Final 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How often do IQ tests have to be renormed and why?

A

Secular trend toward generational rise. They have to be renormed because of new vocabulary due to electronic devices.

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2
Q

What are factors that affect performance?

A
  1. Anxiety - brain fog
  2. Experience with the testing “program”
  3. Stereotype threat - fear of being judged on the basis of a negative stereotype
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3
Q

How do you reduce cultural bias in tests?

A
  1. Find out what is adaptive behaviour for their culture
  2. Purposefully teach how to manage the testing situation
  3. Called dynamic assessment - leads to a better estimate of intelligence
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4
Q

Metalinguistic awareness increases in…?

A

Middle childhood

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5
Q

How does vocabulary increase in middle childhood?

A

Increases during the school years. 20 new words a day.

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6
Q

How does grammar increase in middle childhood?

A

Passive voice, infinitive phrases

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7
Q

How does pragmatics increase in middle childhood?

A

Communicating clearly, narratives, interruptions, etc

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8
Q

When learning two languages, what are the types of bilingual development?

A
  1. Learn both languages at the same time
  2. Learn first language, then second
  3. Code-switching
  4. Sensitive period: childhood
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9
Q

What are the types of bilingual education?

A

Language immersion, bilingual education

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10
Q

What is code switching?

A

Hearing a language, translating it, and saying it back.

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11
Q

Whats the disadvantage of language immersion?

A

A lot of competition between listening to the content and system of the language.

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12
Q

What is the correlation between academic achievement and class size?

A

Children in smaller classes score higher, show better concentration, higher-quality class participation and more favourable attitudes towards school than those in larger classes. Teachers then have more time for individual attention.

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13
Q

What is the traditional educational philosophy?

A

Teacher is the sole authority; students are passed and are measured against uniform standards for grade level.

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14
Q

How do kids do in constructivist classrooms?

A

Lower on achievement scores on tests, but better critical thinkers

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15
Q

What are constructivist classrooms?

A

Children are resourced to construct own knowledge, solve self-chosen problems and are evaluated against prior accomplishments.

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16
Q

What is the social-constructivist educational philosophy? (Vygotsky)

A

Children appropriate knowledge and strategies generated from working together to become competent, contributing members of community.

17
Q

In social constructivist education, what is reciprocal teaching?

A

Cooperative groups of 2, 3 or 5 students take turns leading dialogues about a passage

18
Q

What makes a good teacher?

A

Good teachers are caring, helpful, stimulating, require high-level thinking.

19
Q

What is the self-fulfilling prophecy in the educational environment?

A

Children live up to teacher’s positive or negative attitudes towards them. High bias teachers (expect ethnics to do poorly) vs. low bias teachers have students with lower achievement.

20
Q

What are the types of grouping practices in educational environments?

A

Homogenous, multigrade classrooms, cooperative learning.

21
Q

What are homogenous groups?

A

Teaching students of similar achievement together. Low SES get more drill on basic facts with poorer results.

22
Q

What are multigrade classrooms?

A

Old rural all-grade classrooms.

23
Q

What is cooperative learning?

A

Training needed for resolving differences of opinion, sharing responsibility, and working toward common goals.

24
Q

What is a magnet school

A

Heterogeneity of learning - drama schools, science school, etc.

25
Q

What is the digital divide?

A

Low-SES groups less likely to have computers and internet for learning.