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Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
Chapter 2: History: Exploring the Beginnings of Early Childhood Education
Test Bank
1. _____________ believed that education was the right of ordinary male offspring of the free
citizens of the state and not just the right of the upper class.
a. Plato
*b. Aristotle
c. Socrates
d. Plutarch
e. Aries
2. ____________ wrote about the need for a more humane treatment of children, an idea that was
not necessarily upheld by the Greeks.
a. Aries
b. Plato
*c. Plutarch
d. Aristotle
e. Socrates
3. The ____________ played a significant role in the history of early childhood education and
the evolution of the concept of childhood.
a. philosophers
b. Renaissance
c. Greeks
*d. church
e. peasants
4. Who believed that in order for children to develop human nature and to be prepared for their
life on earth, as well as for eternal life, they need to be educated?
a. Erasmus
b. Aristotle
c. Locke
d. Rousseau
*e. Comenius
5. In The School of Infancy, Comenius introduced the idea that home is
a. where the heart is.
*b. the first school.
c. a place for rest.
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
d. a blank slate.
e. where you are loved.
6. ____________ is associated with the idea of the tabula rasa (the view of the childโs mind as a
blank slate that is sensitive and responsive to instruction).
*a. John Locke
b. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
c. John Amos Comenius
d. Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
e. Friedrich Froebel
7. Who wrote books that were attacked and condemned by the church, leading him to fear for his
life?
a. John Locke
*b. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
c. John Amos Comenius
d. Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
e. Friedrich Froebel
8. __________ established a new early childhood school, which would end up being named
kindergarten.
a. John Locke
b. Jean-Jacques Rousseau
c. John Amos Comenius
d. Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
*e. Friedrich Froebel
9. CHOOSE ALL THAT APPLY. Froebelโs kindergarten activities also included a collection of
games, songs, and stories designed to promote childrenโs
*a. sensory development.
*b. physical development.
c. emotional development.
d. social development.
e. cognitive development.
10. In order to prevent children from becoming gravely ill, an open-air nursery school was
opened by
a. Maria Montessori.
b. Friedrich Froebel.
*c. Margaret McMillan.
d. Jean Piaget.
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
e. Lev Vygotsky.
11. Margaret McMillan valued childrenโs ______ and encouraged _____________.
*a. art; drawing
b. writing; reading
c. language; speaking
d. creativity; music
e. spontaneity; participation
12. Maria Montessori reported that children under 6 years of age had an astonishing power of the
mind, which she called the
a. creative mind.
b. active mind.
c. childrenโs mind.
*d. absorbent mind.
e. spongy mind.
13. Which of the following is NOT one of Jean Piagetโs stages of cognitive development?
a. sensorimotor period
b. preoperational period
c. formal operational period
d. concrete operational period
*e. creative period
14. Vygotsky recognized that learning takes place within the context of
a. family life.
*b. relationships.
c. play.
d. schooling.
e. creativity.
15. Whose educational philosophy touted the need to get rid of rote memorization in schools and
replace it with a more child-centered approach?
a. Jean Piaget
b. Maria Montessori
c. Margaret McMillan
*d. John Dewey
e. Lucy Sprague Mitchell
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
16. This person was known as a leader in the National Association for Nursery Schools, which is
now known as the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC).
a. Maria Montessori
b. Lucy Sprague Mitchell
c. Margaret McMillan
*d. Abigail Adams Eliot
e. Rachel McMillan
17. Erik Erikson developed five psychosocial crises that children progress through before
reaching young adulthood. Which one occurs during the preschool years (3 to 6 years of age)?
a. trust versus mistrust
b. autonomy versus shame and doubt
c. industry versus inferiority
d. identity versus role confusion
*e. initiative versus guilt
18. Erik Erikson developed five psychosocial crises that children progress through before
reaching young adulthood. Which one occurs first (infancy)?
*a. trust versus mistrust
b. autonomy versus shame and doubt
c. industry versus inferiority
d. identity versus role confusion
e. initiative versus guilt
19. _______________ believed that positive early experiences during the period of childhood
shaped oneโs emotional development.
a. Bloom
*b. Maslow
c. Erikson
d. Piaget
e. Dewey
20. The _____________ allows children an opportunity to revisit basic ideas and concepts
repeatedly.
a. High/Scope curriculum
b. creative curriculum
*c. spiral curriculum
d. Montessori curriculum
e. Progressive curriculum
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
21. In the beginning of early childhood education in the United States, educators were not
experienced. Who was the person who helped professionalize the field of early childhood
education?
a. Susan Elizabeth Blow
*b. Patty Smith Hill
c. Margarethe Meyer Schurz
d. Elizabeth Palmer Peabody
e. Mary Tyler Peabody Mann
22. During the Renaissance and Reformation periods, boys and girls were required to move
toward a more personal relationship with God.
*a. True
b. False
23. Rousseau was among the first individuals to acknowledge that young children were not
simply โminiature adults.โ
*a. True
b. False
24. Maria Montessori created a specific type of school aimed at gifted children.
a. True
*b. False
25. When teachers would present the occupations to the children in Froebelโs kindergartens, this
marked the birth of circle time.
*a. True
b. False
26. Montessori schools are very popular in the United States.
a. True
*b. False
27. Elizabeth Peabody established kindergartens in every state of the Union before she died in
1894.
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
*a. True
b. False
28. None of Friedrich Froebelโs gifts or occupations are used today in kindergarten.
a. True
*b. False
29. The language spoken in the early kindergartens was English.
a. True
*b. False
30. The Bank Street College of Education served as a model for the design of subsequent early
education programs in the country.
*a. True
b. False
31. Children learn best when they are involved in rote memorization activities.
a. True
*b. False
Type: E
32. What specifically from Margaret McMillanโs work is evident in early childhood programs
today?
a. Emphasis on childrenโs health, small group work, and parent involvement.
Type: E
33. Why does Pestalozzi represent a beginning point for early childhood education?
a. He actually taught young children.
Type: E
34. What did Martin Luther do to get excommunicated from the church?
a. Luther urged nobles, civil leaders, and laypeople to move away from the church and instead
focus on a more personal road to God and salvation, which got Martin Luther into serious trouble
with church authorities.
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
Type: E
35. Historically, the need for formal education was twofold. What were the reasons that
civilizations felt a need for education?
a. First, to maintain more stable, orderly, and viable communities of men; and second, to assist
humankind in its quest for becoming more self-actualized, to experience personal fulfillment,
and to be more attuned to God.
Type: E
36. What are the two competing ideas regarding education at any level?
a. The importance of meeting the needs of the individual versus meeting the needs of society as a
whole.
Type: E
37. Explain the three ideas Martin Luther proposed about education.
a. First, people needed to find their own way to God by reading the Bible for themselves. This
idea presupposed the need for the population to be literate and led to Luther advocating for the
education of the entire population, including girls as well as boys. Second, Martin Luther
believed that all towns and villages should have schools and that these schools should be
governed by the state and not by the churchโthereby creating a system that would support the
development of morality and increase the stability of the state, simultaneously. Thirdly, while
Luther did stress the importance of religious instruction in schools, he promoted the idea that in
order to ensure that educated people became good citizens, it was also important for schools to
support childrenโs intellectual, physical, emotional, and social development.
Type: E
38. As part of the kindergarten curriculum, Froebel developed a series of gifts and occupations.
List and describe some of these gifts and occupations.
a. Froebelโs Kindergarten Gifts included six soft, colored balls, a wooden sphere, cube, and
cylinder, a large cube divided into eight smaller cubes, a large cube divided into eight oblong
blocks, a large cube divided into 21 whole, six half, and 12 quarter cubes, a large cube divided
into 18 whole oblongs: three divided lengthwise; three divided breadth-wise, quadrangle and
triangle tablets for arranging figures, splints of various lengths, sticks for outlining figures,
whole and half wire rings for outlining figures, and various materials for drawing, perforating,
embroidering, paper cutting, weaving or braiding, paper folding, modeling, and interlacing.
The occupations consisted of artifacts such as pencils, wood, sand, clay, straw, and sticks for
construction purposes.
Type: E
Gordon Biddle, Early Childhood Education
Instructor Resource
39. Maria Montessori had a very specific pedagogical approach. List the ideas that were included
in her pedagogy.
a. Montessoriโs pedagogy included the following: (a) encouraging teachers to observe and pay
attention to children rather than children paying attention to the teacher; (b) allowing children to
work at their own pace by providing a stimulating learning environment; (c) providing teaching
materials that would allow children to use their imagination; and (d) allowing children to correct
their own mistakes.
Type: E
40. Analyze Lev Vygotskyโs concepts of the zone of proximal development and scaffolding.
a. The zone of proximal development (ZPD) is the difference between what children can do
independently and what they can achieve with adult assistance and guidance. Related to the
notion of the ZPD is the idea of scaffolding, which has often been used to help illustrate this
concept. In much the same way as a scaffold extends the work of a builder or a painter, adults
and peers extend the growth and learning of children through modeling, encouragement,
discussion, joint participation, leading questions, and verbal prompts.
Type: E
41. Compare and contrast the opposing views of Friedrich Froebel and John Dewey.
a. Dewey diverged from the traditional perspective of early education as proposed by Froebel
and reorganized the structure of the kindergarten classroom to emphasize a cooperative learning
environment in which children actively participated in making decisions regarding daily learning
activities. The Froebelian kindergarten focused on symbolism, play, unity, and imitation, while
Deweyโs approach emphasized experiences and methods that were more relevant to childrenโs
everyday existence. Dewey believed that teachers should use creative methods when instructing
young children in order to better support childrenโs independent problem-solving capabilities.
Deweyโs classroom was organized to allow children to direct the sequence of activities, while
teachers supported their learning through the provision of learning experiences such as field
trips, art, and music. Teachers fostered childrenโs developing social skills through having
children interact with their peers. Childrenโs self-initiated activities promoted the internal
motivation for them to learn more about formal subjects taught in school, such as reading,
writing, and arithmetic. Froebelโs kindergarten activities included a collection of games, songs,
and stories designed to promote childrenโs sensory and physical development. Teachers would
often present the occupations to groups of children using hand motions and rhythmic songs. This
marked the birth of what is now called โcircle timeโ in many of todayโs early childhood
programs. Overall, Froebelโs kindergarten was designed to convey basic ideas about the unity of
the world to young children.
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