Learning & Thinking
Developmental Theories
Studnet Differences
Positive Environment
Assessing Students
100
An explanation of how people learn to become self-regulated through the interaction of their personal characteristics, behaviors, and social reinforcement
What is social cognitive theory?
100
This theorist is famous for his "zone of proximal development where he said learning will occur.
Who is Vygotsky?
100
Define mainstreaming.
What is the policy of placing students with disabilities in regular classes?
100
Present the rules and explain the pelalties for breaking them.
What are things you should do on the first day of school?
100
Type of assessment that monitors a student's progress in order to facilitate learning.
What is formative assessment?
200
The view that meaningful learning is the active creation of knowledge rather than the transfer of knowledge from one person to another.
What is Constructivist Theory?
200
According to his theory, people have deficiency needs and growth needs. In his hierachy of needs, the lower needs must be met before the higher ones will be activiated. Who is this theorist?
Who is Maslow?
200
Students who have difficulty with perceprion, attention, and memory may have a(n)
What is a learning disability?
200
What is the best way to address agressive or antisocial behavior in the classroom?
What is reward good behavior and reduce the opportunity for bad behavior?
200
A system of grading that compares the score of each student to the scores of other students.
What is norm referenced?
300
A area of study that tries to understand how people acquire, store, and recall information and how their current knowledge guides them.
What is Information processing Theory?
300
This theorist stated that personal growth occurs in eight stages that a person must confront and resolve in either a positive or negative way.
Who is Erikson?
300
An approach to learning where one student teaches another
What is peer tutoring?
300
"Chris, I get frustrated when you do that. Please stop."
What is an I-message?
300
A single-subject achievement test intended to identify the source of a learning problem.
What is a diagnostic test?
400
An approach to instruction that emphasizes the effect of student needs, values, motives, and self-perceptions on learning.
What is Humanistic approach?
400
Vygotsky saw social interaction as a primary cause of cognitive development, and he believed that children learn from
What is adults and more knowledgable peers?
400
I.Q. scores measure what?
What is success in school?
400
A learning approach that uses small heterogeneous groups for the purpose of mutual help in mastering learning tasks popular with middle to low students, low SES students, and many minorities.
What is cooperative learning?
400
They cause students to recall, organize, and communicate what they have learned about a particular subject.
What are written tests?
500
B. F. Skinner created the behavior theory based on the fact that organisms respond to their environment in particular ways to obtain or avoid particular consequences. Name the theory.
What is operant conditioning?
500
Sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operational
What are Piaget's stages of cognitive development?
500
Perferences for dealing with intellectual tasks in a particular way
What is learning style?
500
What type of classroom environment is best?
What is authoritative (supportive & businesslike)?
500
If you were using s standardized test to determine your students' aptitude for science and found that students who took the test a second time got scores quite different from those they received on the first attempt, you should question the test's
What is reliability?
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