FREUD'S THEORIES
PIAGET'S STAGES
TEMPERAMENT & PERSONALITY
LEARNING & DEVELOPMENT
SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE
100

This is the part of personality that operates on the pleasure principle and seeks immediate gratification.

What is the id?

100

In this stage, children develop object permanence and learn through their senses.


What is the sensorimotor stage?

100

This temperament type is characterized by regular routines, positive mood, and easy adaptation to change.


What is easy temperament?

100

This is the gap between what a child can do alone and what they can do with help.


 

What is the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)?

100

This social work role involves connecting clients with appropriate resources and services.


What is broker or coordinator?

200

This defense mechanism involves attributing your own unacceptable feelings to someone else.

Show Answer 

What is projection?

Close 

200

Children in this stage can think logically about concrete objects but struggle with abstract thinking.


What is the concrete operations stage?

200

This concept describes how well a child's temperament matches their environment's demands.


What is goodness-of-fit?

200

This process involves changing your mental schema to fit new information that doesn't match existing knowledge.


What is accommodation?

200

his approach focuses on client strengths and helping them gain control over their own lives.


What is empowerment?

300

During this psychosexual stage, children develop the Oedipus or Electra complex.

What is the phallic stage?

300

This characteristic of preoperational thinking involves focusing on only one aspect of a situation.


What is centration?

300

This type of intelligence involves accumulated knowledge and skills acquired through experience.


What is crystallized intelligence?

300

Children use this self-directed speech to regulate their behavior and solve problems.


What is private speech?

300

This concept involves providing support that matches typical life experiences for people with disabilities.


What is normalization?

400

This defense mechanism involves channeling unacceptable impulses into socially acceptable activities.

What is sublimation?

400

This ability develops during the sensorimotor stage and involves understanding that objects exist even when not visible.


What is object permanence?

400

These neurological disorders can affect learning in areas like reading, math, or communication.


What are learning disabilities?

400

This teaching strategy involves providing temporary support that is gradually reduced as the learner becomes more competent.


What is scaffolding?

400

This gap between how someone actually is versus how they would like to be can affect self-esteem.


What is incongruence (between real self and ideal self)?

500

According to Freud, fixation at this stage might result in adult behaviors like smoking, overeating, or excessive talking.

What is the oral stage?

500

This stage is characterized by abstract thinking, hypothetical reasoning, and the ability to consider multiple variables.


What is the formal operations stage?


500

This temperament type shows low activity levels, mild reactions, and takes time to adapt but eventually does so successfully.


What is slow-to-warm-up temperament?

500

This type of intelligence involves the ability to think logically and solve novel problems independent of acquired knowledge.


What is fluid intelligence?

500

This feminist perspective focuses on equal rights and opportunities within existing social structures.

What is liberal feminism?

M
e
n
u