Ed 216 ch4 Flashcards

Applying what we know about Children's Learning and Development

1
Q

age related change that results from an interaction between biological and maturation in physical and/or social experience; development occurs as children grow, adapt, and change in response to various experience

A

development

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2
Q

a change in knowledge or skill that results from experience or instruction

A

LEARNING

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3
Q

an explanation of how information and observations are organized and relate to one another

A

THEORY

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4
Q

Ecological Systems Theory of Development that describes the diverse, interactive contexts that influence children’s development over time. Microsystems and Macrosystems.

A

Urie Brofenbrenner

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5
Q

Areas of human development and functioning that include cognitive, social, emotional, and physical.

A

DOMAINS OF DEVELOPMENT

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6
Q

Biological growth and acquisition of fine motor and gross motor skills.

A

PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT

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7
Q

Thinking, intelligence, and language abilities.

A

COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

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8
Q

The ability to establish positive relationships with adults and peers, make friends, cooperate, and resolve conflicts.

A

SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

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9
Q

An assumption about or a tentative explanation for a phenomenon

A

HYPOTHESIS

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10
Q

times in life when the brain is most open to certain types of experiences

A

WINDOW OF OPPORTUNITY

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11
Q

The ability to regulate and appropriately express feelings.

A

EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT

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12
Q

Psychosocial Theory of Human Development- 8 Stages of personal and social development which each stage of life confronts a major challenge or crisis.

A

Erik Erikson

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13
Q

Sociocultural Theory that children learn from social interactions within a cultural context

A

Lev Vygotsky

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14
Q

Self actualization theory behavior and learning are motivated by a hierarchy of needs

A

Abraham Maslow

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15
Q

Theory of development (Arnold Gesell) that assumes that the sequence of changes in abilities and behavior is largely predetermined by children’s biological growth processes rather than by their experiences or learning.

A

MATURATIONIST

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16
Q

Abraham Maslow’s theory that behavior and learning are motivated by a hierarchy of needs, first being physical needs such as air, water, food, shelter.

A

SELF-ACTUALIZATION THEORY

17
Q

The biggest threat to children’s developing brains, which occurs when children experience intense, frequent, and/or prolonged anxiety such as abuse, neglect, violence, or economic deprivation without adult support to help them cope

A

TOXIC STRESS

18
Q

Cognitive Development theory - 4 stages birth to adulthood - sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operational stages

A

Jean Piget

19
Q

Behavioral learning theory - change in behavior that is controlled by the consequences, either positive or negative, that follow the behavior

A

BF Skinner

20
Q

Social Cognitive theory - people can learn efficiently from observing the consequences of another person’s behavior

A

Albert Bandura

21
Q

Learning Theory derived from the work of Jean Piaget; assumes that children actively build their knowledge from first hand experiences in stimulating environments, known as:

A

Constructivism

22
Q

The organizing structures people use to think or guide behavior coined from Piaget.

A

SCHEMA

23
Q

the distance between the actual developmental level an individual has achieved (their independent level of problem solving) and the level of potential development they could achieve with adult guidance or through collaboration with other children

A

ZPD

24
Q

The assistance, guidance, and direction teachers provide children

A

SCAFFOLDING

25
Q

A childs interactions that have the most impact on a child’s development, due to their frequent, ongoing nature, often over extended periods of time

A

Proximal Process

26
Q

Using pleasant or unpleasant consequences to control behavior

A

operant conditioning

27
Q

learning is reflected in changes in behavior that are controlled by the consequences, either positive or negative, that follow the behavior.

A

behaviorism

28
Q

Teaching a new skill or behavior by rewarding each step toward the goal

A

Shaping