15: Preschool and Formal Education Experiences and Work and Career Experiences, 16: Endings Flashcards

1
Q

Social promotion and theory behind it!

A

practice of promoting children to the next grade even when they have not met the academic standards to progress

if kids move forward, they will eventually catch up to their peers, but if they’re held back, it can hurt their self-esteem and sense of competency

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2
Q

Grade retention

A

practicing of holding children back (because they didn’t meet standards)

purpose is for them to catch up, but the outcome of this practice wasn’t good. If they were held back because they missed a lot of school, this behavior may persist even if they are held back.

They shower poor academic performance throughout their academic years

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3
Q

How parents influence motivation - parents with a fixed view of ability

A

these parents provide few opportunities for children to improve and can ignore positive changes that children show

results in children to have learned helplessness and it inhibits the children’s desire to succeed and foster helplessness

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4
Q

How parents influence motivation - parents with a changeable view of ability

A

mostly authoritative parents. They encourage children to explore their environment and allows them to take an active role in solving their own problems

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5
Q

How parents influence vocational choices

A

SES and parent’s occupational fields influence career choice. They share similar personality characteristics and abilities with their children, which can influence education attainment

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6
Q

Work-life balance

A

the challenge of finding time and energy for both a career and personal pursuits, like family. The boundaries between work and home are blurred. Some people are expected to bring work home and be available during non-working hours

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7
Q

Mortality - leading causes of death for infants, children, adolescents, adults, and seniors

A

Infants: genetic, prenatal, and birth complications, SIDS

Childhood: accidents, illnesses, homicide (child maltreatment)

Adolescents: accidents (car, drowning, unintentional poisoning/drugs), illnesses, homicide, suicide

Adulthood: cancer, heart disease, injury, chronic illnesses (diabetes and diseases of liver and respiratory system)

Old people: chronic illnesses (heart disease), strokes, alzheimer’s disease

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8
Q

Bereavement in childhood

A

children usually experience grief for their parents for a longer time than adults do. This may affect developmental milestones and they will lack the emotional support they once had

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9
Q

Grieving children - how they may handle it

A

feeling that the parent is watching them or they dream about them. They hold onto symbolic objects and may even try to communicate with them

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