalculia, whereas Mindy has dyslexia.

16) Samuel is an 8-year-old boy. He has difficulty solving numerical problems. Hence, he is not able to solve any of the Math tests given by his teacher. His teacher gave him extra assignments and made him attend some remedial classes so that he can improve, but these did not help. His parents finally took him to a doctor, and the doctor diagnosed him with a learning disability called ________, or developmental arithmetic disorder.

A) dyscalculia

B) dysgraphia

C) dyslexia

D) dyspraxia

17) Carl's son has been diagnosed with a learning disability. Since then, Carl has spent a significant amount of time understanding the causes of his disability. He learns that even though several research studies have been conducted, the precise causes have not yet been determined. He comes across a research finding that indicates that it is unlikely that learning disabilities

A) reside in a single, specific brain location.

B) are due to problems in integrating information from multiple brain regions.

C) are a result of subtle impairments in brain structures.

D) occur as a result of subtle impairments in brain functions.

18) Interventions with children who have a learning disability often focus on improving

A) math ability.

B) right and left brain functioning.

C) writing skills.

D) reading ability.

19) ________ is a disability in which children consistently show inattentiveness, hyperactivity, and/or impulsivity over a period of time. Some children show a combination of these symptoms.

A) ADHD

B) OCD

C) PTSD

D) EMDR

20) Damon's teachers frequently complain that he disrupts his kindergarten class by fidgeting and moving about all the time. He does not pay any attention to what is being taught in class and behaves impulsively. Considering the presence of the tell-tale characteristics of inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity, Damon's pediatrician diagnosed him with ________ and put him on a combination of Ritalin and behavior therapy.

A) ADHD

B) OCD

C) PTSD

D) EMDR

21) Which of the following statements is true about ADHD in children?

A) The sole cause of ADHD in children is damage to the brain during prenatal development.

B) The number of children diagnosed and treated for ADHD has increased substantially in recent decades.

C) Stimulant medication such as Ritalin is effective in improving the attention of children with ADHD to the levels seen in children without ADHD.

D) Doctors recommend avoiding exercise in all forms for children with ADHD.

22) Anne, a 10-year-old girl, has been diagnosed with ADHD. Which of the following scenarios would have most likely caused this disability?

A) Anne had a high birth weight.

B) Anne has poor discipline at home.

C) Anne was a victim of verbal and physical abuse during her childhood.

D) Anne's mother smoked cigarettes and consumed alcohol frequently while pregnant.

23) A recent study revealed that peak thickness of the cerebral cortex occurs ________ in children with ADHD than in children without ADHD.

A) in adulthood

B) in infancy

C) three years later

D) two years earlier

24) Jana's doctor is treating her for ADHD. Which of the following treatment plans would her doctor most likely recommend to achieve better results?

A) a combination of stimulant medication and sedatives

B) primarily stimulant medication

C) primarily behavior management

D) a combination of stimulant medication and behavior management

25) From the following options, identify the disorder that consists of serious, persistent problems involving relationships, aggression, depression, and fears associated with personal or school matters, as well as other inappropriate socioemotional characteristics. Approximately eight percent of children who have a disability and require an individualized education plan fall into this classification.

A) autism

B) ADHD

C) emotional and behavioral disorders

D) learning disorders

26) ________ is a severe developmental disorder that has its onset in the first three years of life and includes deficiencies in social relationships, abnormalities in communication, and restricted, repetitive, and stereotyped patterns of behavior.

A) Asperger syndrome

B) ADHD

C) Autistic disorder

D) ICF syndrome

27) Three-year-old Jared was taken to the doctor by his parents who were concerned by his seeming lack of attachment to those around him. Jared hardly spoke a word to his parents and would not respond when his parents called out to him. His parents arranged play dates with other children his age so that Jared could mingle with other kids and play with them. However, Jared would instead go to a corner and spend all day preoccupied with bouncing his ball. After a thorough investigation, his pediatrician diagnosed him with

A) fragile X syndrome.

B) ADHD.

C) autistic disorder.

D) ICF syndrome.

28) ________ is a relatively mild autism spectrum disorder in which the child has relatively good verbal language skills, milder nonverbal language problems, and a restricted range of interests and relationships.

A) Asperger syndrome

B) Fragile X syndrome

C) Down syndrome

D) ICF syndrome

29) What causes autism spectrum disorders?

A) improper family socialization

B) brain dysfunction with abnormalities in brain structure and neurotransmitters

C) damage to the prefrontal cortex of the brain

D) childhood immunizations

30) The Education for All Handicapped Children Act, enacted in 1975, required that

A) all students with disabilities be brought into mainstream schools.

B) parents of children with disabilities provide homeschooling for their children.

C) all students with disabilities be given a free, appropriate public education.

D) a standard curriculum be provided for students with and without disabilities.

31) A(n) ________ is a written statement that spells out a program that is specifically tailored for a student with a disability.

A) tailored education plan (TEP)

B) individualized education plan (IEP)

C) exclusive education plan (EEP)

D) disabilities education plan (DEP)

32) The ________ is a setting that is as similar as possible to the one in which children who do not have a disability are educated.

A) ideal learning environment (ILE)

B) special learning environment (SLE)

C) least discriminating environment (LDE)

D) least restrictive environment (LRE)

33) Jacob is a third grader and has a disability that has caused him to be separated from his peers during the school day. Recently, Jacob was moved to the regular third-grade classroom. This is an instance of

A) transforming.

B) transitioning.

C) incorporation.

D) inclusion.

34) Sadie has a learning disability and is being educated in the least restrictive environment possible. This means that Sadie

A) is given great freedom and few rules.

B) is placed in as regular a classroom as possible.

C) has significant input into the development of her educational goals.

D) spends part of her time in a regular classroom and part of her time in a special education classroom.

35) In relation to the cognitive development theory, Piaget proposed that the concrete operational stage lasts from approximately ________ years of age.

A) three to five

B) five to seven

C) seven to eleven

D) ten to thirteen

36) A child is presented with two identical balls of clay. The experimenter rolls one ball into a long, thin shape; the other remains in its original ball form. The child is then asked if there is more clay in the ball or in the long, thin piece of clay. If the child answers the problem correctly but cannot use abstract reasoning yet, the child most likely is in which stage of Piaget's cognitive development theory?

A) sensorimotor stage

B) preoperational stage

C) formal operational stage

D) concrete operational stage

37) Children who have reached the concrete operational stage are capable of ________, which is the ability to order stimuli along a quantitative dimension, such as length.

A) centration

B) seriation

C) reversibility

D) classification

38) Luis is able to organize coins in a row from the largest in size to the smallest. His newfound ability is called

A) centration.

B) seriation.

C) reversibility.

D) classification.

39) Byron can take sticks of different lengths and put them all in order from shortest to longest. He can also discern that if stick A is longer than B and B is longer than C, then A is longer than C. This ability to logically combine relations to understand certain conclusions is

A) seriation.

B) transitivity.

C) transduction.

D) classification.

40) ________ develops more rapidly during early childhood, and ________ develops more rapidly during middle and late childhood.

A) Long-term memory; short-term memory

B) Short-term memory; long-term memory

C) Knowledge; expertise

D) Expertise; knowledge

41) Compared with novices, experts have

A) poorer overall memory regardless of their area of expertise.

B) acquired extensive knowledge about a particular content area.

C) less experience in their area of expertise.

D) lower levels of motivation.

42) If the word "win" is on a list of words a child is asked to remember, the child might think of the last time he won a pony race with a friend. This is an example of

A) rehearsal.

B) organization.

C) inclusion.

D) elaboration.

43) Which of the following is a strategy for improving children's memory skills?

A) Avoid repetition of the same instructional information.

B) Embed memory-relevant language when instructing children.

C) Motivate children to remember material by memorizing it.

D) Discourage children from engaging in mental imagery.

44) A teacher uses pictures to teach her students about a particular concept. She is confident that doing so will help the children remember the concept easily. Identify the strategy that the teacher is using to improve her students' memory.

A) encouraging elaboration

B) engaging in mental imagery

C) motivating students to remember the concept by understanding it rather than memorizing it

D) repeating the concept multiple times

45) At some point during the early elementary school years, children begin to use ________ more and, according to fuzzy trace theory, this contributes to the improved memory and reasoning of older children.

A) verbatim traces

B) elaboration

C) verbal traces

D) gist

46) According to fuzzy trace theory, ________ consists of the precise details of the information.

A) the gist

B) the verbatim memory trace

C) the fuzzy trace

D) mental imagery

47) When a person thinks reflectively and productively and evaluates evidence, he or she is engaging in

A) critical thinking.

B) metacognition.

C) cognitive monitoring.

D) control processes.

48) ________ refers to being alert, mentally present, and cognitively flexible while going through life's everyday activities and tasks.

A) Mindlessness

B) Mindfulness

C) Elasticity

D) Creativity

49) Emily has the ability to think about things in novel and unusual ways; this allows her to come up with unique solutions to problems. This ability is called ________ thinking.

A) logical

B) analytical

C) critical

D) creative

50) ________ thinking characterizes the kind of thinking that is required on conventional tests of intelligence.

A) Convergent

B) Creative

C) Divergent

D) Abstract

51) The type of thinking that produces many answers to the same question is called ________ thinking. This kind of thinking characterizes creativity.

A) divergent

B) convergent

C) oblique

D) finite

52) "What would you do if you could be invisible for a day?" is an example of a question that has many possible answers and fosters ________ thinking.

A) divergent

B) convergent

C) critical

D) oblique

53) ________ involves knowing about knowing.

A) Cognition

B) Brainstorming

C) Metacognition

D) Metadata

54) Knowledge about memory is known as

A) metamemory.

B) working memory.

C) implicit memory.

D) metadata.

55) Megan, who is eight years old, has a test tomorrow. "It's an easy test," she tells her mother. "I just have to recognize a bunch of stuff on a chart. I finished studying for it yesterday. I know that I'll remember everything I need to know." Megan is exhibiting her

A) brainstorming ability.

B) creative thinking.

C) metamemory.

D) metadata.

56) Michael Pressley believes that the key to education is helping students to

A) develop social skills.

B) learn creativity.

C) learn a repertoire of problem-solving strategies.

D) distinguish between convergent and divergent thinking.

57) Mental age (MA) is

A) the age that an individual mentally identifies himself at.

B) the age at which an individual attains cognitive maturity.

C) an individual's level of mental development relative to others.

D) an individual's age at the time of peak cortical thickness.

58) A person's mental age divided by chronological age (CA) and multiplied by 100 would indicate that person's

A) emotional quotient.

B) intelligence quotient.

C) level of mental development relative to others.

D) cognitive maturity.

59) Sergio's mental age is eight, but his chronological age is nine. We would say that Sergio's IQ

A) is 100.

B) is more than 100.

C) is less than 100.

D) cannot be determined from the information provided.

60) Who created the concept of intelligence quotient?

A) Alfred Binet

B) William Stern

C) David Wechsler

D) Robert J. Sternberg

61) Sally's mental age is 12, but her chronological age is 10. Sally's IQ is ________.

A) 200

B) 100

C) 80

D) 120

62) If intelligence is assumed to be normally distributed, which of the following would you expect to find in the overall population?

A) more people of high intelligence than of low intelligence

B) more people of moderate intelligence than of high or low intelligence

C) more people of high intelligence than of moderate or low intelligence

D) more people of low intelligence than of moderate or high intelligence

63) Amber is given a Stanford-Binet intelligence test. Her mental age is determined to be 14, and her chronological age is 10. Which of the following is true of Amber?

A) Her IQ score is 86.

B) Her IQ score is about average.

C) Her IQ score is below the majority of the population.

D) Her IQ score is above the majority of the population.

64) The ________ not only provide an overall IQ score but also yield several composite indexes that allow the examiner to quickly determine the areas in which a child is strong or weak.

A) Wechsler scales

B) Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scales

C) Stanford-Binet tests

D) Apgar Scales

65) Which of the following is a type of intelligence identified in Robert J. Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence?

A) cultural intelligence

B) practical intelligence

C) spatial intelligence

D) verbal intelligence

66) Although Casey scores only about average on standardized intelligence tests, she is street-smart and has excellent social skills and good common sense. Given a problem, Casey will try her best to arrive at a solution. Most of her friends and family appreciate this about her as she seems to be able to find ways to get things done on her own. In the context of Sternberg's theories, she has ________ intelligence.

A) spatial

B) practical

C) analytical

D) interpersonal

67) Robert J. Sternberg's triarchic theory and Howard Gardner's theory of intelligence are examples of the idea that

A) intelligence is a general ability.

B) there are three types of intelligence.

C) intelligence consists of a number of specific abilities.

D) culture plays an important role in the development of intelligence.

68) Howard Gardner suggests that there are ________ types of intelligence.

A) four

B) six

C) eight

D) eleven

69) Colin does not get good grades on standardized tests and does not seem to be making an effort to improve his grades. He is more interested in martial arts and has earned a black belt in this field. In the context of Gardner's theories, Colin has ________.

A) spatial skills

B) intrapersonal skills

C) bodily-kinesthetic skills

D) naturalist skills

70) According to Howard Gardner's theories, who among the following would need to have good spatial abilities to be successful?

A) journalists and authors

B) theologians and psychologists

C) botanists and landscapers

D) architects and sailors

71) Which of the following is a type of intelligence identified by Howard Gardner?

A) intrapersonal

B) analytical

C) practical

D) creative

72) Nathan Brody and many other researchers have observed that people who excel at one type of intellectual task are

A) likely to underperform in other tasks.

B) evidence that multiple-intelligence approaches are correct.

C) proof that intelligence is a number of specific abilities.

D) likely to excel at other tasks, too.

73) Which of the following statements about IQ or intelligence is true?

A) Modifications in environment have no impact on one's IQ score.

B) Schooling has been shown to have no influence on intelligence.

C) The conception of intelligence is the same across cultures.

D) IQ scores have been rapidly increasing around the world.

74) The worldwide increase in intelligence test scores that has occurred over a short period of time has been called the ________ effect.

A) Binet

B) Goleman

C) Flynn

D) Wechsler

75) Considering how early intervention programs to improve intellectual development have shown marked improvements in the IQ of participants, it can be inferred that the main reason children from low SES families earn lower scores on IQ tests is that

A) the parents have difficulty providing an intellectually stimulating environment for their children.

B) the genes for lower intelligence are passed down from the parents to the children.

C) IQ tests are culture-fair tests.

D) IQ tests fail to test for street-smarts and practical intelligence.

76) It is considered difficult to create culture-fair intelligence tests because they

A) predominantly test the nonverbal skills of the test taker.

B) consider the values that are common to all test takers.

C) reflect the cultures of some test takers more than others.

D) use only standardized test items familiar to all test takers.

77) Aiden is 18 years old. He has always found it harder to cope with his studies than his siblings do. He is always the last to finish any assignment or task in class. In a recent IQ test, his IQ score was 60. Which of the following is true of Aiden?

A) Aiden is gifted.

B) Aiden has an intellectual disability.

C) Aiden is an introvert.

D) Aiden has dyslexia.

78) Which of the following statements is true of children with cultural-familial intellectual disability?

A) Individuals with this type of disability have IQs between 55 and 70.

B) Individuals with this type of disability are highly insensitive to what is expected of them.

C) Individuals with this type of disability often need intangible rewards—praise rather than candy.

D) Individuals with this type of disability can often be identified easily in schools, where they excel in academics.

79) Most people who suffer from organic intellectual disability have IQs between

A) 0 to 50.

B) 0 to 75.

C) 0 to 90.

D) 100 and above.

80) Studies support the conclusion that gifted people tend to be

A) less mature than others, have fewer emotional problems than others, and grow up in a positive family climate.

B) more mature than others, have fewer emotional problems than others, and grow up in a positive family climate.

C) less mature than others, have more emotional problems than others, and grow up in a negative family climate.

D) more mature than others, have more emotional problems than others, and grow up in a negative family climate.

81) The idea that gifted children are maladjusted is a ________, as Lewis Terman found when he conducted an extensive study of 1,500 children whose Stanford-Binet IQs averaged ________.

A) reality; 75

B) reality; 150

C) myth; 75

D) myth; 150

82) Which of the following is the correct definition of intellectual disability?

A) It is a condition of limited mental ability in which the individual (1) has a moderately low IQ, usually above 50 on a traditional intelligence test; (2) has slight trouble adjusting to the demands of everyday life; and (3) first displays these characteristics by age 25.

B) It is a condition of limited mental ability in which the individual (1) has a low IQ, usually above 70 on a traditional intelligence test; (2) has little or no trouble adjusting to the demands of a competitive environment; and (3) first displays these characteristics by age 5.

C) It is a condition of limited mental ability in which the individual (1) has a low IQ, usually below 50 on a traditional intelligence test; (2) has a lot of difficulty adapting to the demands of a competitive environment; and (3) first exhibits these characteristics by age 25.

D) It is a condition of limited mental ability in which the individual (1) has a low IQ, usually below 70 on a traditional intelligence test; (2) has difficulty adapting to the demands of everyday life; and (3) first exhibits these characteristics by age 18.

83) According to Ellen Winner, which of the following refers to a characteristic displayed by gifted children who begin to master an area earlier than their peers?

A) marching to their own drummer

B) maladjustment

C) precocity

D) a passion to master

84) Paul is a gifted pianist. He was always highly motivated to learn and become an artist of consummate skill. According to his mother, Paul always showed an intense and obsessive interest in learning the instrument. He was always self-motivated and never needed to be "pushed" by his parents. What characteristic, as described by Ellen Winner, of gifted children is Paul exhibiting?

A) precocity

B) a passion to master

C) marching to their own drummer

D) vehemence

85) Organic intellectual disability is caused by

A) a genetic disorder or brain damage.

B) being raised by poorly educated parents.

C) an impoverished intellectual environment.

D) traumatic experiences in early childhood.

86) When no evidence of organic brain damage can be found, cases are labeled ________ intellectual disability. Individuals with this type of disability have IQs between 55 and 70.

A) pseudo-social

B) moderate

C) cultural-familial

D) severe

87) Psychologists suspect that ________ often results from growing up in below-average intellectual environment.

A) cultural-familial intellectual disability

B) metabolic syndrome

C) Asperger syndrome

D) transitivity

88) Children with superior talent for something are called

A) gifted.

B) creative.

C) perspicacious.

D) sagacious.

89) Fiona, a ten-year-old girl, is an outstanding flautist and has an IQ of 140. Fiona is

A) an anomaly.

B) gifted.

C) sagacious.

D) maladjusted.

90) Ethan is a gifted 14-year-old boy who has an excellent academic record. He has always scored higher than his classmates in Math and can do computations much faster than any of his classmates. Seeing his potential, his teachers encouraged him to compete in interstate Math tests. He has won several scholarships through these competitions. He recently took an IQ test and found that his score of 140 was much higher than the scores of his classmates. In the light of the findings from Lewis Terman's study of high IQ children, it is likely that Ethan is

A) socially awkward.

B) maladjusted.

C) more mature than others his own age.

D) emotionally insecure.

91) Ellen Winner described three criteria that characterize gifted children. Which of the following is one of these criteria?

A) mindfulness

B) self-confidence

C) easily bored

D) a passion to master

92) Which of the following statements is true of giftedness?

A) Signs of high ability of an individual in a particular area do not manifest themselves at a very young age.

B) Deliberate practice is not required of individuals who become experts in a particular domain.

C) Individuals with world-class status in the arts, mathematics, science, and sports all report strong family support.

D) Individuals who are highly gifted are typically gifted in many domains.

93) By the time children are 11 years old, their vocabulary has increased to approximately

A) 10,000 words.

B) 200,000 words.

C) 40,000 words.

D) 100,000 words.

94) The ________-language approach stresses that reading instruction should parallel a child's natural language learning.

A) assisted

B) remedial

C) complex

D) whole

95) At Jackson Elementary, children are taught to read by making them learn to recognize entire words and sentences and to use the context of the words that are given in the text to guess their meaning. Their reading material consists of stories, poems, newspapers, and magazines. This school is using the ________ approach to reading instruction.

A) assisted-language

B) remedial-language

C) phonics

D) whole-language

96) The ________ approach to reading instruction emphasizes the teaching of basic rules for translating written symbols into sounds.

A) whole-language

B) phonics

C) balanced-instruction

D) morphological

97) Louise is teaching her son to read by helping him sound out letters. She also plays a cartoon where the characters repeat the sounds of each letter. Watching her and the characters in the cartoon pronounce the letters, her son makes the effort to read aloud some of the letters. What approach is Louise using to teach her son?

A) the whole-language approach

B) the phonics approach

C) the balanced-instruction approach

D) the morphological approach

98) Alberta is a school teacher who introduces children to reading by teaching them a rhyme that goes "A for apple, A says ah, B for ball, B says buh," and so on. This exemplifies the ________ approach to reading instruction.

A) whole-language

B) phonics

C) information-processing

D) analytic

99) Which of the following statements represents the current thinking among increasing number of experts in the field of reading?

A) Direct instruction in the whole-language approach is a key aspect of learning to read.

B) Direct instruction in phonics is a key aspect of learning to read.

C) The whole-language approach and the phonics approach are equally effective in teaching children to read.

D) The morphological approach has been shown to be the best way to teach reading.

100) Violet is teaching her 6-year-old child to write sentences. She notices that, most of the time, if he can't spell a word, he makes up his own spelling. Which of the following approaches should she follow to make her son a competent writer over time?

A) She should be overly concerned about how he forms letters and words and should send him for after-school coaching sessions.

B) She should discourage him from writing so that he knows he must pay more attention.

C) She should give him fewer writing opportunities and instructions so that he improves independently.

D) She should encourage him to apply what he has learned in one paper to another paper.

101) Which of the following statements is true about second-language learning?

A) For adolescents and adults, new vocabulary is easier to learn than new sounds or new grammar.

B) Children's ability to pronounce words with a native-like accent in a second language typically increases with age.

C) Sensitive periods for learning a second language are constant across different language systems.

D) Adults tend to learn a second language slower than children, but their final level of second-language attainment is higher.

102) Which of the following statements about children who are bilingual is true?

A) Children who are bilingual have a larger vocabulary in each language than children who are monolingual.

B) Children who are bilingual are better at analytical reasoning than children who are monolingual.

C) Children who are bilingual are less conscious of the structure of spoken language than children who are monolingual.

D) Children who are bilingual have lower cognitive flexibility than children who are monolingual.

103) Before she started school in the United States, Mita, daughter of immigrant parents of Indian origin, used to speak only her native language, Hindi, fluently. She then learned to speak English in school and attained fluency in both Hindi and English. However, as she grew older, she started to feel ashamed of her roots and gave up speaking Hindi altogether. This phenomenon is called ________ bilingualism.

A) subjective

B) relapsed

C) subtractive

D) retractive

104) Tabitha has a learning disability that involves a severe impairment in her ability to read and spell. She most likely has ________.

105) Identify the disability in which individuals consistently show problems in one or more of these areas: inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsivity.

106) The concept that a child with a disability must be educated in a setting that is as similar as possible to settings of children who do not have disabilities is called ________.

107)  ________ is a mental "workbench" where individuals manipulate and assemble information when making decisions, solving problems, and comprehending written and spoken language.

108) Identify the theorist who distinguished between convergent thinking and divergent thinking.

109) Identify the theorist who developed the triarchic theory of intelligence.

110) Identify the theorist who described three criteria that characterize gifted children, whether in art, music, or academic domains: precocity, marching to their own drummer, and a passion to master.

111) Children who have reached the concrete operational stage are also capable of ________, which is the ability to order stimuli along a quantitative dimension (such as length).

112) Which theory states that memory is best understood by considering two types of memory representation: verbatim memory trace and gist?

113) Quinn is asked "How many things can you do with a paper clip?" This kind of question, which can produce many different answers, is a test of ________.

114) If we look at Madeline's mental age and divide it by her chronological age and then multiply it by 100, we are calculating her ________.

115) In the context of language development, the process through which children make progress in understanding how to use language in culturally appropriate ways is called ________.

116) Meghan is a 5-year-old girl. Her mother is teaching her to pronounce words. She shows Meghan the word and the image associated with the word and then says the word out loud while stressing certain parts of the word. What is this approach known as?

117) Discuss height and weight changes that take place during middle and late childhood.

118) Briefly describe the three types of learning disabilities. Discuss the various treatment options. Do you think that educators treat learning disabilities appropriately? Provide reasons for your answer.

119) What are the treatment options available for children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)?

120) Discuss the key features of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA).

121) Compare convergent thinking with divergent thinking. What are some of the causes of decline in creative thinking in children in the United States?

122) According to Robert J. Sternberg, which type of intelligence in students is most likely to be favored in conventional schooling?

123) What are the two types of culture-fair tests that have been devised? What are the barriers to creating culture-fair tests?

124) Define giftedness. Is giftedness a product of heredity or environment? Give one example.

125) What is subtractive bilingualism? Explain with an example. Describe the positive aspects of bilingual education.

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
7
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 7 Childhood Development – Middle
Author:
John Santrock

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