Behaviorism
Information Processing
Cognitive Constructivism
Motivation
Moral Development
100
A view of learning that focuses on behavior(external/environment) rather than the cognitive process.
What is behaviorism?
100
Learning is relatively enduring change in mental structures as a result of an individual's interaction with the environment.
What is cognitive theories?
100
When you apply stored knowledge to new situations.
What is transferring knowledge?
100
Name the two types of motivation that are exhibited through: Recreational reading and studying for a test.
What is intrinsic and extrinsic?
100
The three levels of Kohlberg's moral development
What is Preconventional, Conventional, and Postconventional?
200
Two types of reinforcers
What are primary and secondary?
200
Just maintaining information, not encoding it.
What is rehearsal?
200
When we confront children with a problem and help them discover the answer.
What is guided discovery learning?
200
Where you become so absorbed in an activity that you lose track of time is called...
What is flow?
200
This man questioned the depth of adolescent stages-the identity crisis.
Who is James Marcia?
300
Emily is reading quietly at her desk like Ms. Barton asked. Because of this, Ms. Barton gives Emily a free homework pass. This is an example of...
What is positive reinforcement?
300
3 types of memory
What is sensory, working, and long-term store?
300
When students are given supportive materials and the students discover the information for themselves.
What is pure discovery?
300
When a learner is aware of outside influences, they avoid risks and challenged that might not go well.
What is a performance oriented person?
300
Heinz was wrong to steal the drug because "It's against the law," or "It's bad to steal". A child thinking this would be in the ___________ stage.
What is the Obedience and Punishment Orientation Stage?
400
The 5 essential elements of classical conditioning.
What is unconditioned stimulus, unconditioned response, neutral stimulus, conditioned stimulus, and conditioned response?
400
The number of items the working memory can hold
What is 7 +/- at a time?
400
When you adjust schemas and experiences to maintain equilibrium.
What is adaptation?
400
When learning is ongoing, you compare with yourself and not others. All outcomes are opportunities.
What is mastery orientation?
400
Preconventional orientations speak from a _________ view and focuses on punishment
What is 'me centered'?
500
Difference between operant and classical conditioning.
Classical is involuntary. You present a stimulus and then the behavior happens. Operant is voluntary control of behavior. The behavior happens and then they get the consequence.
500
Your long term store is comprised of...
What is declarative knowledge, procedural knowledge, and episodic memory?
500
Piagets Four Stages
What is sensorimotor, pre operational, concrete operational, and formal operational?
500
Motivation= Expectancy x Value is called... You have no motivation if...
What is expectance value theory? What is if either one is zero?
500
List all of the stage in each level of morality development.
What is obedience and punishment orientation, individualism and exchange, good interpersonal relationships, maintaining the social order, social contract and individual rights, and universal principles?
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