What are the six major ethical priniciples?
What is autonomy, veracity, confidentiality, nonmaleficence, beneficence, justice
What is it when a response/behavior may appear to be gone, but it could recover or reappear at any time especially when stimulus conditions are similar to the initial learning experience?
What is spontaneous recovery
What is prejudice against older adults known as?
What is Ageism
Define nonbinary.
What is individuals who have a gender identity that does not conform to culturally defined male/man or female/woman gender norms.
What is educational, instructional, and behavioral objectives.
Name 3 benefits of education to patients.
What is (3 of the following):
increases consumer satisfaction, improves quality of life, ensures continuity of care, decrease patient anxiety, effectively reduces complications of disease, promote adherence to tx plans, maximize independence, energize/empowers consumers
What are the two subtheories of the Behaviorist Learning Theory?
What is respondent conditioning and operant conditioning
What are the four developmental stages of childhood?
What is infancy and toddlerhood, early childhood, middle and late childhood, and adolescence
What theory explains behavioral change in terms of threat and coping appraisal?
What is Protection Motivation Theory
What are the three learning domains?
What is cognitive, affective, and psychomotor.
Starting after WWII, this time period is when medicare and medicaid were established and a time of significant scientific accomplishments, what is this time period known as?
What is Phase 3 of Historical Foundations for Patient Education in Healthcare
What theory involves perceiving information, interpreting it based on what is already known and then reorganizing the information into new insights or understanding?
What is Cognitive Learning Theory
What are the three determinants of learning?
What is learning needs, readiness to learn, and learning style
Name four Socioeconomic status variables that influence health beliefs, health practices, and readiness to learn.
What is: educational level, family income, occupation, family structure
What type of instructional material is an artificial experience that engages the learner in an acitivity that reflects real-life conditions but without high risk?
What is simulation.
What type of costs may be fixed, but not necessarily directly related to a particular activity?
What is indirect costs
What is Psychodynamic Learning Theory
What are the four types of readiness to learn to evaluate?
What is physical, emotional, experiential and knowledge readiness
What are the six variables to consider in motivational assessment?
What is cognitive, affective, physiological, experiential, environmental, and educator-learner relationship system.
When selecting instructional materials what three characteristics do you want to evaluate?
What is characteristics of the learner, of the medium, and of the task.
What is:
Analyze the learner
state the objectives
select instructional methods and materials
use the instructional methods and materials
require learner performance
evaluate the teaching plan and revise as needed
What are the three phases of motor learning?
What is cognitive, associative, and autonomous
What are the three phases of learning from childhood to adulthood under the maturity continuum?
What is Dependence, Independence and Interdependence.
What does the BELIEF framework stand for?
What are the three major components of instructional materials?
What is delivery system, content and presentation