This measure is determined by growth at the epiphyses.
What is skeletal age?
Julie puts toy furniture in the same spots as her real house. This shows understanding of this concept.
What is dual representation?
Kevin covers his eyes at a scary clown. He’s showing early:
What is emotional self-regulation?
A teacher who lets children discover things through play uses this approach.
What is child-centered?
This parenting style is warm, has clear rules, and respects autonomy.
What is authoritative?
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY!*
This term describes the dominance of one side of the brain for skilled motor actions.
What is handedness or dominance?
When a child focuses on only one aspect of a situation, Piaget called this:
What is centration?
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY!*
Emotions like pride and guilt are considered:
What are self-conscious emotions?
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY!*
Teaching reading by “sounding out” letters uses this approach.
What is phonics?
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY!*
This discipline style helps children internalize rules and future behavior.
What is inductive discipline?
Running is an example of this type of motor skill.
What is a gross motor skill?
*DOUBLE JEOPARDY!*
This concept refers to a child’s ability to reverse a mental sequence of steps.
What is reversibility?
Inductive discipline helps children by:
What is explaining the impact of their behavior on others?
Teaching math with both number sense and drills is best.
What is a blended approach?
The style that leads to the most positive outcomes in development.
What is authoritative parenting?
A child writing their name uses this type of motor skill.
What is a fine motor skill?
The task showing a child can’t understand others may hold false beliefs is called:
What is the False Belief Task?
Excluding others or spreading rumors are examples of:
What is relational aggression?
A classroom where students sit in rows and the teacher leads most instruction is:
What is traditional?
What are 3 areas you should study for your essay?
What is:
1. Piaget’s conservation tasks and how they reflect the cognitive shift from preoperational to concrete operational thinking.
2. Mildred Parten’s six levels of play, with descriptions and examples of how children’s interactions change at each stage.
3. The four parenting styles
*Describe each in terms of control, warmth, and autonomy, and how they impact a child’s development.
This condition, common in early childhood, is also called bedwetting at night.
What is nocturnal enuresis?
This term describes understanding the number of items in a set, like when Jack counts milk cartons.
What is cardinality?
According to Erikson, the conflict “industry vs. inferiority” builds:
What is a sense of competence at a useful skill?
In this type of setting, students with disabilities learn alongside peers.
What is an inclusive classroom?
This factor is most closely tied to children’s self-esteem.
What is perceived physical appearance?