Indigenous Knowledge
Developmental Theory
Behaviourism
Holism/Humanism
Motivation & Affect
100

The definition of appropriation is?

Telling people you are Indigenous when you are not

100

This theorist proposed that children experience development through eight distinct stages in life.

Who is Erick Erickson

100

This behaviorist is famous for experimenting with dogs and classical conditioning.

Ivan Pavlov

100

This theorist described early childhood as a time when children have an “absorbent mind” and learn through movement, independence, and intrinsic motivation.


Who is Maria Montessori?

100

The Myers-Briggs has how many different personality types?

What is 16

200

Within an Indigenous culture, who provides the codes of conduct expected of the community?

The Elders

200

Jean Piaget, coined this term which is used to describe our ways of learning.

What is Assimilation and Accommodation

200

In operant conditioning, this occurs when a behavior increases because something unpleasant is removed.

negative reinforcement

200

This approach views the child as strong, competent, capable, and full of potential, and emphasizes that learning is social, creative, and community-based.


What is Reggio Emilia?

200

Carol Dweck termed the belief in the ability to learn new tasks as

What is a Growth Mindset

300

Finish this sentence: Nothing about us ...

without us

300

Arnold Gesell’s Maturation Theory focuses on these 4 areas of growth and development:

What is Motor, Adaptive, Language, and Personal-Social behavior.

300

If a student receives praise after completing homework and then continues completing homework, this is an example of what type of consequence.

positive reinforcement

300

According to Montessori, this plane of development (ages 6–12) is when children develop moral reasoning and intelligence, watching adults closely as models of thinking and behaviour.


What is the Second Plane of Development?

300

This is known as the ability to recognize, understand and manage our emotions and the emotions of others

What is Emotional Intelligence

400

The four elements of interconnectivity central to the medicine wheel are?

Mental, Spiritual, Emotional, & Physical

400

If you are aligned with this theorist, you would agree that students need opportunities to have physical access to books, play and explore learning materials, and engage in oral storytelling to develop language and literacy. You would agree that building strong, conversation-focused relationships with students is essential to their success, especially in preschool. 

Who is Marie Clay.

400

According to Skinner, this determines whether a behavior is likely to happen again.

consequences

400

In a Reggio-inspired classroom, this practice is used to observe, record, and reflect on children’s thinking through photos, notes, conversations, and creative work — and is not used for grading.


What is documentation?

400

This theorist challenged Piaget's development theory claiming children develop different levels of expertise in different areas at different rates

Who is Howard Gardner

500

The four foundations for self-worth as identified by Stanley Coopersmith are?

Significance, Competence, Power, & Virtue

500

What are the four stages of cognitive development and their corresponding age ranges as theorized by Jean Piaget?

Sensorimotor (0 – 2 Years of Age), Pre-operational (2 – 6 Years of Age), Concrete Operational (7 – 12 Years of Age) , and Formal Operational (12 Years of Age – Adulthood).

500

Thorndike later revised this law, stating that rewards strengthen behavior more effectively than punishments weaken it.

Law of Effect

500

A teacher ensures students feel safe, valued, and a sense of belonging before expecting academic risk-taking or higher-level thinking. This reflects the classroom application of which theorist’s work?


Who is Abraham Maslow?

500

What neuroscience concepts does the acronym RAD stand for?

What is:

Reticular activating system

Amygdala's affective filter

Dopamine

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