Chapter 10 Flashcards

1
Q

Industry Versus Inferiority

A

Psychological conflict of middle childhood.

Is resolved positively when experiences lead children to develop a sense of competence at useful skills and tasks

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2
Q

Social Comparisons

A

Judgments of their appearance, abilities, and behavior in relation to those of others.

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3
Q

Perspective-Taking Skills

A

An improved ability to infer what other people are thinking and to distinguish those viewpoints from one’s own

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4
Q

Mastery-Oriented Attributions

A

Crediting their success to ability - a characteristic they can improve through trying hard and can count on when faced with new challenges. And they attribute failure to factors that can be changed or controlled, such a insufficient effort or a difficult task

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5
Q

Learned Helplessness

A

Children who attribute their failures, not their successes, to ability. When they succeed, they conclude that external factors, such as luck, are responsible. Unlike their mastery-oriented counterparts, they believe that ability is fixed and cannot be improved by trying hard.

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6
Q

Person Praise

A

Emphasizes the child’s traits. Ex. “you’re smart”

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7
Q

Process Praise

A

Emphasizes behavior and effort. Ex. “You figured it out”

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8
Q

Problem-Centered Coping

A

Appraising the situation as changeable, identify the difficulty, and decide what to do about it

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9
Q

Emotion-Centered Coping

A

When problem solving doesn’t work, taking part in internal, private, and aimed at controlling distress when little can be done about an outcome

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10
Q

Peer Groups

A

Collectives that generate unique values and standards for behavior and a social structure of leaders and followers.

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11
Q

Peer Acceptance

A

Refers to likability - the extent to which a child is viewed by a group of agemates, such as classmates, as a worthy social partner

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12
Q

Popular Children

A

Get many positive votes, are well liked

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13
Q

Rejected Children

A

Who get many negative votes, are disliked

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14
Q

Controversial Children

A

Who receive many votes both positive and negative

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15
Q

Neglected Children

A

Who are seldom mentioned, either positively or negatively

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16
Q

Average Children

A

Who receive average numbers of positive and negative votes and account for about one-third of children in a typical elementary school classroom

17
Q

Popular-Prosocial Children

A

Both well-like (socially preferred) and admired (high in perceived popularity). Combines academic and social competence

18
Q

Popular-Antisocial Children

A

Include “tough” boys - athletically skilled but poor students who cause trouble and defy adult authority - and relationally aggressive boys and girls who enhance their own status by ignoring, excluding, and spreading rumors about other children

19
Q

Rejected-Withdrawn Children

A

Passive and socially awkward

20
Q

Peer Victimization

A

In which certain children become targets of verbal and physical attacks or other forms of abuse

21
Q

Gender Typicality

A

The degree to which the child feels similar to others of the same gender

22
Q

Gender Contentedness

A

The degree to which the child feels comfortable with his or her gender assignment, which also promotes happiness

23
Q

Coregulation

A

A form of supervision in which they exercise general oversight while letting children take charge of moment-by-moment decision making.

24
Q

Blended (Reconstituted) Family

A

About 60 percent of divorced parents remarry within a few years. Others cohabit, or share a sexual relationship and a partner outside of marriage. Parent stepparent, and children form a new family structure

25
Q

Self-Care Children

A

Who regularly look after themselves for some period of time after school

26
Q

Phobia

A

About 5 percent of school-age children develop an intense, unmanageable fear