Test Bank for Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence: An Active Learning Approach, 2nd Edition
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Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
Test Bank
CHAPTER 2: THEORY AND RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENT
Multiple Choice
1. A basic set of principles that help us organize our observations in order to understand
and predict human development is called a(n) ______.
a. hypothesis
b. operationalization
c. developmental theory
d. dynamic system
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.1: What do child development theories tell us?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Why Theories of Development Are Important
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. The scientific process ______.
a. is the best way to prove or disprove a theory
b. provides us with hypotheses, but does not provide the methodology to test them
c. has changed over time so that there now is little agreement on the best way to
conduct the process
d. cannot prove a theory beyond a shadow of a doubt, but can provide evidence that
supports or opposes the ideas in it
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.1: What do child development theories tell us?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Why Theories of Development Are Important
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. As children grow, they become taller and heavier. This is a(n) ______.
a. quantitative change in development
b. qualitative change in development
c. accumulative change in development
d. transactive change in development
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.1: What do child development theories tell us?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Why Theories of Development Are Important
Difficulty Level: Easy
4. The force that drives development ______.
a. is biological processes in early development, but environmental processes later on
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
b. alternates between biological process and environmental processes throughout
development
c. cannot be quantified so we cannot say what this force might be
d. can be biological processes, environmental events, or an interaction of both
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.1: What do child development theories tell us?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Why Theories of Development Are Important
Difficulty Level: Easy
5. When we look at developmental theories in historical perspective, we find that
______.
a. theories do not develop in a vacuum because each draws upon earlier ideas or
concepts
b. over time theories have given more and more weight to the influence of early
experiences on development
c. all of our current best ideas are really just old ideas that have been recycled
d. the oldest theories, such as psychoanalysis and classical conditioning, are really still
the best ones
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Theories of Child and Adolescent Development
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. Freud believed that the key to healthy psychological functioning involved ______.
a. children directly confronting their parents about their perceived mistreatment while
they were young
b. releasing inhibitions and giving free reign to the demands of the id
c. uncovering the thoughts in the unconscious mind that were associated with the
psychological symptoms of the personโs problem
d. slowly being desensitized to stimuli that are provoking anxiety
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Psychoanalytic Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
7. In Freudโs psychoanalytic theory, the basic drives, such as sex and hunger, are
contained in the ______.
a. id
b. ego
c. unconscious
d. superego
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SAGE Publishing, 2020
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Psychoanalytic Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
8. The superego is the part of the personality that ______.
a. contains the basic biological drives, such as sex and hunger
b. deals with the demands of the real world and the demands of the id
c. constitutes the conscience or sense of right and wrong
d. contains the growing sense of autonomy as the child develops
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Psychoanalytic Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
9. Freud would say that an adult who smokes heavily or one who constantly bites her
nails ______.
a. is trying to repress her aggressive urges
b. is fixated at the oral stages because these needs were not met in infancy
c. has not resolved his or her issues with the same-sex parent
d. is stuck in the latency stage of development
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Sigmund Freudโs Psychosexual Stages
Difficulty Level: Medium
10. According to Freud, boys and girls develop what has been called โthe family
romanceโ during the ______ stage of development.
a. anal
b. phallic
c. latency
d. genital
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Sigmund Freudโs Psychosexual Stages
Difficulty Level: Medium
11. The driving force for development in Erik Eriksonโs theory is the ______.
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
a. use of rewards and punishment to shape the childโs behavior
b. need to understand and make sense of the childโs experiences
c. social experiences that are typical at each stage of development
d. need to adapt to the changing demands of the environment
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Erik Eriksonโs Psychosocial Stages
Difficulty Level: Medium
12. In Eriksonโs psychosocial theory, the developmental challenge of infancy is the
issue of ______.
a. initiative versus guilt
b. trust versus mistrust
c. autonomy versus shame
d. intimacy versus isolation
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Erik Eriksonโs Psychosocial Stages
Difficulty Level: Easy
13. Erik Eriksonโs psychosocial theory would suggest that the best way to help toddlers
develop a sense of autonomy would be to ______.
a. be patient and allow the child to do things on her own, even if she struggles a bit
b. allow the child to make his own decisions about what he wants to eat and when he
wants to eat it
c. let the child learn by watching other children of her own age, rather than getting help
from an adult
d. hold very high standards for the child and be critical of the childโs performance when
the child doesnโt meet your expectations
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Erik Eriksonโs Psychosocial Stages
Difficulty Level: Easy
14. The major modern application of psychoanalytic theory has been in the area of
______.
a. neuroscience
b. ethnography
c. mental and emotional disorders
d. information processing
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Modern Applications of Psychoanalytic Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
15. Psychoanalytic theory focuses on the internal process of the mind, but learning
theories focus on ______.
a. conscious motivation
b. adaptive biological mechanisms
c. biological maturation
d. observable behavior
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Learning Theories
Difficulty Level: Easy
16. Watson believed that our personality, abilities, and other qualities are primarily
determined by ______.
a. biological maturation
b. neural impulses
c. the environment
d. internal drives
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
17. John Watson classically conditioned Little Albert to demonstrate ______.
a. that infants could learn to salivate to the sound of a bell
b. how classical conditioning could create fear in a human infant
c. that reinforcement was more powerful in shaping behavior than punishment
d. how quickly responses can be learned and then unlearned
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Easy
18. One of the important modern applications of classical conditioning is to ______.
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
a. develop effective treatments for phobias
b. treat eating disorders
c. understand the adaptive functions of behavior
d. design better teaching techniques to use in classrooms
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
19. Through the use of virtual reality, deconditioning has been used to help returning
soldiers overcome their debilitating fear reactions. This therapeutic approach is based
upon ______.
a. dynamic systems theory
b. principles of operant conditioning
c. principles of classical conditioning
d. social cognitive theory
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Hard
20. In operant conditioning ______.
a. involuntary responses are either reinforced or punished by the environment
b. an unconditioned stimulus will always lead to an unconditioned response
c. a reinforcement that follows a behavior causes that behavior to occur again
d. a fixed response produces behaviors that are the most resistant to extinction
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
21. If you wanted to encourage a child to eat a more healthy diet, at first you might smile
or nod when the child was willing to take a small bite of a healthy food item on her plate.
Then you might only smile and nod when the child took a full bite of the food. Then you
might only respond when the child ate several bites, and finally only when the child
finished the serving on her plate. You are changing this childโs behavior through the
process of ______.
a. classical conditioning
b. negative reinforcement
c. shaping
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
d. assimilation
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Easy
22. If a professor wanted his students to study at a steady pace throughout the
semester, this would be more likely to happen if the quizzes in his class happened
______.
a. each time the class finished covering 100 pages in the textbook
b. every other week
c. as โpop quizzesโ that occurred from time to time without warning
d. only at the middle and then again at the end of the semester.
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Hard
23. After you eat dinner at your favorite restaurant five times, they give you a free
dessert. This is an example of a ______ schedule of reinforcement.
a. fixed ratio
b. variable ratio
c. fixed interval
d. variable interval
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Hard
24. You can extinguish an undesired behavior by ______.
a. delivering an unpleasant consequence following the behavior
b. slowly escalating the amount of punishment for the continued undesired behavior
c. not responding to the behavior
d. only intermittently punishing the behavior
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Easy
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
25. Banduraโs social cognitive theory added a third learning principle to classical and
operant conditioning, which was that ______.
a. reinforcement is more powerful in shaping behavior than punishment
b. only involuntary responses can be classically conditioned
c. shaping is an effective way to learn a new behavior
d. people also can learn through imitation of behaviors they observe
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Albert Bandura and Social Cognitive Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
26. When children observed an adult treating a Bobo doll in an aggressive manner
______.
a. they were more likely to treat the doll aggressively themselves when they had the
chance to play with it
b. it aroused a great deal of anxiety in the children and the experiment needed to be
discontinued
c. only children who were initially highly aggressive in their play were affected by what
they saw
d. they exactly copied what they saw the adult do when they played with a smaller doll
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Albert Bandura and Social Cognitive Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
27. In recent research, Bandura has focused on the core belief that one has the power
to influence oneโs own functioning and life circumstances, also known as ______.
a. social cognitive theory
b. self-efficacy
c. social learning theory
d. operant conditioning
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Albert Bandura and Social Cognitive Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
28. According to Piaget, when you encounter new information and it fits into an existing
scheme, you can ______ the new information.
a. transform
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SAGE Publishing, 2020
b. assimilate
c. accommodate
d. encode
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Jean Piagetโs Cognitive Developmental Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
29. If new information cannot fit into an existing scheme, it throws us into a state of
cognitive disequilibrium and we will ______.
a. transform the new information into a form we can understand
b. encode the information in a new way that will allow it to be assimilated
c. need to create a new scheme to accommodate the information
d. level the information so that it can make sense to us
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Jean Piagetโs Cognitive Developmental Theory
Difficulty Level: Hard
30. Piagetโs research has affected the world of education by ______.
a. stressing the importance of rote learning in early education
b. promoting strategies that allow the child to construct his own learning
c. emphasizing the importance of group work and collaboration in learning projects
d. making us realize the young children need a great deal of adult supervision and
oversight in order to learn effectively
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Jean Piagetโs Cognitive Developmental Theory
Difficulty Level: Hard
31. The help that a more knowledgeable person offers to a child to help the child move
beyond his current level of understanding is called ______.
a. collaborative learning
b. prompting
c. assimilation
d. scaffolding
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
Answer Location: Lev Vygotskyโs Sociocultural Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
32. When dynamic assessment is used to determine a childโs level of understanding,
the instructor determines the childโs current level of understanding and then ______.
a. helps the child move to the next level of understanding
b. compares the childโs performance to the performance of other children of the same
age
c. re-assesses the childโs understanding at a later date
d. determines what the child can do under a different set of testing conditions
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Modern Applications of Vygotskyโs Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
33. The theory that originally proposed our brains work in similar ways to how
computers process information is called ______.
a. evolutionary theory
b. ecological theory
c. dynamic systems theory
d. information processing theory
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Information Processing
Difficulty Level: Easy
34. In the connectionist/network model of memory, memory consists of ______.
a. stores of information that are linked by encoding processes
b. memory traces that strengthen with use or degrade with inactivity
c. concept nodes that are linked together into a neural network
d. the free associations that we make between ideas and concepts
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Information Processing
Difficulty Level: Medium
35. Information processing theory, by breaking cognitive processes down into their
component steps, has been used to ______.
a. make progress in developmental psychopathology
b. design better teaching techniques
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SAGE Publishing, 2020
c. help scientists understand how and why children develop as they do, based on the
adaptive value of behaviors
d. understand the importance of nutrition in a childโs development
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Information Processing
Difficulty Level: Medium
36. The understanding that newborn ducklings and goslings will imprint upon and follow
their mothers immediately after birth came from early work in the field of ______.
a. ethology
b. sociobiology
c. ecological theory
d. information processing
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Evolutionary Theory: Ethology
Difficulty Level: Easy
37. An explanation for why girls growing up in families that are conflictual, dysfunctional,
or in which the father is absent go through puberty at an earlier age has come from the
field of ______.
a. psychopathology
b. ecological systems theory
c. evolutionary developmental psychology
d. ethology
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Modern Applications of Evolutionary Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
38. Bronfenbrenner would say that it is important that we understand the individual
______.
a. as an autonomous individual who has the free will to make independent choices
b. as someone who primarily responds to biological processes that he canโt control
c. not on her own or with one or two other people, but rather within all of the contexts
that affect development
d. as a member of a specific culture that dictates the personโs attitudes, values, and
beliefs
Ans: C
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Ecological Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
39. In ecological theory, the macrosystem consists of ______.
a. all of a personโs face-to-face interactions in the personโs immediate settings
b. the interactions between various microsystems
c. the settings that are external to the child and that the child never enters
d. the cultural norms that guide the organizations and places that make up oneโs
everyday life
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Ecological Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
40. Ecological system theory has made a particularly important impact in the area of
______.
a. sociobiology
b. social policy and action research
c. education
d. neurobiology
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Ecological Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
41. A new understanding that has emerged from the research in neuropsychology is
that ______.
a. genes largely determine our behavior
b. experience is powerful enough to override almost all genetic effects
c. biology impacts behavior, but the environment also affects biological functioning
d. the effects of biology and behavior are so complex that we are not yet able to
disentangle the two
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.3: What role do neuropsychology, genetics, and culture play
in the study of child development?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Neuropsychology and Behavioral Genetics
Difficulty Level: Medium
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
42. As a result of our growing understanding of how both the brain and genes function,
we now recognize that ______.
a. biology has an impact on behavior, but the environment also affects our biological
functioning
b. all of the different aspects of development interact and affect each other over time
c. the โclose inโ environments have a greater impact on development than the more
distal environments
d. dominant genes are a more powerful influence on brain development than recessive
genes
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.3: What role do neuropsychology, genetics, and culture play
in the study of child development?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Neuropsychology and Behavioral Genetics
Difficulty Level: Medium
43. As part of research study, a researcher decides that she will use the number of
pieces of junk mail that a family receives each week as an indicator of how wealthy the
family is. If we do not have a good reason to believe that these two things are related,
her measure of family wealth is ______.
a. unreliable
b. not valid
c. unstandardized
d. multidimensional
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Hard
44. If we conduct a research study using a sample of 14- to 16-year-old adolescents
attending school in ethnically diverse middle-class communities, we could correctly
generalize our results to ______.
a. all adolescents between the ages of 14 and 16
b. all middle-class adolescents
c. all middle-class adolescents between the ages of 14 and 16
d. adolescents who have characteristics similar to those of the sample
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Easy
45. One of the advantages of doing research by using observations is that we can
______.
a. determine the causes of behavior
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
b. observe behavior as it naturally occurs
c. compare a single individual to an entire group of individuals
d. generalize our results to most populations
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Easy
46. When we use our observations to make a detailed record of everything that occurs
in a stream of behavior, we can ______.
a. carefully control and manipulate the variables we are interested in
b. infer the causes of the behaviors that we are observing
c. generalize our results to other children in similar circumstances
d. use it to generate new hypotheses for future research
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Observations
Difficulty Level: Medium
47. When we use observations to conduct research ______.
a. we are able to identify the causes of the behavior we observe
b. we can be certain that we are seeing behavior as it naturally occurs
c. it does not tell us directly about the causes of the behaviors we see
d. they cannot help us to formulate new hypotheses that we can later test
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Observations
Difficulty Level: Medium
48. One of the disadvantages of using surveys to conduct research is that ______.
a. respondents may not be able to accurately recall and report on the behavior covered
by the survey
b. it is a very expensive and time-intensive method of collecting data
c. the researcher must develop norms for the responses and update those norms
periodically
d. the researcher must be sure that the groups of participants who answer the questions
are comparable in as many ways as possible
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Self-Report Measures
Difficulty Level: Medium
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
49. When Piaget was conducting his research, he might present a story and then ask
children questions about it. There were some questions he asked every child, but there
also were questions that were specifically tied to the childโs initial response. Piaget was
using a ______ to conduct his research.
a. standardized interview
b. modified interview
c. clinical interview
d. flexible interview
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Self-Report Measures
Difficulty Level: Medium
50. When a researcher conducts a clinical interview, the interviewer ______.
a. asks everyone the same set of questions in the same order
b. asks questions from a standard set of questions, but in random order from one
respondent to another
c. talks to a third party who is familiar with the experiences of the person who is the
subject of the interview
d. can ask additional questions based on the respondentโs answers or ask the
respondent to expand on an answer
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Self-Report Measures
Difficulty Level: Easy
51. A controversy surrounding the use of intelligence tests by the U.S. Army during
World War I and World War II centered around whether ______.
a. the achievement items were better predictors of abilities than the performance items
b. a larger number of items would improve the accuracy of the tests in placing recruits in
specific jobs
c. group differences in scores reflected inherent differences in mental abilities or were
biased against members of certain groups
d. the tests were useful for assessing individuals who were older than their mid-20s.
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Standardized Tests
Difficulty Level: Medium
52. The Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) and the American College Testing (ACT)
programs are used by many colleges as part of the admissions process because
______.
a. they are free from bias and give every student an equal chance of being admitted
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
b. when taken together with high school grade point average (GPA) they predict college
GPA better than high school GPA alone
c. they are designed to give an advantage to traditionally underrepresented groups of
students
d. these tests are able to detect differences in inherent ability or aptitude between
students
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Standardized Tests
Difficulty Level: Medium
53. One of the advantages of using physiological measures when conducting research
is that ______.
a. they do not require that the participant be able to use language
b. you can utilize multiple methods to collect the data
c. data can be gathered quickly and efficiently
d. the interpretation of the data is always clear and straightforward
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Physiological Measures
Difficulty Level: Easy
54. Physiological tests (such as EEGs and ERPs) are particularly useful in research on
______.
a. infants because their central nervous system is more responsive than the central
nervous system of older children
b. adolescents because they often are not aware of their true feelings and canโt report
on them
c. infants and young children who are not yet speaking and therefore cannot answer
questions or follow complex instructions
d. adolescents because their hormones make their central nervous system more
reactive to physical stimuli than to words
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Physiological Measures
Difficulty Level: Easy
55. Professor Tyrone is interested in studying how the use of media (such as having the
television on, answering text messages, or listening to an iPod) affects studentsโ ability
to study for their courses. It would be better if she got permission to look up the
studentsโ grade point average than to simply ask the students to self-report their grade
point average because ______.
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
a. they might not correctly report their grade point average in an attempt to make
themselves look better to the researcher
b. students donโt pay much attention to grades, so many may not have this information
in their memory
c. grade point averages change so frequently that it is difficult for students to accurately
recall what it is
d. it wonโt be clear to students what information Professor Tyrone is looking for when
she asks about their grade point average
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Archival Records
Difficulty Level: Hard
56. When conducting a case study, it is particularly important that the researcher
______.
a. gathers a representative sample for the study
b. remains objective in her observations and interpretation of them
c. carefully explains the purpose of the study to the subject
d. uses valid, standardized tests in the assessment process
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Case Studies
Difficulty Level: Medium
57. The unique advantage of experimental research is that it ______.
a. can be used with large, diverse groups of participants
b. relies on norms to determine what is typical or average
c. can produce data that periodically are updated
d. can identify the causes of behavior
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
58. In an experiment, the difference between the experimental group and the control
group is that the ______.
a. experimental group is always larger than the control group
b. control group knows what is being tested in the experiment, but the experimental
group is โblindโ to the purpose of it
c. experimental group gets the special treatment that the researcher is studying and the
control group doesnโt
d. control group is always tested before the experimental group is
Ans: C
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
59. The ______ variable is the one that the researcher controls or manipulates in the
experiment and the ______ variable is the outcome that is measured at the end of the
experiment.
a. dependent; independent
b. independent; control
c. dependent; concluding
d. independent; dependent
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
60. Participants are randomly assigned to either the experimental group or the control
group in an experiment ______.
a. to ensure that there will be an equal number of males and females in the
experimental group and the control group
b. so that the participants will not be able to figure out what is being tested in the
experiment
c. to help ensure that the two groups are not systemically different from each other at
the start of the experiment
d. so that the researcher will not know which group is being given the independent
variable
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
61. When you find a positive correlation between two variables, it means that ______.
a. these variables have a beneficial effect on the childโs development
b. changes in the first variable will cause a change in the second variable
c. as the value of one variable goes up so does the value of the second variable
d. these two variables can predict the value of a third variable
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Experimental Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
62. Which of the following correlations is the strongest?
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
a. +.25
b. โ.82
c. +.63
d. โ.11
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
63. We cannot determine the causes of behavior from a correlation because ______.
a. a negative correlation means that the two variables are not related to each other
b. the relationship may not hold for the control group
c. we need more than two variables before we can determine the causes of behavior
d. we do not have control over other variables that may affect the correlation
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
64. If you read that a correlational study has found that children who participate in more
extracurricular activities have higher self-esteem, you could conclude that ______.
a. participating in extracurricular activities makes children feel good about themselves
b. getting children to participate in more extracurricular activities will lead to increases in
self-esteem
c. participation in extracurricular activities is associated with higher self-esteem
d. high self-esteem drives children to seek out activities at which they can excel
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
65. Children who have been the victims of child maltreatment are followed from early
childhood through adolescence with their psychological and emotional well-being
assessed every 3 years during this time. This is an example of a(n) ______.
a. archival study
b. longitudinal study
c. correlational study
d. cross-sectional study
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
66. One of the major challenges with conducting longitudinal research is that ______.
a. it is very difficult to construct matched groups of subjects for your sample
b. the groups of participants you are studying have had different life experiences
c. you need to continually update the tests and measures that you are using
d. it takes a great deal of time and money to conduct such research
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
67. Attrition is a problem for longitudinal studies because ______.
a. all participants are not at equal risk of being lost from the study over time
b. you cannot add new measures to the study as it goes on
c. all groups in the study must be as much the same as you can possibly make them
d. it creates a cohort effect among the participants
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
68. Professor Alsmith looks at changes in self-esteem across adolescence by
measuring the self-esteem of 11-year-olds, 13-year-olds, 15-year-olds, and 17-yearolds and comparing the results between the groups. This is an example of a(n) ______.
a. archival study
b. longitudinal study
c. correlational study
d. cross-sectional study
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
69. One of the challenges with doing a cross-sectional study is that ______.
a. you must have groups that cover the entire age range from infancy through
adolescence
b. you must be certain that the different age groups you use are as similar to each other
as you possibly can make them
c. it will be hard to get the statistical tools that you need to adequately analyze your data
d. your findings may no longer be relevant by the time your study is completed
Ans: B
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
70. A cohort effect is the biggest problem for ______.
a. longitudinal studies
b. experimental research
c. observational research
d. cross-sectional studies
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Easy
71. There is a cohort effect in cross-sectional studies when ______.
a. the different groups in the study have had different life experiences
b. the researcher uses different measures for the different groups in the study
c. participants drop out of the study for various reasons over time
d. the measures that are being used in the study change over time
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
72. A study that has several groups of different ages that are followed over time and
that has an overlap in the ages of the groups is a ______.
a. multi-phasic study
b. longitudinal study
c. cohort study
d. cross-sequential study
Ans: D
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Developmental Research Designs
Difficulty Level: Medium
73. When the results of a study are statistically significant, it means that ______.
a. the results are not likely to have occurred by chance
b. the differences found will have an important impact on childrenโs development
c. the research has been carefully conducted
d. there is no other interpretation of the results of the study
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Interpreting and Using the Results of a Study
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
Difficulty Level: Easy
74. A meta-analysis involves ______.
a. combining results from different studies to identify patterns of findings that are
consistent across studies
b. increasing the size of a sample to include a wider range of child characteristics
c. adding additional groups of participants to a study so it will represent a wider age
range
d. establishing a level of statistical significance that we can agree makes the results
highly reliable
Ans: A
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Interpreting and Using the Results of a Study
Difficulty Level: Hard
75. To protect the rights of individuals who participate in scientific research, it is
necessary to ______.
a. pay participants for the time that they give to the study
b. make the names of participants available to anyone who requests that information
c. weigh the potential risks to the participants against the anticipated benefits of the
research
d. provide the participants with advice, based upon the results of the study, for how they
can improve their lives
Ans: C
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.5: What are ethical considerations in research with children
and adolescents?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Ethics in Research with Children and Adolescents
Difficulty Level: Medium
True/False
1. The very best theories are those that are totally novel and seem to come out of the
blue.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.1: What do child development theories tell us?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Why Theories of Development Are Important
Difficulty Level: Easy
2. According to psychoanalytic theory, a person can be fixated at a stage because the
personโs needs were not adequately met at that stage or because the person received
so much gratification that the person is not willing to move on to another stage.
Ans: T
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Sigmund Freudโs Psychosexual Stages
Difficulty Level: Easy
3. The process of classical conditioning works on animals, but humans cannot be
classically conditioned.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
4. Piaget believed that the primary difference between how children think and how
adults think is a difference in how much each knows.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Jean Piagetโs Cognitive Developmental Theory
Difficulty Level: Hard
5. The connectionist or neural network model of memory is based on the idea that
neurons in the brain operate through multiple simultaneous connections with other
neurons.
Ans: T
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Information Processing
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. In evolutionary theory, survival of the fittest refers to the ability of the animal to adapt
most successfully to their environment.
Ans: T
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Evolutionary Theory: Ethology
Difficulty Level: Easy
7. Evolutionary developmental psychologists have suggested that girls in dysfunctional
families reach puberty earlier because this will enable them to pass on their genes if
they donโt reach adulthood.
Ans: F
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Modern Applications of Evolutionary Theory
Difficulty Level: Hard
8. When research has ecological validity it means that it takes the environment into
account when interpreting the findings.
Ans: T
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Ecological Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
9. Developmental theories proposed by American and European theorists are universal
and can be applied to the study of children anywhere in the world.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Developmental Theory in a Cultural Context
Difficulty Level: Easy
10. Using a large sample ensures that it will be a representative sample.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: The Scientific Method
Difficulty Level: Medium
11. When observations are carefully done and include a representative sample of
children, you can determine the causes of their behavior.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Observations
Difficulty Level: Medium
12. Well-constructed, reliable, well-standardized psychological tests are not biased
against native-born American racial and ethnic minorities.
Ans: T
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Standardized Tests
Difficulty Level: Easy
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
13. One of the advantages of doing a case study is that it is easy for the researcher to
remain objective about his observations and interpretations.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: Case Studies
Difficulty Level: Medium
14. In a negative correlation, as the value of one variable goes down, so does the value
of the second variable.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.4: How is research on child development conducted?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Correlational Designs
Difficulty Level: Hard
15. Children and adolescents are never asked to give consent for participation in
research because they cannot understand what they are agreeing to.
Ans: F
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.5: What are ethical considerations in research with children
and adolescents?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Ethics in Research with Children and Adolescents
Difficulty Level: Hard
Essay
1. A 9-year-old boy is not doing well in school. How would you find out what is causing
his problem and how would you treat the problem if you were a behaviorist? If you were
a psychoanalyst?
Ans: Freud thought our most basic drive is the sex drive. Freud believed that many of
our thoughts and feelings about sexuality are hidden in our unconscious mind, the part
of our mind of which we are unaware. As the ego develops, children are still motivated
by their basic drives, but they are now able to interact in the real world to get their needs
met. Finally, sometime between the ages of 5 and 7, children begin to incorporate moral
principles that work against the drive-motivated functioning of the id. These moral
principles are maintained by the superego. Freud believed that children do not have
any internal sense of guilt that guides their actions until they develop a superego.
With behaviorists, the concentration is on the observable, or what the child is doing.
One might study the way that the environment influences human behavior.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Theories of Child and Adolescent Development
Difficulty Level: Easy
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
2. Give at least two ways in which Freudโs stages differ from those of Erikson. How are
their theories similar?
Ans: Erikson believed that issues of the ego are more important than those linked with
the id and that the development of identity is the central issue for children and
adolescents. At each stage in his theory, a conflict arises rooted in the social
experiences typical at that stage of development. For this reason, Eriksonโs (1963)
theory is said to describe psychosocial stages (as opposed to Freudโs psychosexual
stages).
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Analysis
Answer Location: Psychoanalytic Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
3. What did John Watson claim that he had accomplished with the infant Little Albert
and how did he do it?
Ans: When Little Albert was first shown a white rat, he was curious and unafraid, so the
rat was initially a neutral stimulus because it did not produce a fear response. However,
Watson then made the loud sound at the same time that he presented the white rat to
the infant. He did this numerous times over a number of days, and Little Albert soon
began to express fear by crying as soon as he saw the white rat. Eventually Watson
stopped making the loud sound, and yet every time he showed Little Albert the white
rat, which by now had become a CS, the infant continued to show fear, which now was
a CR, or learned response.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level:
4. What is the difference between positive and negative reinforcement?
Ans: A reinforcement is anything that occurs after a behavior that increases the
likelihood the behavior will continue or happen again. Reinforcement can be positive or
negative, and both types make a behavior more likely to happen. Positive reinforcement
occurs when you get something you like and want. Negative reinforcement occurs when
something disagreeable is removed by a behavior.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer Location: John B. Watson and Classical Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
5. How would you use Skinnerโs idea of reinforcement to work with a child who was
showing a lot of aggression in a third-grade class?
Ans: Skinner described several concepts related to operant conditioning that help us
understand how the process works. The first is the process of shaping behavior. You
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
cannot reinforce a behavior unless that behavior occurs. For example, you cannot
reinforce positive peer interaction with a child who does not interact with his peers.
However, Skinner developed the idea that behavior can slowly be โshapedโ through
reinforcement of behaviors that progressively get more and more like the behaviors
desired. To shape the behavior of a child who does not interact with peers, you could
use a series of rewards that begin when the child is simply near another child. The next
step might be that the child is reinforced only when he looks at the other child, and
finally the reinforcement might be provided only when he speaks while looking at the
child. Eventually, the reward would be contingent only on true interaction with a peer.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: B. F. Skinner and Operant Conditioning
Difficulty Level: Medium
6. Some adolescents abuse alcohol in a way that is risky to their health and possibly to
those around them. Describe at each level of Bronfenbrenner’s ecological model what
may cause an individual to develop such problems.
Ans: The microsystem includes the face-to-face interactions a person has in her
immediate settings, such as home, school, or friendship groups. The interaction
between a child and a peer, or between a pair of siblings. The mesosystem brings
together two settings that contain the child. For example, when parents meet and talk to
a childโs teacher, the home setting interacts with the school setting and this interaction
influences the childโs progress at school. The exosystem consists of settings the child
never enters, that is, that are external to the child, but that affect the childโs
development nevertheless (Bronfenbrenner, 1986). For example, even if the child never
goes to a parentโs workplace, what happens in that setting can have an effect on the
child. A job so demanding that it leaves parents exhausted at the end of the day affects
the way parents will interact with children when they come home. The macrosystem
consists of cultural norms that underlie the institutions and activities that make up
someoneโs everyday life. For example, the macrosystem in the United States includes
the ideology of democracy, as well as the value placed on individual achievement. The
chronosystem consists of the events that take place at different times of a childโs life, as
well as the time in history in which the child lives. For example, parental divorce affects
a 2-year-old child much differently than a teenager.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Application
Answer Location: Bronfenbrennerโs Ecological Systems Model
Difficulty Level: Hard
7. Define Vygotskyโs concept of the zone of proximal development.
Ans: Zone of proximal development, defined as โthe distance between the actual
developmental level as determined by independent problem solving and the level of
potential development as determined through problem solving under adult guidance or
in collaboration with more capable peers.โ Proximal refers to being near or close. A
Levine, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence 2e
SAGE Publishing, 2020
good teacher must first determine what children already know and then challenges them
to learn something near enough to what they already know that they will able to make
sense of it, a process called scaffolding.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Knowledge
Answer Location: Lev Vygotskyโs Sociocultural Theory
Difficulty Level: Hard
8. Describe Piagetโs ideas of assimilation, accommodation, and equilibration.
Ans: In assimilation, we take new information and put it into an existing schema,
whether it really fits there or not. Accommodation, the child accommodates this new
information by creating a new schema. In Piagetโs theory, a process he called
equilibration is the constant seesaw between assimilation and accommodation.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer location: Jean Piagetโs Cognitive Developmental Theory
Difficulty Level: Medium
9. A parent who smokes tells her child never to smoke because it is bad for her health.
What would Albert Bandura say about how effective this will be and why?
Ans: The learning occurs from watching other people (social). Banduraโs earliest work
showed how children learn by direct observation.
KEY: Learning Objective: 2.2: What are the hypotheses and modern applications of the
major child development theories?
REF: Cognitive Domain: Comprehension
Answer location: Albert Bandura and Social Cognitive Theory
Difficulty Level: Easy
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