Living Well at Every Stage of Life Chapter 5 Exam Questions - Positive Psychology 4e Complete Test Bank by Shane J. Lopez. DOCX document preview.

Living Well at Every Stage of Life Chapter 5 Exam Questions

Chapter 5: Living Well at Every Stage of Life

Test Bank

Multiple Choice

1. Which group of psychologists is known to approach their research with questions about “what is working” instead of “what is not working?”

A. clinical psychologists

B. developmental psychologists

C. industrial–organizational psychologists

D. vocational psychologists

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Living Well at Every Stage of Life
Difficulty Level: Medium

2. How does the work of developmental psychologists fit in with positive psychology?

A. Their work goes beyond boundaries such as ethnicity or class to concentrate on self-correcting behaviors.

B. They typically take a close look at what is not working in the lives of the people that they are studying.

C. They work almost exclusively with people at the early and final stages of life, to determine which theories hold up over time.

D. They are tasked with examining the everchanging concept of aging, and thus have a hard time maintaining rigor in their studies.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: Living Well at Every Stage of Life
Difficulty Level: Medium

3. Professionals that recognize naturally occurring personal and environmental resources that help youth overcome life’s challenges are referred to as ______.

A. positive youth developmentalists

B. early childhood researchers

C. adolescent counselors

D. resilience researchers

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: Living Well at Every Stage of Life
Difficulty Level: Easy

4. What task differentiates positive youth developmentalists from resilience researchers?

A. Positive youth developmentalists develop research on resilience and related constructs.

B. Resilience researchers have oversight of the development of programs related to their work.

C. Positive youth developmentalists design and conduct programs based on resilience research.

D. Resilience researchers use the empirical data for creating resilience programs.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: Living Well at Every Stage of Life
Difficulty Level: Hard

5. In the case study of “Jackson,” how was the child’s ability to rebound from abuse was made possible?

A. direct intervention by professional psychologists

B. the ability to share his story with his teachers

C. the caring shown by the minister at his church

D. the availability of a safe place to sit and heal

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Case of Jackson
Difficulty Level: Medium

6. Which of these do the authors identify as the parsimonious definition of resilience?

A. “hitting bottom”

B. “bouncing back”

C. “getting sacked”

D. “pulling through”

Cognitive Domain:

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Easy

7. Masten, Cutuli, Herbers, and Reed refer to resilience as ______.

A. the ability to adjust to life’s harsh circumstances

B. being flexible while facing life-threatening phenomena, particularly natural disasters

C. someone’s ability to psychologically compensate for the harmful actions that can occur throughout their life

D. a class of phenomena characterized by patterns of positive adaptation in the context of significant adversity or risk

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?

Difficulty Level: Medium

8. Which of the following best exemplifies one of the two judgments that are used to diagnose resilience?

A. A person is displaced by a hurricane and must start life anew elsewhere.

B. A person earns a C on an important exam and must retake it.

C. A person breaks their arm after a biking accident.

D. A person finds a job after a month without working.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

9. Although scholars agree on what needs to be present for a person to be considered resilient, what debate is currently taking place?

A. the existence of resilient adults

B. the ability to study resilience

C. the universality of protective factors

D. the definition of protective factors

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

10. Which of the following statements best describes one of the two dimensions of resilience?

A. Dimension 1 consists of the development of coping strategies with people from one’s community.

B. Dimension 2 involves the relative positivity of the life outcomes that stem from the use of coping strategies.

C. Dimension 1 is focused on how people draw success after failure to use a coping strategy.

D. Dimension 2 emphasizes the need to discontinue the use of unhealthy coping strategies.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Hard

11. One potential experience of adversity is using risky coping methods and obtaining expected negative outcomes, which is termed as ______.

A. struggling

B. fortunate

C. resilient

D. dysfunctional

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Easy

12. Which of the following is something that resilience researchers look out for when examining a child’s postthreat functioning?

A. sustained friendships

B. a return to normal functioning

C. development of new coping strategies

D. physiological signs of stress

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

13. At what level do observers expect children’s functioning to be at after experiencing adversity?

A. a normal level of functioning

B. a below normal level of functioning

C. an above average level of functioning

D. a shift from high to low levels of functioning

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

14. The most celebrated cases of resilience often depict an individual overcoming overwhelming circumstances to become stronger. Considering this, which of the following individuals would be considered resilient?

A. An individual who had average grades in high school but is performing well in college

B. An individual who was sexually molested as a child but now advocates publicly for abused women

C. An individual who experienced a lot of conflict at home and now lives with a friend’s family

D. An individual who was diagnosed with a learning disability and did not finish high school

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

15. What major force is often ignored in the conceptualization of resilience outcomes?

A. family

B. number of childhood risk factors

C. culture

A. socioeconomic status

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Easy

16. According to your authors, the question that is often disagreed upon in the conceptualization of resilience outcomes is ______.

A. the role of the family in fostering resiliency

B. whether the child has experienced risk or adversity

C. the role of culture and the expectation of the youths’ community

D. the degree to which the child “bounces back.”

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

17. What is important about having awareness of unconscious or conscious stereotypes while conducting resilience research?

A. Awareness of stereotypes can allow for researchers to further investigate those specific assumptions.

B. Understanding whether stereotypes are unconscious or conscious can help with determining who should be conducting research.

C. The stereotypes can lead to asking less questions that allow groups to show their true strengths.

D. If the groups being researched are aware of the stereotypes, then their behaviors can become unpredictable.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Hard

18. How did Cabrera and Padilla’s research reflect the principle of avoiding biased topics and questioning in research?

A. They asked generic questions that were unlikely to be viewed as biased.

B. They avoided studying factors that led to poor achievement and instead examined factors that promoted achievement.

C. They first asked the people being researched if their questions or topics were biased in any way.

D. They investigated public perception of the groups they were researching and asked about how to avoid poor achievement.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Hard

19. In a study investigating resilience in American Indian adolescence, what phenomenon did researchers discover was significantly linked to resilience?

A. the ability to adapt to the surrounding mainstream culture

B. having strong ties to their American Indian heritage

C. having greater access to bitter education

D. being removed from negative aspects of life on reservations

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

20. Which of the following is an example of helping youth develop ties to cultural communities to help increase resilience?

A. helping African-American children research African culture

B. allowing teenagers to create art and place it around their neighborhoods

C. showing middle-schoolers how to handle bullying in a positive manner

D. organizing a block party with educational features for neighborhood children

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

21. Which term is used for meeting the social, educational, cultural, and occupational expectations of society?

A. internal regulation

B. external modification

C. internal adjustment

D. external adaptation

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Easy

22. Researchers are split on whether it is necessary to determine internal adaptation, also known as someone’s ______.

A. happiness

B. positive psychological well-being

C. degree of life satisfaction

D. level of resilience

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

23. Which two primary characteristics accounted for the resiliency of at-risk children in the Werner and Smith study involving children born on the island of Kauai?

A. an outgoing disposition and several sources of support

B. a positive outlook and a wealthy family member

C. a wealthy family member and several sources of support

D. a healthy lifestyle and a parent who was home during the day

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Medium

24. Which of these factors would most of the participants in Dr. Werner’s study have claimed to help raise their resiliency?

A. earning money from participating in the study to afford necessities

B. having a high number of friends in grade school

C. receiving support from a caring adult, such as a teacher

D. receiving a broad and effective education to increase general intelligence

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Medium

25. In the end, what percentage of the Kauai children in Dr. Werner’s study bounced back from their challenges?

A. 50%

B. 30%

C. 70%

D. 80%

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Easy

26. In the study of children on the Hawaiian island of Kauai, what factor affected one third of children who were considered as at-risk for academic and social problems?

A. development of intellectual disabilities

B. deficits in family support and home environments

C. onset of neurodevelopmental disorders

D. ability to access educational resources outside of school

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Medium

27. What does the study by D’Imperio, Dubow, and Ippolito demonstrate about resilience literature?

A. Similar traits of resilience are found among most cultural groups.

B. Resilience is harder to study in advantaged groups.

C. There are few universal truths in the resilience literature.

D. Resilience tends to be found in eastern cultures more often.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: Resilience Resources
Difficulty Level: Hard

28. What do the authors suggest has grown due to the absence in rigorous research about resilience?

A. many resilience programs

B. disorders related to the lack of resilience

C. pseudoscientific resilience research

D. spiritual awareness

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Resilience Resources
Difficulty Level: Medium

29. What did Doll and Lyon note about resilience programs for young people?

A. Youth tend not to take the programs seriously until they age more.

B. Young people learn about using life skills that are not reinforced in their cultures.

C. Programs focused on why resiliency is important tend to be more effective.

D. Resiliency is viewed as something hard to achieve by young people.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Resilience Resources
Difficulty Level: Medium

30. People do best in life when developing coping skills during ______.

A. early adulthood, when they become independent

B. the beginning of their career

C. childhood, particularly the first 10 years

D. the stages that they need the most care from others

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: An Excerpt From Finding Strength: How to Overcome Anything
Difficulty Level: Easy

31. How might an individual demonstrate resilience in the event of a natural disaster if they are conscientious and goal-oriented?

A. They would not stick to specific plans due to unpredictability.

B. They would assume that authority figures are well-trained and follow along with the authority figures.

C. They would move away from the area entirely to avoid the natural disaster in the first place.

D. They would set up an emergency plan in case a natural disaster struck.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: An Excerpt From Finding Strength: How to Overcome Anything
Difficulty Level: Medium

32. What is something that a person who has low self-awareness can do to build resilience?

A. Ask others to give advice on what the person should do.

B. Learn to recognize their own strengths.

C. Ignore negative traits or circumstances to avoid the need to build resilience.

D. Observe their friends who have high self-awareness.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: An Excerpt From Finding Strength: How to Overcome Anything
Difficulty Level: Medium

33. Teachers, counselors, and psychologists who are committed to positive youth development focus on ______.

A. academic success

B. building positive relationships with peers

C. developing children’s social skills

D. each child’s strengths and potential

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Easy

34. Which of the following is an outcome targeted by positive youth development programs?

A. greater occupational success

B. effective critical thinking skills

C. rewarding bonding

D. increased cultural awareness

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Easy

35. What do the authors suggest for what is necessary in evaluating positive youth development?

A. Evaluations must be conducted in different ways to assure that these programs are truly positive.

B. Understanding that the benefits of these programs are universal in many ways.

C. Ensuring that children in these programs are mostly or completely deemed at-risk.

D. Rigorous controls that will eliminate other variables that can affect the outcomes of these programs.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

36. Which of the following statements best describes the counterargument to using positive youth development programs?

A. Most youth who are in these programs do not find these programs necessary.

B. The continued focus on decreasing problems has taken away from reinforcing positive growth.

C. There is no effective way to determine which programs are useful because there are too many.

D. These programs do not garner enough interest from the government or donors to be studied extensively.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Hard

37. How does finding strength ethnic identity affect the academic performance of White American students?

A. There is a positive correlation in white American students’ ethnic pride and their academic performance.

B. Performance due to stronger ethnic identity in White American students exceeds performances for other ethnic groups who also show strong ethnic identity.

C. Stronger ethnic identity has a negative correlation with academic performance for White American students.

D. No links have been observed in strength of ethnic identity and academic performance in White American students.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

38. African-American and Mexican youth have shown better self-esteem and academic performance, respectively, due to ______.

A. a strong ethnic identity

B. strong religiosity

C. greater multi-cultural competence

D. decreased conflict within communities

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

39. What is the implication of the study on self-transformation in African-American and Latino/Latina youth?

A. Self-transformation has been shown to be useful on an individual basis, but not on a group basis.

B. It exposes harmful stereotypes and can be used to find ways to stop advantaged group members from believing in those stereotypes.

C. Exploring broad and diverse groups can bring about more information on how to enrich development of youth in minority groups.

D. It demonstrates that minority groups are currently struggling to find greater success without outside intervention.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Hard

40. What do the authors imply that slogans aimed at empowering women can result in?

A. Men may perceive the slogans as slights against their competence.

B. Women may feel as though their failures cannot be attributed to the systems of the world.

C. Young women may view the slogans as patronizing gestures.

D. Women may feel empowered by the slogans depending on which ethnic groups are represented in the messages.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

41. How can positive youth development programs be helpful in impoverished communities of color?

A. The programs serve as an alternative way to educate children outside of traditional schooling.

B. By offsetting the inherent risks of being raised in such a community.

C. Parents can become involved in the programs and create a family atmosphere.

D. Volunteers from the community can be viewed as mentors and improve relationships between community members

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

42. What contrast exists between studies on African-American youth from studies on Asian-American and European youth?

A. Studies on Asian-American and European youth are typically done with qualitative methods.

B. Studies on African-American youth tend to emphasize relationships with authority figures.

C. Studies on Asian-American and European youth demonstrate how researchers have ignored these groups.

D. Studies on African-American youth often highlight deficits and negative outcomes.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Hard

43. What unintended consequence can occur from articles that attempt to be helpful toward populations that are struggling?

A. There might be stigmatization or the creation of deficit models that make recovery difficult.

B. There can be too much attention toward these struggling groups, making it hard to find mutually agreed-upon decisions.

C. Struggling groups can feel patronized from receiving help from outside of their group.

D. Over-emphasis on the success of struggling groups can take away from their issues that need to be addressed.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

44. Through studying positive development in Finnish youth, what implication became apparent?

A. Positive youth development stemmed from early intervention at or before the age of 8.

B. Youth who relied on each other for guidance showed greater development.

C. Allowing youth to make their own decisions can lead to greater feelings of empowerment in other areas..

D. Development programs should be paired with traditional education to be effective and maintain success.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Hard

45. Which program that matches low-income children and adolescents with adult volunteers who are committed to providing caring and supportive relationships?

A. the Penn Resiliency Program

B. Big Brothers and Big Sisters

C. YMCA/YWCA

D. Boy’s and Girl’s Club

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development Programs That Work
Difficulty Level: Easy

46. Which positive youth development program focuses on awareness of thought patterns and on modifying the explanatory style of students?

A. Big Brothers and Big Sisters

B. Boy’s and Girl’s Club

C. YMCA/YWCA

D. the Penn Resiliency Program

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development Programs That Work
Difficulty Level: Easy

47. The Changing Lives Program aims to be ______.

A. compatible with school classrooms

B. inclusive of both gender and ethnicity

C. a resource for low-income children and adolescents

D. a program to develop vocational skills

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development Programs That Work
Difficulty Level: Medium

48. Within the Chickering model, what is the primary developmental goal for college students?

A. developmental competence

B. moving through autonomy toward interdependence

C. developing mature interpersonal relationships

D. managing emotions

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development Programs That Work
Difficulty Level: Medium

49. What conclusion should be drawn from Terman’s longitudinal study on giftedness?

A. Gifted children tend to do well even when facing moderately negative life circumstances throughout their lives.

B. Higher IQ scores were related to greater success in sociability, relationships, and occupation.

C. Having a higher IQ as a child does not assure that they will have success as an adult or better mental health.

D. People with high intelligence adjust to negative life circumstances in a healthy manner if they are not informed that they have high intelligence.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: The Trajectories of Precocious Children
Difficulty Level: Hard

50. Which of the following is the best example of someone undergoing the task of developing an identity?

A. A person starts to build a broader social circle.

B. A person begins to follow their own political stances instead of their parent’s stance.

C. A person becomes more engaged with their career and coworkers.

D. A person passes down meaningful information about life to others.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Are the Primary Tasks of Adulthood?
Difficulty Level: Medium

51. Which task of adult development is associated with building a broader social circle and a mentoring of the next generation?

A. career consolidation

B. integrity

C. keeper of meaning

D. generativity

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Are the Primary Tasks of Adulthood?
Difficulty Level: Easy

52. Someone who is willing to share their wisdom of the workings of the world and people by telling folktales is demonstrating which primary task of adulthood?

A. keeper of meaning

B. generativity

C. integrity

D. identity

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: What Are the Primary Tasks of Adulthood?
Difficulty Level: Medium

53. What do the authors indicate was notable in the story about Keyonna being able to convince her team leader to change her role at her job?

A. She continued working past retirement age.

B. She identified what she didn’t like about her job.

C. She developed a relationship with her team leader.

D. She anticipated the need for flexibility in her sixth decade of life.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Case of Keyonna
Difficulty Level: Medium

54. According to the MacArthur study of successful aging, what are the three components of successful aging?

A. avoiding disease, engaging with life, and maintaining functioning

B. avoiding disease, contributing to the next generation, and remaining financially independent

C. engaging with life, contributing to the next generation, and avoiding dementia

D. engaging with life, maintaining functioning, and remaining financially independent

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Successful Aging?
Difficulty Level: Easy

55. Which of the following has been shown to be a secondary theme linked to successful aging?

A. positive experiences as a child

B. number of family members

C. higher levels of education

D. political stances

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Successful Aging?
Difficulty Level: Medium

56. What does the case of Tony illustrate?

A. how difficult retirement is for most people

B. retired people often face many health challenges

C. generativity through perpetuating talents in a different role

D. struggles that people face due to an imposed retirement age

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Case of Tony
Difficulty Level: Medium

57. What difference exists between socioemotional and instrumental support?

A. An individual can use social displays of support or practical displays of support.

B. Whether someone likes and/or loves another person or gives assistance to someone in need.

C. If support is given to someone in an individual’s community or outside of the community.

D. A person can support someone through a social cause or through volunteer work.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: The MacArthur Foundation Study of Successful Aging
Difficulty Level: Hard

58. Considering the study on the pattern of changes in the activities of the elderly, which of the following factors was shown to serve as a buffer to declining health?

A. marriage

B. hope

C. occupation

D. attractiveness

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: The MacArthur Foundation Study of Successful Aging
Difficulty Level: Easy

59. What might the studies on MacArthur studies and Valiant study indicate about successful aging?

A. People tend to age successfully if they are born in eastern countries.

B. Transcendence is key to successful aging and is seen across cultures.

C. Living around multiple family members is an underlying factor in successful aging.

D. Successful aging may be due to having positive emotional experiences in early life.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: The Adult Development Study
Difficulty Level: Hard

60. As indicated in Valiant’s study, which of the following was a lifestyle predictor of healthy aging?

A. engaging in low-effort hobbies

B. racial or ethnic background.

C. coping adaptively with mature defenses

D. avoidance of assisted living before the age of 70

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: The Adult Development Study
Difficulty Level: Medium

True/False

1. Positive youth developmentalists apply the research done by resilience researchers.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: Living Well At Every Stage of Life
Difficulty Level: Easy

2. Resilience can occur without exposure to adverse conditions or circumstances.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

3. A person’s environment influences the type of coping method that they use.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Easy

4. Stronger ethnic identity has a low level of influence on resiliency across cultures.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Medium

5. The study on children in Kauai demonstrated that building a relationship with supportive adult can be important for developing resiliency.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Medium

6. Research indicates that resilient traits are utilized similarly across cultures.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Resilience Resources
Difficulty Level: Medium

7. Deborah Blum indicated that the initial development of coping methods and resiliency can occur throughout one’s lifetime.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: An Excerpt From Finding Strength: How to Overcome Anything
Difficulty Level: Easy

8. One of the outcomes of positive youth development includes fostering spirituality.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Easy

9. Positive youth programs have developed to the point of avoiding unintended consequences such as stigmatizing minority groups.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Medium

10. Children in impoverished neighborhoods can flourish despite the lack of affordability for traditional afterschool programs, due to positive youth development programs.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Is Positive Youth Development?
Difficulty Level: Easy

11. Big Brothers and Big Sisters can be described as a positive youth development program that emphasizes the promotion of growth.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development Programs That Work
Difficulty Level: Medium

12. Research indicates that IQ was a predictor of adult success and good decisions related to health.

Cognitive Domain: Comprehension

Answer Location: The Trajectories of Precocious Children
Difficulty Level: Medium

13. The life task of career consolidation requires the development of a social identity.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: What Are the Primary Tasks of Adulthood?
Difficulty Level: Easy

14. Due to the increased physiological demands, maintaining high cognitive functioning is an optional component of successful aging.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: The MacArthur Foundation Study of Successful Aging
Difficulty Level: Easy

15. Across studies, social support has been shown to promote successful aging.

Cognitive Domain: Knowledge

Answer Location: The Adult Development Study
Difficulty Level: Easy

Essay

1. Identify the ways in which culture influences the concept of resiliency.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Resilience?
Difficulty Level: Hard

2. Based on the findings in Emmy Werner’s longitudinal study of at-risk children in Kauai, create a description of a person who develops resiliency despite facing harsh circumstances.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: The Roots of Resilience Research
Difficulty Level: Medium

3. Describe the possible methods, activities, or services that a positive youth development program can use to attain four of the nine positive outcomes that are targeted by these programs.

Cognitive Domain: Application

Answer Location: Positive Youth Development
Difficulty Level: Medium

4. How do Terman’s longitudinal study of giftedness and Valliant’s research on the tasks of adulthood give insight into adult development?

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Are the Primary Tasks of Adulthood?
Difficulty Level: Hard

5. Describe the factors that are prevalent across studies on adult aging, along with the methodological issue that should be considered in future studies on aging.

Cognitive Domain: Analysis

Answer Location: What Is Successful Aging? | The MacArthur Foundation Study of Successful Aging | The Adult Development Study
Difficulty Level: Hard

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
5
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 5 Living Well at Every Stage of Life
Author:
Shane J. Lopez

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