Test Bank Chapter 12 Cognitive development - Psychology (Euro Ed.) | Test Bank by Jarvis by Jarvis, Okami. DOCX document preview.

Test Bank Chapter 12 Cognitive development

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 1

1) Though newborn babies require a long period of time to develop language skills, evidence suggests that, while in the womb

a. they begin to distinguish language sounds from non-language sounds

b. they can identify the scent of their mother while she is reading

c. they can distinguish between their mother’s and father’s voices

d. they can distinguish between their mother’s voice and a strange female’s voice

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 2

2) Which of the following is true regarding the milestones of an infant’s motor development?

a. At least 50 percent of babies will have attempted walking by 6 months.

b. The age at which one child achieves a milestone does not necessarily predict the age that he or she will achieve the next.

c. The age at which a child first begins to walk predicts the sequence of the rest of their motor developmental trajectory.

d. There is cause for concern if one twin’s motor development lags less than a month behind the other.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 3

3) In developmental psychology, empiricism refers to

a. the innate abilities or tendencies babies illustrate at birth

b. the mental characteristics acquired through experience

c. the interaction of genes and environments during infancy

d. the process of moving from reflexes to voluntary movements

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 4

4) Nativism is the developmental view that babies enter the world

a. with a set of innate abilities

b. with a sensitivity to all environmental input

c. with a blank slate; ready to learn

d. with no awareness of the visual aspects of their environments

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 5

5) To say that Jean Piaget’s theories of cognitive development are “constructivist” means that a child

a. is pre-equipped with most of the knowledge he or she will need for early life

b. passively receives information through environmental sources

c. actively builds an understanding of the world based on his or her experience

d. proceeds through a series of stages toward understanding quantities

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 6

6) According to Piaget, these units of knowledge are cognitive models that children and adults construct of what the world is and how it works.

a. assimilations

b. schemas

c. accommodations

d. conservations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 7

7) When Genevieve, was about 12 months old, she had just learned the word “ball.” One night she looked up, pointed to the moon and delightedly observed, “Ball!” This is an example of

a. assimilation

b. accommodation

c. schema acquisition

d. language detection

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 8

8) When primary school children’s knowledge of birds is altered or expanded so that includes examples like penguin and ostrich, this developmental phenomena has probably occurred

a. assimilation

b. accommodation

c. schema acquisition

d. language detection

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 9

9) This stage of Piaget’s developmental theory begins at birth and involves only simple responses to internal and external events.

a. pre-operations

b. sensorimotor

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 10

10) Two-month-old Jacqueline has some understanding of object permanence because she reacts to her mother’s attempts to engage in games of peek-a-boo. According to Piaget Jacqueline is in this stage of development.

a. sensorimotor

b. pre-operations

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 11

11) When mum tries to play with seven-month-old Willie, she is frustrated because he won’t reach for objects that she covers with her hands or a blanket. Willie has thus, not developed

a. sensorimotor skills

b. object permanence

c. concrete operations

d. formal logic

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 12

12) Three-year-old Gustavo has begun to use two and three word sentences and is very good at explaining what activities he’d like to engage in when his baby-sitter arrives. Gustavo is in this stage of development.

a. pre-operations

b. sensorimotor

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 13

13) Many preoperational children are highly verbal but have trouble describing the world from any perceptual perspective but their own. This type of thinking is termed

a. conservative

b. unobjective

c. egocentric

d. data-driven

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 14

14) As a child moves from the pre-operational to the concrete operational stage, they begin to develop the understanding that an object may retain its identity even if its appearance is changed for some reason. This ability is called

a. egocentrism

b. physicality

c. conservation

d. confirmation

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 15

15) The false-belief task depicts a situation where children must understand that their own knowledge of the true facts of a situation may conflict with someone else’s false beliefs about the situation. The task is used as a test of this.

a. conservation

b. theory of mind

c. egocentrism

d. concrete operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 16

16) Theory of mind, or the ability for children to understand that other people think and have minds, just as they do, develops during this stage.

a. pre-operations

b. sensorimotor

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 17

17) Eight-year-old Simian knows that when his teacher pours liquid from one of two identical containers into a taller, slimmer container, the amount of liquid is the same in both containers. Simian is most likely in this developmental stage.

a. pre-operations

b. sensorimotor

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 18

18) The concrete operations stage differs from the formal operations stage in that

a. the child can only perform logic in the formal operations stage

b. the child can perform abstract logic only in the first stage

c. the child can perform abstract logic only in the second stage

d. the child can read and write only in the second stage

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 19

19) Though there is considerable debate about this stage of Piaget’s developmental theory, he asserted that all adolescents and adults live the rest of their lives within it

a. pre-operations

b. sensorimotor

c. concrete operations

d. formal operations

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 20

20) Which of the following is not a valid critique of Piaget’s stage-theory of cognitive development

a. Piaget’s theory describes development, but does not explain how it happens.

b. Piaget did not sufficiently account for sociocultural influences on development.

c. Piaget overemphasized notion of stages of development.

d. Piaget’s theory has not led to the development of any testable hypotheses.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 21

21) According to Kohlberg’s cognitive developmental theory of moral reasoning, younger adolescents should demonstrate this level of morality.

a. preconventional

b. conventional

c. postconventional

d. epiconventional

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 22

22) The most important scientific criticism levelled at Kohlberg’s cognitive developmental theory of moral reasoning is that

a. the tests of moral reasoning do not predict moral behavior

b. the views about morality have changed since Kohlberg’s model was described

c. the theory is biased toward adolescents and adults

d. the tests are better representations of how children and adults will act than how they feel about morality.

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 23

23) Haidt (2001) stated that moral judgments are frequently intuitive and emotional rather than rational, and so his theory is called

a. intuitive positive psychology

b. social Darwinism

c. social intuitionism

d. intuitive morality

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 24

24) Haidt (2001) proposed that members of western cultures often utilized this foundation of morality when evaluating moral scenarios.

a. respect for authority

b. loyalty to one’s group

c. purity and sanctity

d. fairness and justice

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 25

25) This ability to understand another person’s state of mind or experience is thought to underlie the development of moral reasoning and behaviour.

a. compassion

b. empathy

c. apathy

d. sociability

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 26

26) Researchers have found that children much younger than four appear to demonstrate some understanding of the reasoning underlying behaviour. This is known as

a. Intentional reasoning

b. Moral judgement

c. False belief

d. Theory of mind

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 27

27) The social constructivist theory is associated with

a. Jean Piaget

b. Lev Vyotsky

c. Sigmund Freud

d. Lawrence Kohlberg

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 28

28) The zone of proximal development is

a. the conceptual gap between the complexity of learning that a learner can master on their own and the complexity of learning which they can potentially master with the help of an expert instructor

b. the developmental stage lasting from approximately age 2 to 7, characterized by unthinking responses to internal and external stimuli and events.

c. the developmental stage lasting from approximately age 7 to 11 or 12, characterized by mastery of tasks involving the application of logic.

d. the understanding that an object may retain its identity even if its appearance has changed

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 29

29) The process by which the expert instructor provides assistance are collectively called

a. nurturing

b. zoning

c. scaffolding

d. constructivism

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 30

30) For Piaget, cognitive development was

a. a completely domain-general process

b. a completely domain-specific process

c. independent of language development

d. the end point of childhood

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 31

31) Kohlberg identified _ specific stages of moral development

a. two

b. six

c. twelve

d. seven

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 32

32) Kohlberg divided these specific stages into _ broad levels

a. six

b. three

c. two

d. four

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 33

33) Which of the following is NOT one of the broad levels of moral development according to Kohlberg

a. Conventional morality

b. Unconventional morality

c. Preconvention morality

d. Postconventional morality

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 34

34) According to Kohlberg, this stage is generally characteristic of younger school-aged children, and describes moral judgements based on the prospect of reward or punishment

a. Conventional morality

b. Unconventional morality

c. Preconvention morality

d. Postconventional morality

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 35

35) According to Kohlberg, this stage is generally characteristic of older school-age children and many adolescents and adults, is based on respect for law, social norms, and rules set by parents and other authorities

a. Conventional morality

b. Unconventional morality

c. Preconvention morality

d. Postconventional morality

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 36

36) According to Kohlberg, this stage is generally characteristic of some older adolescents and adults, involves more complex personal judgments based on abstract principles, such as fairness or justice.

a. Conventional morality

b. Unconventional morality

c. Preconvention morality

d. Postconventional morality

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 37

37) According to Kohlberg, each level of moral development is

a. Less complex than the stage that came before it

b. More adequate than the level that came before it

c. Differs depending on cultural norms

d. Less adequate than the level that came before it

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 38

38) This term describes a situation when one is convinced that something is wrong but unable to explain why

a. The zone of proximal development

b. Oblivious scenario

c. Morally dumbfounded

d. Moral dilemma

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 39

39) This theory proposes that moral judgements are frequently intuitive and emotional rather than rational

a. Moral humanistic theory

b. Kohlberg’s theory

c. Formal operations theory

d. Social intuitionism theory

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 40

40) Which of the following is NOT one of the five foundations of morality

a. Fairness and justice

b. Purity and sanctity

c. Respect for authority

d. Right and wrong

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 41

41) Jean Decety and colleagues tested the connection between empathy and morality in children from a neuroscientific perspective. Which method did they use?

a. TMS

b. fMRI

c. Blood tests

d. Eye-tracking

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 42

42) Decety et al (2008) found when viewing images of pain, children

a. showed decreased activity in brain regions associated with experiencing first-hand pain

b. showed increased activity in brain regions associated with experiencing first-hand pain

c. showed no difference in activity in brain region associated with experiencing first-hand pain

d. began to cry and were withdrawn from the experiment

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 43

43) This approach proposed that each cognitive function depends on a brain system or module

a. Innatist modular approach

b. Domain-general approach

c. Social constructivism approach

d. Positive psychology approach

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 44

44) The Sally-Anne story is a task used to assess

a. Moral judgements

b. False belief understanding

c. Language skills

d. Motor skills

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 45

45) Children with this disorder typically have difficulty with theory of mind and lag several years behind others in false belief tasks

a. Social anxiety disorders

b. Mood disorders

c. Autistic spectrum disorders

d. Psychosis

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 46

46) During the process of transmission, cultural tools initially exist on an

a. Intermental plane

b. Zone of proximal development

c. Intramental plane

d. spectrum

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 47

47) The ZPD have been retrospectively termed

a. The critical periods

b. The core stages

c. scaffolding

d. The intermental plane

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 48

48) This term refers to the internal and individual motivation to master understanding

a. schemas

b. agency

c. reliability

d. independence

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 49

49) These stages are age-related periods of development with distinct boundaries, and that reflect qualitatively different types of cognitive activity

a. Sensorimotor stages

b. Developmental stages

c. Vygotsky stages

d. Theory of mind

Type: multiple choice question

Title: Part 4, Chapter 12, Question 50

50) Wynn’s (1992) work with 5-month old infants provided evidence that

a. Small infants do not have a concept of number

b. small infants are able to understand basic addition and subtraction.

c. Small infants did not differentiate their looking tie as a function of the task

d. Small infants could not attend to cognitive tasks

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 51

51) Jean Piaget suggested instead that each infant and child passively assimilates an understanding of the world based on his or her sensory input, but does not do much in the way of actively constructing a model of the world

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 52

52) The preoperational child may also have difficulty performing mental operations requiring an understanding that, for example, an object may retain its identity even if its appearance is changed for some reason.

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 53

53) Vygotsky and Piaget both emphasized that cognitive growth in the child is highly variable and dependent on the individual child’s social and cultural experiences and the broader sociocultural context as expressed in phenomena such as language.

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 54

54) Tests of moral reasoning, like Kohlberg’s, do not actually measure or observe moral reasoning in children and adolescents and do not predict moral behaviour

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 55

55) Williams syndrome is characterised by low verbal scores and social interaction but high scores on non-verbal IQ

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 56

56) Soon after birth, babies are able to distinguish their mothers face and voice from others.

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 57

57) According to the social constructivism theory, learning takes place when children cross zones of proximal development

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 58

58) The nativist position holds that infant knowledge and perception is acquired through experience.

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 59

59) According to Piaget’s constructivist theory of development, mental structures also known as schema, become more sophisticated with age.

a. True

b. False

Type: true-false

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 60

60) Intentional reasoning has been found to develop from around 4 years of age

a. True

b. False

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 61

61) When children began to notice the many differences between various examples of categories they _ the new information by altering their existing schemas

a. accommodate

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 62

62) The __ level of morality, characteristic of older adolescents and adults, involves more complex personal judgments based on abstract principles, such as fairness or justice.

a. postconventional

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 63

63) Within a few hours of birth, infants prefer to _ at, and will increase their __ in response to images of their mother’s face.

a. Gaze; sucking behaviour

b. Look; sucking behaviour

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 64

64) According to Piaget’s constructivist theory, __ mark the onset of adolescents, adolescents can juggle ideas and apply logical reasoning in a system manner.

a. Formal operations

b. The stage of formal operations

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 65

65) Kolhberg’s work on moral reasoning in children has received critique stating that tests of moral reason are not able to _ moral reasoning and may not _ moral behaviour.

a. Capture; predict

b. Measure; predict

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 66

66) Louie is convinced that something is wrong but he is unable to explain why. Louie is __.

a. Morally dumbfounded

b.

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 67

67) Children on the __ have difficulty with theory of mind and lag several years behind others in false belief tasks

a. Autistic spectrum

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 68

68) Wynn (1992) presented correct and incorrect ‘solutions’ to addition and subtraction ‘problems’ to a group of 5-month-olds month-old infants and found that infants stared _ at the _ solutions.

a. Longer; impossible

b. Longer; incorrect

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 69

69) __ is the understanding that objects continue to exist when they are no longer in view.

a. Object permanence

Type: fill-in-blank

Title: Chapter 12 - Question 70

70) The gap between what a child can understand alone and what they have the potential to understand after interaction with others is known as the ____.

a. Zone of proximal development

b. ZPD

Type: essay/short answer question

Title: Chapter 12, Question 71

71) According to Jean Piaget, babies construct meaning from their environment. Describe the push and pull of the two learning processes known as assimilation and accommodation, and briefly describe each stage in Piaget’s 4-stage theory of cognitive development.

Type: essay/short answer question

Title: Chapter 12, Question 72

72) Theory of mind is the cognitive ability perceive the thoughts, emotions and intentions of other people. Describe the measure that has been most widely used as a measure of ToM, what does this tell us about the development of ToM in children?

Type: essay/short answer question

Title: Chapter 12, Question 73

73) Kohlberg’s cognitive-developmental theory of moral reasoning describes moral development as occurring in a series of universal, invariant stages. Describe Kohlberg’s theory making reference to the three levels of moral development.

Type: essay/short answer question

Title: Chapter 12, Question 74

74) Piaget believed that children passed through four distinct stages of development that were invariant—that is, everyone passed through them, and they always occurred in the same order. Describe Piaget’s developmental stages, making reference to the development of cognitive skills at this time.

Document Information

Document Type:
DOCX
Chapter Number:
12
Created Date:
Aug 21, 2025
Chapter Name:
Chapter 12 Cognitive development
Author:
Jarvis, Okami

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