Test Bank for Educational Psychology: Developing Learners, 10th Edition
Preview Extract
Chapter 2
COGNITIVE AND LINGUISTIC DEVELOPMENT
CHAPTER OUTCOMES
RELEVANT TEST BANK
ITEMS
2.1 Describe four principles portraying the general nature of
child development and the interactive roles of heredity and
environment in guiding it.
Multiple Choice 1โ6
2.2 Explain how the brain and its development influence
childrenโs thinking and learning.
Multiple Choice 7โ14
2.3 Apply Piagetโs theory of cognitive development to
classroom practice.
Multiple Choice 15โ45
2.4 Apply Vygotskyโs theory of cognitive development to
classroom practice.
Multiple Choice 46โ69
2.5 Describe developmental changes in language during the
school years, and explain how you might adapt instruction
to children with diverse linguistic abilities and needs.
Multiple Choice 70โ84
Essay 85
Essay 86โ88
Essay 89โ91
Essay 92, 93
Multiple-Choice Questions
โข
1. Most developmental theorists agree that:
a. development occurs at a smooth, constant rate throughout childhood and early
adolescence; it begins to slow down in the high school years.
b. developmental milestones appear in a consistent sequence for most children.
c. physical development occurs in a predictable sequence, but cognitive
development does not.
d. cognitive development occurs in a predictable sequence, but physical
development does not.
โขโข
2. Which one of the following statements best illustrates a universal in development as
developmentalists define the term?
a. Piaget proposed that formal operational thought is characterized by an ability to
think abstractly about a wide variety of topics.
b. Contemporary theorists have derived the concept of cognitive apprenticeship
from Vygotskyโs theory of development.
c. Young children show similar patterns in their language development regardless
of the specific language that they learn.
d. Piaget neglected to consider the influence of prior knowledge and experience
on childrenโs ability to think logically.
โข
3. Which one of the following statements reflects what developmentalists mean by the
term maturation?
a. Developmental changes that are controlled largely by heredity
b. Changes related specifically to childrenโs physical development
c. Changes related specifically to childrenโs emotional development
d. Changes that reflect increasingly appropriate social behavior
โข
4. Which of the following is not true regarding the role of the environment in
Bronfenbrenner’s theory?
a. There are several levels of environment and each level exerts a significant
impact on children’s development.
b. The broadest levels of the environment (such as states, provinces, or
countries) exert the most influence on children’s development.
c. A child’s culture can influence all levels of the environment.
d. Children’s environments are dynamic systems encompassing variables that not
only influence each other but are in a state of constant flux or change.
โข
5. Emilyโs mother is a doctor. According to bioecological systems theory, the hospital
and the people she works with all have some influence on Emilyโs development and
are part of Emilyโs:
a. exosystem.
b. mesosystem.
c. microsystem.
d. macrosystem.
โขโข
6. Four-year-old Marc has two best friends โ one from his preschool and one from his
neighborhood. The two best friends donโt know each other, but both have some
influence on how Marc develops. According to bioecological systems theory, these
two friends are part of Marcโs:
a. microsystems.
b. macrosystem.
c. exosystem.
d. mesosystem.
โข
7. A sensitive period in development can best be described as:
a. a stage of development in which children display unpredictable (and often
inappropriate) emotional responses.
b. a period during childrenโs cognitive development in which they are highly
distractible and so are frequently off-task in the classroom.
c. an approach to teaching or parenting that takes a childโs developmental level
into account.
d. an age range during which environmental conditions are most likely to have an
effect on a particular aspect of a childโs development.
โข
8. Which one of the following best describes how neurons transmit messages to one
another?
a. By stimulating the flow of blood in nearby blood vessels
b. By attaching themselves to the same terminal buttons
c. By fusing the axon of one with a dendrite of another
d. By sending chemical substances across a tiny gap between them
โข
9. Which one of the following best describes our current knowledge about the brain
and learning?
a. We know that learning is often associated with the formation of new synapses.
b. We know that the brain reaches adult levels of maturity at puberty, enabling
young adolescents to think and learn as effectively as adults do.
c. We know that โleft-brainedโ individuals are, on average, more effective
learners than โright-brainedโ individuals.
d. We know that the cortexes of rapid learners are about 20% larger than the
cortexes of slow learners.
โข
10. In the human brain, a great deal of synaptic pruning occurs in early childhood. This
pruning appears to be:
a. the unfortunate result of home and school environments that provide only
limited stimulation.
b. an adaptive process that allows children to deal more efficiently with typical
tasks in their environment.
c. due to an imbalance of important nutrients, and especially to low levels of the B
vitamins in many childrenโs diets.
d. the result of the cortexโs gradual takeover of responsibility for functions that
have previously been controlled by other parts of the brain.
โข
11. As children grow older, many of their neurons begin to transmit messages more
rapidly than they did in the early years of life, thanks to:
a. increasing dominance of one brain hemisphere over the other.
b. synaptogenesis.
c. myelination.
d. greater variety of neurotransmitters.
โขโข 12. It is because of brain plasticity that:
a. individuals can be either left- or right-handed.
b. individuals are often able to remember something they thought they had forgotten.
c. individuals are able to learn new things at many different ages and in many
different circumstances.
d. individuals are able to develop mastery with little effort.
โขโข 13. Which example below is not a good example to show brain plasticity?
a. Mary had a stroke and, as a result, was unable to use her right arm. Her doctor and
physical therapist devised a plan in which Mary’s left or “good” arm was put in a
sling so that she would not be able to use it. Over time Mary slowly regained the
ability to use her right arm.
b. A senior citizen decides that she would like to learn to play the piano. She starts
with weekly lessons at a very beginning level and within a couple of years
demonstrates quite a bit of skill with her musical instrument of choice.
c. DeWayne has been riding horses since he was a youngster growing up on a west
Texas farm. Even though he took some nasty falls during his lifetime, he still rides
quite well.
d. A baby learns that her mom always returns home after daily walks. For this
reason, the baby no longer cries when her mother leaves the house each day to
take a walk.
โข 14. Which type of cells can best be thought of as having a variety of specific functions
that help provide support for neurons as well as general brain functioning?
a. Glial
b. Stem
c. Basal
d. Myelin
โขโข 15. Mr. Remick asks 9-year-old Anne to divide a pitcher of lemonade equally between
two glasses, one each for her and her friend Kate. The two glasses are different
shapes, with Anneโs being tall and thin and Kateโs being short and wide. After Anne
pours the lemonade, Mr. Remick says to her, โLook, the lemonade in your glass is
higher than the lemonade in Kateโs glass. Did you give yourself more than you gave
Kate?โ โNo,โ Anne replies, โmy glass is skinnier.โ Mr. Remick continues to ask
Anne questions to determine how well she understands that height compensates for
width in this situation. Mr. Remickโs strategy can best be described as illustrating:
a. equilibration.
b. class inclusion.
c. formal operations.
d. the clinical method.
โขโข 16. Which one of the following reflects class inclusion as Piaget described it?
a. Getting cows and horses confused
b. Identifying a shape as a square one day but as a triangle the next
c. Realizing that things that are cars can also be vehicles
d. Understanding that some behaviors that are perfectly acceptable at home are
unacceptable at school
โขโข 17. Five-year-old Becky is playing with blocks, stacking them one on top of another
until her towers eventually tumble, and then stacking them again. Which one of the
following best reflects Piagetโs view of how Becky is probably learning in this
situation?
a. Because she is probably still in the sensorimotor stage, she will remember what
she learns about the blocks only while the blocks are still in front of her.
b. She is absorbing information about how the environment behaves (e.g.,
โobjects fallโ) without consciously thinking about it.
c. She is actively thinking about and interpreting the results of her actions.
d. Because she builds one tower after another, she is obviously reinforced by
watching her towers tumble down.
โข
18. Which one of the following statements best describes Piagetโs view of how children
acquire knowledge about the world?
a. Children are naturally disposed to think about their environment in particular
ways; in a sense, some basic knowledge about the world is โpre-wired.โ
b. Children actively construct their own view of the world from their experiences
with the environment.
c. Initially, children unconsciously develop a rather complex but confused view of
the world; this view becomes simpler and more straightforward as time goes
on.
d. Children repeatedly parrot their parentsโ and teachersโ beliefs, eventually
adopting these beliefs as their own knowledge.
โข
19. In Piagetโs theory, a scheme can best be described as:
a. a mental picture of oneself.
b. a lifestyle or family pattern.
c. an organized set of similar thoughts or actions.
d. a set of motor skills that children acquire during the preschool years.
โขโข 20. Louis receives a new soccer ball and begins to dribble it in the same way he dribbles
his basketball. His dribbling of the new ball reflects Piagetโs concept of:
a. assimilation.
b. equilibration.
c. accommodation.
d. concrete operations.
โขโข 21.
Which one of the following is the best example of Piagetโs concept of assimilation?
a. A kindergartner uses a white crayon instead of chalk to draw on the blackboard.
b. A third grader develops the necessary eye-hand coordination for writing letters.
c. A sixth grader moves to a different school and changes styles to fit the fashions.
d. An eighth grader is discouraged from using the word awesome to describe
everything he sees.
โขโข 22. Which one of the following best illustrates Piagetโs concept of accommodation?
a. After Amanda solves a set of 10 addition problems carelessly and incorrectly,
she is given 10 more problems to solve.
b. Betsy writes down her definition of a molluskโsomething she learned wordfor-word from her textbook.
c. Carol copies what her teacher writes on the chalkboard.
d. Donna revises her understanding of what clouds are like when she studies them
in science.
โขโข 23. Which one of the following teachers is definitely keeping in mind Piagetโs idea that
assimilation and accommodation are both necessary for learning and cognitive
development to occur?
a. Mr. Ames presents brand new topics every day, expecting the continual novelty
to keep students interested and motivated.
b. Mr. Baretta shows students how a new topic is similar to the things they already
know, but also different in certain ways.
c. Ms. Chang makes sure that students have learned one topic very, very well
before moving on to another topic.
d. Ms. Doherty uses a lot of drill-and-practice exercises, encouraging students to
work faster every time.
โข
24. Which one of the following best describes Piagetโs notion of equilibration?
a. A child assimilates without accommodating.
b. A child accommodates without assimilating.
c. A child doesnโt encounter any new or challenging ideas.
d. A child revises existing schemes to incorporate new information.
โข
25. Piagetโs view of cognitive development can best be described as:
a. a gradual and steady progression of intellectual capabilities.
b. changes in the brain that enable increasingly rapid learning.
c. an increasing number of stimulus-response connections over time.
d. discrete stages in which distinctly different forms of logical thought emerge.
โขโข 26. Mr. Johnson teaches a class of twenty 8-year-old third graders. His goal for the
upcoming school year is to help at least 50% of his students reach formal
operations. From the perspective of Piagetโs theory, we would expect that Mr.
Johnsonโs goal is:
a. an easy one to attain.
b. almost impossible to attain.
c. attainable only if he emphasizes abstract reasoning throughout the school year.
d. attainable only if his students have had enriching educational experiences
throughout their early lives.
โข
27. Piagetโs sensorimotor stage is characterized by:
a. the beginnings of deductive logic.
b. inaccurate mental representations of the surrounding world.
c. schemes based primarily on perceptions and behaviors.
d. rudimentary schemes for dealing with abstract ideas.
โขโข 28. Piaget spoke of egocentrism in both the thought and speech of the preoperational
child. Three of the following are examples of preoperational egocentrism as Piaget
defined it. Which one is not?
a. Justin is constantly grabbing objects and pulling them toward himself.
b. Kate cannot understand or answer the question, โHow do you think Molly
feels?โ
c. Isabel cannot understand why she must share classroom equipment with others.
d. Lois tells a story as if her listeners already know many details they canโt
possibly know.
โขโข 29. Roger is shown two piles of sand and says that each pile has the same amount.
However, when one pile is flattened with a shovel, he now claims emphatically that
the flattened pile has less sand. Based on this information, Roger is probably in
which of Piagetโs stages of development?
a. Concrete operations
b. Sensorimotor
c. Formal operations
d. Preoperational
โข
30. Imagine you are a third-grade teacher. Considering Piagetโs theory of cognitive
development, you should expect most or all of your students to exhibit ______
thinking.
a. preoperational
b. formal operational
c. sensorimotor
d. concrete operational
โข
31. Which one of the following is associated with Piagetโs concrete operations stage?
a. Reasoning about hypothetical ideas
b. Awareness that other peopleโs thoughts might differ from oneโs own
c. Separation and control of variables
d. An inability to classify objects as belonging to more than one category
โขโข 32. Which one of the following would Piaget be least likely to advocate for elementary
school children?
a. Discussions with classmates
b. Field trips to hands-on science museums
c. Laboratory-type experiences with concrete objects
d. Lectures that describe simple abstract scientific concepts
โขโข 33. The following four junior high school science teachers are teaching the concept
molecule to their students. In each classroom, some of the students have acquired
formal operational reasoning abilities, whereas others think in a concrete operational
manner. In which classroom are the concrete operational students most likely to
have difficulty understanding?
a. Mr. Armani lets students touch and manipulate concrete models of various
molecules.
b. Mr. Bendetti lets students look at the same concrete models that Mr. Armani
has used.
c. Mr. Carmen verbally describes how different elements are made up of different
numbers of neutrons, protons, and electrons.
d. Mr. Davidson has students role-play being neutrons, protons, and electrons.
The โneutronโ and โprotonโ students huddle together in the middle of the room,
and the โelectronsโ move around them.
โข
34. One thing that children in Piagetโs formal operations stage can do, but children in
the concrete operations stage cannot do, is:
a. distinguish between their own feelings and those of others.
b. consider someone elseโs perspective on an issue.
c. recognize that amount of liquid stays the same even when itโs poured into a
differently shaped container.
d. reason logically about strictly hypothetical situations.
โขโข 35. Considering Piagetโs theory of cognitive development, we would expect a student in
the concrete operational stage to have the greatest difficulty with which one of the
following questions?
a. An apple pie is cut into 4 pieces. A blueberry pie of the same size is cut into 12
pieces. How many pieces of blueberry pie do you need to have the same
amount as 3 pieces of the apple pie?
b. In what way are an apple and a blueberry alike?
c. If we have one row of blueberries arranged like so: o o o o o o
and another row of blueberries arranged like so: o o o o o o
then does one row have more blueberries than the other?
d. If you have 8 Macintosh apples and 2 Jonathan apples, then do you have more
Macintoshes or more apples?
โขโข 36. Carl can correctly answer a question such as, โIf all flegs are blats, and if all blats
are dulms, are all flegs also dulms?โ From Piagetโs perspective, Carl must be in
which one of the following stages of cognitive development?
a. Preoperational
b. Formal operational
c. Sensorimotor
d. Concrete operational
โขโข 37. Olivia understands why 3/5 and 9/15 are equivalent fractions. Based on this
information, from Piagetโs perspective Olivia is probably in the __________ stage
of development.
a. concrete operations
b. preoperational
c. sensorimotor
d. formal operations
โขโข 38. From Piagetโs perspective, why might it be wise to postpone the teaching of
complex fractions until middle school or high school?
a. Younger students donโt know their math facts well enough.
b. Younger students cannot learn complex equations.
c. Younger students havenโt acquired conservation.
d. Younger students havenโt acquired proportional reasoning.
โขโข 39. Which one of the following statements reflects a concern about the separation and
control of variables?
a. โHow do you think I should make amends with Martha? If I tell her Iโm sorry,
she might think Iโm lying.โ
b. โIโm catching more tadpoles today, but I donโt know if itโs because Iโm using a
larger container to catch them or because Iโm working in a different part of the
frog pond.โ
c. โI have two tests to study for tonightโscience and Spanish. Iโll study one
subject before dinner and the other one after dinner so I donโt get them
confused.โ
d. โIโm trying to learn how to do a lay-up shot. Can you show me all the things I
should do, going one step at a time?โ
โข
40. Piaget claimed that an adolescentโs overly optimistic idealism about how one might
easily improve the world is due to __________ during the formal operations stage.
a. egocentrism
b. incomplete brain maturation
c. an incompletely developed ability to think abstractly
d. an inability to separate and control variables
โขโข 41. James says, โIf everyone would just agree to get along with everyone else, then we
wouldnโt have any more wars.โ From Piagetโs perspective, James is probably in the
__________ stage of development.
a. concrete operations
b. sensorimotor
c. formal operations
d. preoperational
โข
42. Choose the statement below that most accurately reflects research findings
concerning Piagetโs theory of cognitive development.
a. The order in which various logical thinking capabilities emerge is consistent
with the sequence that Piaget proposed.
b. Preoperational egocentrism continues to be common even in the upper
elementary grades.
c. Concrete operational thinking abilities, such as conservation and class
inclusion, develop later than Piaget believed.
d. Formal operational thinking abilities, such as the ability to think and reason
about abstract and hypothetical ideas, begin to emerge in the preschool years.
โข
43. Which one of the following conclusions can be derived from research findings
regarding Piagetโs theory of cognitive development?
a. Middle school and secondary school students typically have an easier time
thinking logically in the social sciences than they do in the physical and life
sciences.
b. Students will think more logically about a topic when they have acquired
relevant knowledge and experiences related to the topic.
c. Many students continue to show signs of preoperational thinking until well into
the high school years.
d. Students have an easier time understanding fractions and proportions later on if
such concepts are first introduced at the same time that division is introduced
(e.g., in third grade).
โขโข 44. Three of the following teaching practices are consistent with Piagetโs theory of
cognitive development. Which one is not?
a. When Sue leaves out important details as she tries to explain something, her
teacher says, โI donโt understand what you mean when you say. . . .โ
b. A second-grade teacher encourages students to speculate about possible
explanations as to why kites can fly and then to test each explanation
systematically.
c. When a high school student claims that people should โMake love, not war,โ
his teacher urges him to consider whether such an approach would have been
advisable when the Nazi movement was gaining influence in Europe in the late
1930s and early 1940s.
d. When Martin says that two nickels are worth more than one dime because there
are two of them and theyโre bigger, his teacher asks, โHow can that be? Two
nickels are worth ten cents; one dime is also worth ten cents.โ
โข
45. Which one of the following statements best illustrates a neo-Piagetian approach to
cognitive development?
a. Rather than involving general stages of increasingly advanced reasoning
processes, childrenโs cognitive development may involve discrete stages in
particular content domains.
b. Childrenโs progression through various stages of cognitive development is
almost entirely the result of environmental experiences; brain maturation has
little to do with their advancements in thinking.
c. Childrenโs progression through various stages of cognitive development is
almost entirely the result of brain maturation; environmental experiences have
little to do with their advancements in thinking.
d. Childrenโs acquisition of various cognitive abilities occurs in a gradual, trend
like manner rather than in discrete stages.
โขโข 46.
Which one of the following best illustrates how sociocognitive conflict might
promote cognitive development?
a. Two children work together on a crossword puzzle that includes the weekโs
new spelling words.
b. A teenage boy worries that his friends might think heโs a nerd if he refuses a
can of beer at a party.
c. The students in a cooperative learning group debate different ways of solving a
difficult math problem.
d. Two students help each other prepare for a quiz by giving each other practice
test questions.
โข
47. Central to Vygotskyโs theory of cognitive development is the idea that children
increasingly make better sense of their world:
a. through the mental processes of assimilation and accommodation.
b. by repeatedly encountering both pleasant and unpleasant events in their daily
lives.
c. through their independent explorations of their physical and social
environments.
d. by interacting with more experienced people who mediate their understandings.
โขโข 48. Eight-year-old Julie lives in a rural area where many people are farmers or in some
other way make their living through agriculture. After a lengthy summer drought, it
begins to rain heavily one day in late July. โThank goodness!โ Julie hears her father
exclaim. โOur prayers have finally been answered!โ Julie makes a mental note of
the causeโandโeffect relationship her father has implied. This situation illustrates
Vygotskyโs belief that:
a. adults pass along to children the ways in which their culture interprets events.
b. childrenโs level of potential development is always a bit higher than their actual
developmental level.
c. children acquire more knowledge and skills when scaffolding is kept to a
minimum.
d. thought and language are distinct processes in the early years of life.
โขโข 49. Which one of the following is the best example of a cognitive tool?
a. Use of natural lighting in a studio art class
b. A jigsaw in a woodworking class
c. Use of country-western music in a step-aerobics class
d. The concept of pi (ฯ) in a geometry class
โขโข
50.
Sociocultural theory suggests that with development, children acquire many
cognitive tools of their culture. Which teacher is most clearly applying this idea?
a. Mr. Shaw reminds his students that he will let them go to lunch only after
theyโve put away their art supplies.
b. Ms. Turiel shows students how to graph their research results so that they can
more easily see trends in the data.
c. Ms. Norquist smiles to show her approval when students listen quietly and
politely during a guest speakerโs visit.
d. Mr. Cabot demonstrates how to use a paper cutter safely.
โข
51. Vygotsky proposed that thought and language are:
a. closely connected at all stages of life.
b. largely independent before age two but closely connected thereafter.
c. closely connected early in life but become increasingly independent with age.
d. largely independent until the elementary school years and closely connected
thereafter.
โข
52. From Vygotskyโs perspective, what important role does inner speech play in
childrenโs thinking and cognitive development?
a. By giving themselves directions about what to do next, children guide
themselves through complex tasks.
b. By using words mentally as well as orally, children develop more abstract
representations of the world.
c. By practicing various grammatical structures mentally, children acquire more
complex language capabilities.
d. By talking to themselves about what they should have done or said in a
particular situation, children remember the situation more vividly.
โขโข 53. Kiley is having trouble learning the steps involved in using a microscope correctly.
If we consider Vygotskyโs description of how children help themselves through
difficult tasks, we should suggest that Kiley:
a. practice each step separately many times over.
b. go through the procedure a few times in slow motion.
c. talk herself through the steps.
d. learn the reasons why each step is important.
โข
54. Which one of the following statements best describes Vygotskyโs concept of
internalization?
a. As children grow older, they develop an increasing ability to think about events
in abstract rather than concrete terms.
b. With age, children acquire more sophisticated problem-solving skills, largely
because their parents and teachers give them increasingly challenging problems
to solve.
c. Over time, children acquire greater self-confidence about their ability to deal
with the world.
d. Through their social interactions with other people, children acquire ways of
mentally approaching and thinking about a task.
โขโข 55. Students in a fourth-grade reading group are reading a passage about snakes. Their
teacher asks, โWho can think of a good title that summarizes what this passage is
about?โ After hearing several good suggestions, the teacher says, โThe author says
that snakes are helpful to farmers. What evidence does she give to support her
statement?โ If we consider Vygotskyโs concept of internalization, we might predict
that such a discussion will:
a. be more beneficial for students who are working outside their zones of
proximal development than for students working inside their ZPDs.
b. help students develop a greater interest in learning for its own sake.
c. help students develop effective reading comprehension strategies (e.g.,
summarizing, looking for supporting statements).
d. be confusing and counterproductive for students who are not yet capable of
abstract thought.
โข
56. Vygotskyโs concept of zone of proximal development refers to:
a. the range of tasks children can accomplish only with support.
b. childrenโs ability to estimate how much they know.
c. the range of tasks children can perform by themselves.
d. the degree of maturation necessary to accomplish complex physical tasks.
โขโข 57. Which one of the following students is definitely working in his or her zone of
proximal development?
a. Arnold uses correct grammar and punctuation when he writes short stories.
b. Berta is beginning to learn basic woodworking techniques. She has trouble
hammering a nail straight into a piece of wood unless her teacher stands beside
her, helping her and reminding her of what to do.
c. Calvin is playing the clarinet in the band. He finds that he can more easily keep
the tempo if he taps the beat with his foot.
d. Doreen finds it virtually impossible to solve mathematical word problems, even
when her teacher gives her helpful hints.
โข
58. Which one of the following statements most accurately describes Vygotskyโs view
of how cognitive development occurs?
a. Childrenโs cognitive growth should be judged on the basis of their actual
developmental level, not on the basis of their level of potential development.
b. Cognitive development progresses through four distinct stages; each stage is
characterized by increasingly complex thought and language.
c. Children develop, in part, by working on challenging tasks with the assistance
of more competent individuals.
d. Language and thought, although closely intertwined in the first few years of
life, become increasingly distinct entities over time.
โขโข 59. Three of the following statements are consistent with Vygotskyโs views about the
kinds of diversity we are likely to see in students. Which statement is not consistent
with Vygotskyโs theory?
a. Children in any single age-group are apt to have different zones of proximal
development.
b. Children from some cultures are more concerned about being punctual to
appointments than children from certain other cultures are.
c. Some children frequently engage in self-talk, whereas other children donโt use
it at all.
d. Children from different cultures might interpret certain environmental events
(e.g., a tornado or hurricane) in distinctly different ways.
โขโข 60. As a high school music teacher plays a recording of Ferde Grofรฉโs symphony Grand
Canyon Suite for his class, he asks his students to visualize scenes that Grofรฉ tried
to capture with music: a sunrise over the Grand Canyon, a burro ride down a
winding trail, a thunderstorm, and so on. From a Vygotskian perspective, this lesson
could best be described as:
a. guided participation.
b. a mediated learning experience.
c. a lesson at studentsโ actual developmental level.
d. a lesson at studentsโ level of potential development.
โขโข 61. Which one of the following is the best example of a mediated learning experience?
a. Ms. OโBrien insists that students sit quietly at their desks before she dismisses
them for lunch.
b. Mr. James reflects on the lesson he taught earlier in the day. โI suspect that
most of my students still donโt understand the concepts I was trying to teach
them,โ he thinks.
c. Mr. Lucas asks his students to read Chapter 5 in their textbooks over the
weekend. โYouโll find that the chapter is more challenging than previous ones,โ
he says.
d. As Ms. Robinson takes a group of children hiking, she gathers leaves from
maple, oak, and elm trees and points out the ways in which the leaves from the
trees are distinctly different.
โข
62. From a Vygotskian perspective, scaffolding serves what purpose in instruction?
a. It gives students an idea of what they need to do to get good grades.
b. It keeps school tasks within studentsโ actual developmental levels.
c. It lets students learn by watching one another.
d. It supports students as they perform difficult tasks.
โขโข 63. Three of the following teachers are using scaffolding to help their students learn.
Which one is not necessarily providing scaffolding?
a. Ms. Applegate gives her students a structure to follow when they write their
first essay.
b. Mr. Bernardo teaches students how to swing a softball bat effectively by gently
guiding each student through the correct movement a few times.
c. Ms. Chen gives her class some hints about how to solve an especially difficult
word problem.
d. Mr. Donaldson takes his students on a field trip to the local art museum.
โขโข 64. Three of the following are definitely examples of scaffolding. Identify the situation
in which no scaffolding is described.
a. Ms. Andrews likes to challenge her students by giving them group research
projects. She puts her students in groups of three or four students each, and she
gives each student a topic to research. She sends the groups to the school
library to find out as much as they can about their topic, and then has each
group give a report to the entire class.
b. Mr. Bender is teaching a unit on beginning tennis. In the early stages of
teaching a correct tennis swing, he uses an automatic ball server that serves
balls with consistent speed, height, and direction. He also continually reminds
students to โKeep your eye on the ballโ and โHold your arm straight.โ Later in
the unit he begins to serve the balls himself, varying the speed, height, and
direction of the serves. And he begins to taper off his reminders about what to
do.
c. Ms. Carrera helps students solve math word problems by providing visual
illustrations of the elements of the problem and by showing them โmodelsโ
(i.e., similar problems that have been worked out correctly). As the weeks go
by, she provides fewer and fewer visual illustrations and fewer and fewer
model problems, until eventually the students can solve the problems without
either form of assistance.
d. Mr. Donaldsonโs students are just beginning to learn how to take notes in class.
For the first few weeks Mr. D. begins class by handing out a detailed outline
about the topic for the day. By December he is handing out an outline covering
only the main points of the day, encouraging students to fill in the blank spaces
on the sheet with ideas relative to each point. By May students are writing
down main points and relevant details on their own.
โขโข 65. Several parents who are making costumes for an elementary school play ask the
young cast members to assist them with such tasks as cutting fabric, pinning pieces
together, and sewing simple hems. Using the language of Vygotskian theorists, we
can say that the parents are:
a. presenting tasks that exceed the studentsโ zone of proximal development.
b. encouraging the separation of thought and language.
c. engaging the students in guided participation.
d. creating a cognitive apprenticeship.
โข
66. Which one of the following examples illustrates a cognitive apprenticeship in
mathematics?
a. Mr. Ferguson gives students numerous word problems involving addition until
they can solve such problems easily.
b. Mr. Johnson and a student work together to solve a challenging word problem,
with Mr. Johnson modeling effective ways of thinking about the problem.
c. Ms. Lupinsky asks students to do easy word problems as a way of boosting
their self-confidence for the more difficult problems that will soon follow.
d. Ms. Pang individualizes the word problems she gives each student, depending
on each oneโs present skill level.
โขโข 67. Which one of the following examples most clearly illustrates a cognitive
apprenticeship?
a. A junior high school English class is reading Robert Frostโs โStopping by
Woods on a Snowy Evening.โ At the end of each verse, the teacher describes
the visual images and feelings that the poem elicits for him, and he encourages
his students to do likewise.
b. An elementary school teacher gives his students lots of practice doing addition,
subtraction, multiplication, and division problems so that they will be able to
solve word problems more effectively later in the school year.
c. In a high school chemistry lab, a teacher clearly describes the steps she expects
her students to complete as they conduct the dayโs laboratory experiment. She
also lists the things that students should do when they clean up after the
experiment.
d. A middle school physical education teacher puts her students in pairs as they
practice their forward and backward rolls. She asks the students in each pair to
observe each other and give each other feedback about how to improve.
โข 68. According to Vygotsky, when children adopt a cultural tool they may transform the
idea, strategy, or object to better suit their own purposes. Vygotsky referred
to this
transformation process as:
a. appropriation.
b. a mediated learning experience.
c. adaptive incorporation.
d. pragmatic incorporation.
โขโข 69. Chiara loves to draw with a pencil but decides, one day, to see if she can use her
favorite pencil in a new way. She uses the tip of the pencil to make a series of holes
in her sheet of white paper. She starts out by poking holes in a round circle, to make
a face, and then proceeds to make eyes, a nose, a mouth, and ears for her face.
Chiara’s creative use of her favorite pencil is a good example of Vygotsky’s concept
of:
a. a mediated learning experience.
b. internalization.
c. appropriation.
d. adaptive incorporation.
โข
70. Many theorists believe that people have an innate predisposition to learn language.
Three of the following provide sources of evidence that these theorists use to
support their belief. Which one is not used to support an inherited predisposition to
learn language?
a. Young infants seem to prefer listening to human voices over other kinds of
sounds.
b. Children acquire increasingly larger and more sophisticated vocabularies as
they grow older.
c. Children tend to learn certain aspects of a language more easily when they are
exposed to it at a young age.
d. Children tend to acquire many complexities of their first language that are
unnecessary for day-to-day communication.
โขโข 71. Given what we know about childrenโs language development, which one of the
following problems is typical for the grade level?
a. A first grader pronounces the word rabbit as โwabbit.โ
b. A fourth grader is unable to tell a simple story.
c. A seventh grader says, โThe sheeps are in the meadow.โ
d. An eleventh grader has trouble understanding common proverbs.
โข
72. Three of the following aspects of language development typically appear during the
elementary school years or even earlier. Which one are we not likely to see until
students are in junior high or high school?
a. Some adherence to social conventions for beginning and ending conversations
b. Correct pronunciations of all sounds in oneโs native language
c. Playful use of words in jokes
d. Ability to detect subtle sarcasm
โข
73. Which strategy is most likely to be effective in promoting studentsโ vocabulary
development?
a. Allowing students to make up their own meanings for words to encourage
invention and creativity
b. Teaching students the meanings of words related to topics they are studying
c. Encouraging literal interpretations of such common sayings as โLook before
you leapโ
d. Allowing students to use words incorrectly in the early elementary grades in
order to enhance their self-confidence about public speaking
โข
74. If you were a high school English teacher who wanted your students to acquire
knowledge of especially advanced syntactical sentence structures, your best course
of action would be to:
a. specifically teach them these structures.
b. teach them a wide variety of little-used English vocabulary words.
c. teach them the basics of a language very different from Englishโperhaps
Arabic or Chinese.
d. wait until these structures emerge naturallyโsomething that is likely to happen
simply as a result of brain maturation.
โข
75. Most children in the early elementary grades think that being a โgood listenerโ
means:
a. asking the speaker a lot of questions.
b. remembering what the speaker says.
c. sitting quietly and looking at the speaker.
d. being able to tell somebody else what the speaker has said.
โขโข 76. Which one of the following is the best example of pragmatics in language?
a. Julie waits until her friend has finished talking before she begins to speak.
b. Morris understands the underlying meaning of โA stitch in time saves nine.โ
c. Sheena knows that the plural of man is men, not mans.
d. Isaiah recognizes the double meanings in many of the puns he hears.
โขโข 77. LaWanda understands that a single sentence can sometimes be interpreted in two or
more ways. For example, she realizes that the sentence โI know more beautiful
women than Miss Americaโ has two possible interpretations: โI know women who
are more beautiful than Miss America isโ or โI know more beautiful women than
Miss America knows.โ LaWandaโs appreciation for the double meanings of some
sentences reflects:
a. a sensitive period in language development.
b. metalinguistic awareness.
c. pragmatics.
d. figurative language.
โข
78. Three of the following are common outcomes of learning two languages rather than
only one in the early years of life. Which one is not necessarily an outcome of
bilingualism?
a. Greater phonological awareness
b. Better ability to focus attention
c. Smaller-than-average vocabulary in each of the two languages
d. Ability to maintain good social relationships with different groups of people
โข
79. In North America, which approach appears to be most effective for teaching English
speakers a second language?
a. Let them talk with native speakers of the language, who should alternate
between using English and the other language.
b. Teach it to them before kindergarten if possible, because they quickly lose their
ability to learn a second language fluently after that.
c. Immerse them in the second language, having them hear and speak it
exclusively in all classroom activities.
d. Wait until they reach Piagetโs formal operations stage so that they can better
grasp the subtleties of the new language.
โข
80. Which one of the following statements best captures the nature of cognitive
academic language proficiency in describing English language learners?
a. An ability to learn as well as native English speakers in English-only
classrooms
b. An ability to carry on conversations about day-to-day topics with teachers and
peers
c. An ability to read and understand English texts that are written at a first-grade
level
d. An ability to read and understand English texts that are written at a fifth-grade
level
โข
81. Three of the following strategies should be effective in working with English
language learners. Which one is unlikely to be effective?
a. Especially in the early years of English instruction, speak more slowly and
clearly than you might otherwise.
b. Teach reading skills almost exclusively by using books written in English
rather than in studentsโ native language.
c. When teaching academic subject matter, make a very gradual transition from
studentsโ native language to Englishโperhaps a transition that takes 5 to 7
years to complete.
d. When students work in small, cooperative groups, encourage them to use their
native language if doing so helps them communicate with one another more
effectively.
โขโข 82. In which one of the following situations should we be most concerned about the
possibility of subtractive bilingualism?
a. Ten-year-old Apsaraโs father grew up in Canada, whereas her mother grew up
in Thailand. The family now lives in the United States. At home Dad almost
always speaks English, but Mom often speaks Thai.
b. Twelve-year-old Coshaun lives in an inner-city neighborhood where most of
his peers speak a dialect of English very different from that used at school.
c. Eight-year-old Michelle has a specific language impairment that makes it
difficult for her to understand other peopleโs speech.
d. After being adopted by American parents, 6-year-old Antoni moves from
Poland to Chicago. His new parents donโt know Polish, and he now attends an
English-speaking school.
โข
83. Which one of the following statements characterizes both Piagetโs and Vygotskyโs
theories of cognitive development, as well as psychologistsโ beliefs about the nature
of language development?
a. Development involves a series of stages.
b. Children are actively involved in their own learning.
c. Children and adults think in basically the same ways.
d. Development involves both assimilation and accommodation.
โข
84. Which one of the following do Piaget and Vygotsky agree is essential for childrenโs
cognitive development?
a. Good feelings about oneself
b. Mastery of the pragmatic aspects of language
c. An environment or situation that presents a cognitive challenge
d. An accepting environment in which children arenโt pressured to excel
Essay Questions
โขโข 85. Several teachers tell you that they are โteaching to studentsโ right brainsโ by
spending a lot of time on painting, map interpretation, geometry, and other highly
visual and/or spatial activities. Critique their claim using what you have learned
about how the human brain functions.
โขโข 86. Piaget presented his studies of conservation as evidence of the illogical thinking of
young children.
a. What did he mean by the term conservation?
b. Describe one of his conservation tasks and the kinds of responses that children
in the preoperational and concrete operational stages are likely to give.
c. Describe a specific way in which a childโs ability to conserve is essential for
learning in either mathematics or science.
โขโข 87. Mr. Davis asks his third graders to conduct experiments to examine the effects of
water, sunlight, and type of soil on growing sunflowers. He tells them, โI want you
to find out which of these three thingsโwater, sunlight, and soilโaffect how well
sunflowers grow. Here are lots of sunflower seeds, lots of paper cups to grow them
in, and two different types of soil. You can give your growing plants plenty of
sunlight by putting them on the shelf by the window, or you can grow them in a
shadier place on the bookshelf behind my desk. And hereโs a measuring cup you can
use to measure the amount of water you give them each day.โ
Mr. Davis is assuming his third graders can do at least two things that, from Piagetโs
perspective, they probably cannot do. What two crucial abilities necessary for
conducting appropriate experiments do his students probably not yet have? Justify
your answer in a short paragraph.
โขโข 88. Choose a particular grade level and discuss three important implications of Piagetโs
theory for teaching students at this grade level. State your three points both in
abstract terms and in terms of specific educational practices you would employ.
โขโข 89. Vygotsky and his followers have proposed that childrenโs and adolescentsโ
cognitive development is promoted when they work within their zone of proximal
development and that scaffolding enables them to do this successfully.
a. Explain these two concepts, and give a concrete example of each one.
b. Choose a topic or skill that is apt to be in the zone of proximal development for
most students at a particular grade level. Then explain how you would (1)
scaffold studentsโ efforts and (2) modify the scaffolding over time.
โขโข 90. Use concepts from Vygotskyโs theory of cognitive development to describe how
you learned something in this class. Your response should include references to at
least three of the following concepts: cognitive tools, internalization, zone of
proximal development, and scaffolding.
โขโข 91. In two separate paragraphs, explain how challenge is involved in (1) the process of
equilibration and (2) the concept of zone of proximal development. Give a concrete
example to illustrate each discussion.
โข
92. Describe at least one limitation that elementary school students may have in each
one of the following aspects of language, and illustrate each limitation with a
concrete example:
a. Vocabulary
b. Syntax
c. Listening comprehension
d. Oral communication
โข
93. Identify a learning objective or content standard in your ideal classroom placement
(grade level and subject area). Describe how you would teach that objective using
primarily a Piagetian approach. Then, describe how you would teach the objective
using a Vygotskian approach. Compare these lessonsโis one likely to be more
effective than the other in terms of student learning? Why or why not?
ANSWER KEY for Chapter 2
Multiple-Choice Questions
1.
b
21.
a
41.
c
61.
d
81.
b
2.
c
22.
d
42.
a
62.
d
82.
d
3.
a
23.
b
43.
b
63.
d
83.
b
4.
b
24.
d
44.
b
64.
a
84.
c
5.
a
25.
d
45.
a
65.
c
6.
a
26.
b
46.
c
66.
b
7.
d
27.
c
47.
d
67.
a
8.
d
28.
a
48.
a
68.
a
9.
a
29.
d
49.
d
69.
c
10.
b
30.
d
50.
b
70.
b
11.
c
31.
b
51.
b
71.
a
12.
c
32.
d
52.
a
72.
d
13.
c
33.
c
53.
c
73.
b
14.
a
34.
d
54.
d
74.
a
15.
d
35.
a
55.
c
75.
c
16.
c
36.
b
56.
a
76.
a
17.
c
37.
d
57.
b
77.
b
18.
b
38.
d
58.
c
78.
b
19.
c
39.
b
59.
c
79.
c
20.
a
40.
a
60.
b
80.
a
Essay Questions
85. Although the two hemispheres tend to have different strengths (e.g., the left
hemisphere specializes in language and logical thinking, the right hemisphere in
visual and spatial tasks), they constantly collaborate in day-to-day tasks. Even very
simple tasks (e.g., recognizing an object) recruit numerous areas of the cortex.
86. Answers to the separate parts of the question are as follows:
a. Conservation is the recognition that if nothing is added or taken away, an amount
stays the same regardless of alterations in shape or arrangement.
b. The studentโs response might describe conservation of liquid (e.g., the waterglasses task), conservation of number (e.g., the pennies task), conservation of
weight (e.g., the balls-of-clay task), or any other conservation task with which the
student is familiar. Responses of preoperational children reflect a lack of
conservation (e.g., โOne has moreโ), whereas those of concrete operational
children reflect an awareness that amounts are still the same.
c. There are a number of possible responses to this question; following are two
examples. (1) In mathematics, conservation of number is essential for an
understanding of numbers; children must realize that โ4 is 4 is 4,โ no matter how
the four items are arranged. (2) In science, students studying the concept of
weight must understand that weight stays the same regardless of physical
transformations; for example, gas expands when heated, but it still weighs the
same as it did before.
87. Mr. Davis is assuming that his students can formulate multiple hypotheses about a
particular situation and can separate and control variables to test those hypotheses.
According to Piaget, these are abilities that emerge in formal operations. However,
Mr. Davisโs students, being about eight or nine years old, are probably still in
concrete operations.
88. Studentsโ responses to this item are likely to vary considerably. A response should
list three implications derived either from Piagetโs general assumptions or from
characteristics of the stage in which the age group is likely to be in. Each
implication should be described in both general, abstract terms, and as one or more
specific, concrete teaching practices.
89. Answers to the separate parts of the question are as follows:
a. The zone of proximal development is the range of tasks that a child can do only
with the assistance of a more competent individual. Scaffolding is the structure
that the more competent individual provides to help a child perform a difficult
task successfully; this structure is gradually removed over time as the child
becomes more skillful. The response should include a concrete example of each
of these concepts.
b. Studentsโ responses will vary considerably depending on the grade level, topic,
and specific form of scaffolding they choose. A response should identify a topic
or skill that most students at the grade level identified would find challenging but
not impossible. It should include both an appropriate form of scaffolding (see the
bulleted list in the section โScaffoldingโ for possibilities) and a description of
how the scaffolding is gradually removed over time.
90. Studentsโ responses are likely to vary considerably. However, they should include
reference to at least three of the following ideas:
โข Cognitive tool: A concept, principle or other aspect of Vygotskyโs theory that
enabled the respondent to think more effectively about some aspect of the course
content.
โข Internalization: A socially-based process occurring in the class that the
respondent gradually adopted as his or her own and became able to use
independently.
โข Zone of proximal development: One or more tasks that the respondent could
initially perform only with the support of the instructor, classmates, the textbook,
or other external entity.
โข Scaffolding: Specific form of support that was gradually removed over time.
91. Piagetโs concept of equilibration refers to the idea that children often make
cognitive advancements when they experience disequilibriumโthat is, when they
encounter puzzling situations they cannot adequately address using their existing
understandings. Such challenges lead them to replace, reorganize, or better integrate
their schemes (i.e., through accommodation) so that they can address these
situations. In contrast, Vygotsky proposed that children are most likely to develop
when they perform tasks within their zone of proximal developmentโchallenging
tasks for which they need the assistance of someone more skilled. (Studentsโ
responses should include concrete examples that reasonably illustrate equilibration
and the ZPD.)
92. Elementary school students may have limitations such as these (the response should
include at least one bulleted item in each of the four areas below, with each item
being illustrated with a concrete example):
a. Vocabulary:
โข Limited number of words known and understood
โข Not completely accurate understanding of some words
b. Syntax:
โข Incomplete mastery of irregular forms (e.g., goed instead of went, gooder
instead of better)
โข Limited understanding of complex syntactical structures (e.g., passive
sentences, sentences with two or more clauses)
c. Listening comprehension:
โข Belief that good listening means sitting still and being quiet rather than
understanding what is being said
โข Belief that it is inappropriate to ask for clarification when a message isnโt
understood
โข Literal interpretations of messages
โข Limited ability to understand figurative language
d. Oral communication:
โข Pronunciation difficulties
โข Difficulty taking the knowledge of the listener into account
โข Limited pragmatic skills (i.e., limited knowledge about the social conventions
of spoken language)
93. Answers will vary. Responses should include hands-on, exploratory/discovery, or
inquiry-/project-based learning (Piaget) and modeling, โI do-we do-you do,โ or
guided instruction (Vygotsky).
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