TEST BANK FOR CHILD DEVELOPMENT AN ACTIVE LEARNING APPROACH, 3RDEDITION, LAURA E. LEVINE,JOYCE MUNSCH
Multiple Choice Questions
1. The reason that each chapter in this text starts with a True/False quiz is that
a. most important questions in the field of child development have very simple answers.
b. information about child development changes so rapidly that textbooks cannot keep up with the changes.
c. many of the findings in the field of child development are not what people might intuitively believe.
d. if you do very well on the quiz, you know that you don't need to read the chapter. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Testing Your Knowledge of Child Development and Getting the Most from Your Textbook
Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: MC
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2. In this textbook, the feature that is designed to help you learn about how our understanding of how children grow and develop has changed over time is the
a. true/false questions.
b. Journey of Research feature.
c. Active Learning feature.
d. chapter summaries.
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Evaluating Information on the Web Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
3. The Active Learning features in this book are intended to help you
a. develop a better understanding of how theory relates to practice.
b. correct any mistaken preconceptions you bring with you to the course.
c. engage with the material and relate it to your life experiences.
d. use the scientific method to test your own ideas about development. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Getting the Most from Your Textbook Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
4. Research support for the idea that early traits, behaviors and experiences are related to a number of adult outcomes comes from
a. longitudinal studies.
b. idiosyncratic studies.
c. multi-method studies.
d. experimental studies.
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
5. The connection that Lewis Terman found between the characteristic of conscientiousness or social dependability in childhood and the reduced likelihood of an individual dying in any given year during adulthood can be partially explained by the
a. type of parenting style that the children's parents used.
b. fact that these children tended to come from smaller families.
c. children's ability to delay gratification.
d. fact that these individuals were less likely to smoke and drink to excess. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain:
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
6. Which of the following is not a characteristic of a teenage parent?
a. Teen parents are less likely to talk to their infants.
b. Teen parents are less likely to use physical punishment to discipline their children.
c. Teen parents are more likely to have unrealistic expectations regarding their child’s development.
d. Teen parents are more likely play with their infants. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Parents and Family Members Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
7. Which of the following statements reflects the opinion expressed by the neuroscientist Charles Nelson about the importance of the early stages of development?
a. A person's character traits are pretty much fixed and determined by the age of 6.
b. While early childhood is relatively important, it is adolescence that is the most important developmental stage.
c. The first 3 years of life are important but it is the ongoing circumstances of children’s lives that affect how they develop.
d. Each stage of development is more important than the ones that preceded it. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
8. The emotional bond that develops between an infant and the infant's caregivers during the first year of life is called
a. affective regulation.
b. attachment.
c. active niche picking.
d. scaffolding. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge Answer Location: Ages and Stages Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
9. As researchers continued to study the children who were part of the Minnesota Parent-Child Project as they entered adulthood, the researchers realized that
a. they already had all the information that they needed to predict adult adjustment by the time the children were age 6.
b. to their surprise early attachment had little or no effect on children’s later social development.
c. attachment predicted early social relationships, but was not related to any of the other development outcomes they studied.
d. attachment set the initial conditions for peer relationships, but other experiences played an important role in how the children developed.
Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
10. The conclusion drawn from the most recent longitudinal research on attachment conducted by Sroufe and his colleagues was that
a. there is a straight line in development from early attachment relationships to the nature of adult relationships.
b. there is a straight line in development from adolescent romantic relationships to adult relationships.
c. the nature of adult relationships was related to early attachment as well as the nature of early peer relationships.
d. there is no strong reliable relationship between early attachment and later social relationships. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
11. The physical, cognitive and social-emotional domains of development
a. continually interact with each other so that development in one domain impacts and influences development in the other domains.
b. develop in ways that are largely independent of each other.
c. are linked together in such a way that advances in one domain hold back development in other domains.
d. are so co-mingled that we cannot talk about development in the different domains separately. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Domains of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
12. The way that children can process information changes as they get older. This is a
a. quantitative change in development.
b. qualitative change in development.
c. accumulative change in development.
d. transactive change in development. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
13. includes the influence of what we bring to development as a result of our genetic inheritance.
b. Nurture
b. Nature
c. Qualitative change
c. Quantitative change Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
14. includes the experiences we have and the learning that occurs as we move through development.
a. Nurture
b. Nature
c. Qualitative change
d. Quantitative change Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
15. The quality of the caregiving that you received while growing up is an example of and your potential ability to learn how to use language is an example of .
a. nature; nature
b. nurture; nurture
c. nature; nurture
d. nurture; nature Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Application Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
16. The rapid increase in height that adolescents experience when they go through the adolescent growth spurt is an example of a(n)
a. stage theory.
b. quantitative change.
c. qualitative change.
d. equifinality. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
17. Which of the following is the best example of a qualitative change in development?
a. Children grow taller but also become heavier as they get older.
b. Older children have larger vocabularies than younger children.
c. Children can run faster and farther as they get older.
d. Adolescents become more systematic in the way they go about solving problems. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
18. Stage theories describe
a. qualitative changes.
b. long-term changes.
c. significant changes.
d. physiological changes.
Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
19. Characteristics such as anxiety, shyness, and aggression tend to be
a. unstable over time, but often find the same form of expression.
b. stable over time, as reflected in the same expression of these traits.
c. stable over time, but how these characteristics are expressed changes.
d. unstable over time, and often takes different forms of expression. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Stability Versus Change Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
20. If we say that there is no one right way to raise a child, we are endorsing the principle of
a. multilinearity.
b. longitudinality.
c. equifinality.
d. constructivism. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
21. Among children who suffer early deprivation, we see a variety of developmental outcomes. Some children do quite well, but others are more negatively affected. This is the principle of
a. multifinality.
b. constructivism.
c. determinism.
d. functionality. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
22. The field of developmental psychopathology
a. searches for the genetic cause of the problems we see in development.
b. sees behavioral and emotional disorders as distortions of normal development.
c. identifies the source of problem behavior in children's early learning experiences.
d. focuses on the consequences of maladaptive behavior. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
23. When we consider how a child’s characteristics, such as their age, gender, or ethnicity, impact on their development, we are
a. searching for universal patterns of behavior.
b. examining the resiliency that children bring to their development.
c. looking at how individual differences modify general patterns of development.
d. identifying the predictable stages of development that children move through. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
24. The theory of behaviorism views the child as
a. an active explorer of the environment who creates his or her own understanding of the world.
b. a passive recipient of the attempts of others to control the child's behavior.
c. an active participant in the process of producing his or her own development.
d. a force that actively shapes the behavior of the adults in the child's life. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Role of the Child in Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
25. The Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky described learning as
a. a collaborative process between the child and more experienced adults or peers.
b. something that others impose upon the child through the use of rewards and punishments.
c. the optimal fit between the characteristics of the child and the demands of the environment.
d. a child-directed process that is motivated by the child's internal drives. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: The Role of the Child in Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
26. A child who is very active and enjoys the challenge of competing with others will be more likely to join an athletic team at school than to join the chorus or the French Club. This is an example of
a. scaffolding.
b. cultural transmission.
c. multifinality.
d. active niche-picking. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Role of the Child in Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
27. When incarcerated parents took part in the The Family Nurturing Program, a parent education program, they showed all of the following benefits except which of the following?
a. They spent more time with their infants upon release from prison.
b. They became more empathic.
c. They became less punitive.
d. They developed more realistic expectations for their children. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Parents and Family Members Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
28. When we talk about the impact of culture or socioeconomic status on child development, we are looking at the of development.
a. contexts
b. domains
c. variables
d. content Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Contexts of Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: MC
29. Cross-cultural research
a. has shown that there is nothing in development that is truly universal.
b. finds that stage theories apply equally well in any culture that we study.
c. has shown that early development is very similar across cultures, but that later development shows great diversity.
d. finds both universal processes that apply across cultures as well as important cultural differences. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Culture Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: MC
30. Socioeconomic status (SES) is an important context for development because
a. it is related to the amount of resources that a family has to support their children’s development.
b. it allows us to easily classify the families that we study.
c. it is a family characteristic that is stable and does not change over time.
d. it has different meanings depending upon the culture in which it occurs. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Family Difficulty Level: Easy Question Type: MC
31. You can have confidence in information that you find in scientific journals because
a. all of the information is new.
b. a lot of people believe the information.
c. articles typically go through a peer review process before they are published.
d. the people who write scientific articles have university degrees. Ans: C
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Knowing Your Sources Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
32. The importance of the peer review process is that
a. everyone has an equal chance of getting their research published in a journal.
b. the research has been reviewed by professionals who are knowledgeable about the topic before the research is published.
c. research findings are published in multiple journals so that the results are widely disseminated.
d. only well-established ideas will appear in the research literature. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Knowing Your Sources Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
33. Because a science is an organized body of knowledge
a. there must be consensus about the accuracy of new information before it can be added to that body of knowledge.
b. we should only trust new information that comes from people who have a great deal of experience in the field.
c. all information that enters that body of knowledge must apply across the board to everyone.
d. it changes over time as new and more accurate information is added to our understanding. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Becoming a Critical Thinker Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
34. It is important that scientific findings can be replicated. This means that
a. other scientists must review the research and agree that it was correctly done and that the conclusions are warranted.
b. others have been able to repeat the research with the same or similar results.
c. the results have been able published in a well-respected research journal.
d. the conclusions can be generalized to a large group of people. Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Becoming a Critical Thinker Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
35. You can become a critical thinker about research in child development if you
a. seek out divergent opinions from credible sources on topics that interest you.
b. rely upon your own life experiences because they are your best source of information.
c. reject ideas that are new or different from the way we have thought about a topic in the past.
d. agree with what most people think about a topic. Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Becoming a Critical Thinker Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
36. We should not generalize the findings from a study to the general population unless
a. the research agrees with your personal experiences.
b. the findings apply to every individual who was in the study.
c. longitudinal research has tracked the individuals over time.
d. the sample is representative of the group we want to understand. Ans: D
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Guarding Against Generalizations Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
37. What can you correctly conclude when you read that research has found that playing violent video games is associated with aggressive behavior in children?
a. As a group, children who play violent video games are more likely to behave aggressively than children who don’t play violent video games.
b. Children should not be allowed to play violent video games.
c. Boys should not be allowed to play violent video games.
d. Children who play violent video games will behave aggressively. Ans: A
Learning Objectives: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Evaluating Information on the Web Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
38. We tend to notice things that we expect to see and to disregard things that we aren't expecting. This tendency is called
a. a generalization fallacy.
b. a perceptual bias.
c. niche picking.
d. sample bias.
Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Avoiding Perceptual Bias Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
39. Most of your life you have heard people say that you can’t teach an old dog new tricks. When you hear this you should remember that
a. you shouldn’t expect too much from older people.
b. there are enough anecdotal stories to support this statement so we can believe it.
c. this is a bit of folk wisdom that needs to be tested scientifically before we accept it.
d. people would only say this if the idea had been supported by a substantial amount of scientific evidence.
Ans: C
Learning Objectives: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Avoiding Perceptual Bias Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
40. Teen parents are particularly able to benefit from intervention programs that provide information on child development because they
a. are more open and receptive to new ideas than older parents.
b. usually have larger families than older parents.
c. are less likely to know what to expect of children than older parents.
d. are more impressionable than older parents. Ans: C
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Parents and Family Members Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
41. Teens are more likely than older parents to have a baby
a. to prove that they can take care of themselves without anyone else's help.
b. so they can pass along cultural traditions and values.
c. as a way to establishing their financial independence.
d. because they are looking for someone who will love them unconditionally. Ans: D
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Parents and Family Members Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
42. Child therapy and family therapy are two ways to try to
a. prevent problems from developing.
b. address existing problems.
c. develop social policies that support children and families.
d. identify problems before they become serious. Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Child Development Professionals Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
43. Once a problem that is having a negative effect on a child's development is identified, help often comes in the form of a(n)
a. associate's program.
b. intervention program.
c. educational program.
d. self-actualization program. Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Child Development Professionals Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
44. Which of the following would be the most helpful resource for a student who is looking for information on careers working with children and families?
a. Occupational Outlook Handbook prepared by the Bureau of Labor Statistics
b. The Consumer Price Index prepared by the Department of Labor
c. The Annual Report on the Well-Being of Children prepared by the Forum on Child and Family Statistics
d. The Dynamics of the American Workforce Report prepared by the Department of Labor Ans: A
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: How Much Do You Know About Careers in Child Development? Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
45. In the Occupational Outlook Handbook, you can find all of the following information about careers EXCEPT
a. The training and qualifications need for a particular career
b. Information on average earnings
c. Information on other related careers
d. Where you can apply for jobs Ans: D
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: How Much Do You Know About Careers in Child Development? Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
46. Research conducted by Dr. Walter Gilliam resulted in an increase in the number of mental health consultants available to work with preschool children. Dr. Gilliam's research had this impact because
a. it used a large, representative sample of preschool children.
b. his research was published in a well-respected scientific journal.
c. his research convinced legislators to create social policy that provided these services.
d. everyone recognizes that early childhood is the most important period in development. Ans: C
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Policymakers Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: MC
47. The RAND Corporation, The Annie E. Casey Foundation, and The Future of Children are all
a. organizations that devote resources to informing legislators and the public about issues that affect children.
b. multi-national corporations that raise funds to support worthy causes related to children.
c. educational think tanks that work toward the implementation of educational reform.
d. organizations that oversee the publication and dissemination of research conducted by independent researchers.
Ans: A
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Policy Affecting Children and Adolescents Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
48. The Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) Program is an example of:
a. Development in context
b. Social policy in action
c. Development intervention
d. Anti-bias programming Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Social Policy Affecting Children and Adolescents
Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: MC
49. Understanding that depression may result from biological and genetic processes, but also from early traumatic experiences means that you understand the concept of .
a. multifinality
b. equifinality
c. psychopathway
d. convergence Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
50. Understanding that children who are victims of abuse can have many different long-term outcomes that can include depression but also resiliency and healing means that you understand the concept of
.
a. multifinality
b. equifinality
c. psychopathway
d. convergence Ans: A
Learning Objectives: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: MC
True/False Questions
1. In order for information to be considered “scientific” information, it should be information that stays the same over time.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Becoming a Critical Thinker Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
2. Early experiences are the ones that have the most important and long lasting effects on development.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
3. Promoting the optimal development of children and adolescents is a primary goal of professionals who work in the field of education.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Child Development Professionals Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: TF
4. The mission of the Future of Children is “to advance research and solutions to overcome the barriers to success, help communities demonstrate what works and influence decision makers to invest in strategies based on solid evidence.”
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objectives: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Social Policy Affecting Children and Adolescents Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: TF
5. The basic form of the brain is set down in the first years of life, but experiences throughout life continue to affect it.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
6. There is a straight line from the quality of infant attachment to adult developmental outcomes.
a. True
b. False
Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
7. Changes in the way that we think, understand and reason about the world is the domain of social- emotional development.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Domains of Development Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: TF
8. Physical characteristics such as height or eye color are largely determined by the genes we inherit from our parents.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
9. In any stage theory, the quality of what happens at one stage is different from what happens at other stages.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: TF
10. Although there is both stability and change in development, stability is the most prominent characteristic in development.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development?
Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Stability Versus Change Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
11. It is possible for the same pathways through development to lead to different outcomes.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
12. The Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget said that we should see children as active participants in their own development.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Role of the Child in Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
13. A family’s socioeconomic status is important because it largely determines the amount of resources the family will have to support their children’s development.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Family Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: TF
14. You should know something about the qualifications of people who present themselves as experts on child development before you accept what they are saying.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Child Development Professionals Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: TF
15. Development is a mixture of both nature and nurture.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: TF
16. You should be careful about gathering information about child development from too many sources because it will only result in confusion.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Knowing Your Sources Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
17. It is appropriate to generalize results from one study to other populations similar to the sample used in it.
a. True
b. False Ans: A
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Guarding Against Generalizations Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
18. It is easier to remember ideas that challenge your expectations than to remember those that fit your expectations.
a. True
b. False Ans: B
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Avoiding Perceptual Bias Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: TF
Essay Questions
1. Compare and give an example of how both early and later development in childhood and adolescence are important for how we develop as adults.
Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Understanding the Process of Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: ESS
2. Describe three domains of development and explain how they interact. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Domains of Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: ESS
3. Describe what is meant by nature and nurture. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Nature and Nurture Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: ESS
4. Describe the difference between continuous and stage-like change in child development. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Continuous Versus Stage-like Development Difficulty Level: Easy
Question Type: ESS
5. What is developmental psychopathology? How do the concepts of equifinality and multifinality
relate to the study of developmental psychopathology? Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Comprehension Answer Location: Individual Differences Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: ESS
6. Describe how a child plays an active role in his or her own development. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.2 What are the domains of child development and some recurring themes and issues in the field?
Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Role of the Child in Development Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: ESS
7. The socioeconomic status of a child’s family plays an important role in children’s development. Describe several factors related to socioeconomic status that affect a child’s academic achievement. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.3 What are the contexts for child development? Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Family Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: ESS
8. Mary tells you “I was spanked when I was a child and I turned out all right, so I plan to do the same with my children”. How would you find and evaluate information to tell whether this is a good idea. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Knowing Your Sources Difficulty Level: Hard
Question Type: ESS
9. Many people believe that the study of child development is just “all common sense.” Is this true? Why or why not?
Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: 1.4 How can you be a smart consumer of information about development? Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Avoiding Perceptual Bias Difficulty Level: Medium
Question Type: ESS
10. Children’s lives are affected by those who interact directly with them. However, even more children are affected by laws, policies and programs established at a national or local level. Describe two
programs that have had a major impact on children’s lives. Ans: Varies
Learning Objective: Learning Objective: 1.1 Who needs to have a good understanding of child development? And why?
Cognitive Domain: Application Answer Location: Policymakers Difficulty Level: Medium Question Type: ESS
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