Cognitive Development Theory/Psychosocial Stages
Relationships/Friends
Bullying
Language
Intelligence
100

Type of cognition marked by the ability to reason about the world in a more logical, adult way

Concrete Operational Thinking (8-11 years old)

100

What are the core qualities of a friendship?

Similarity, trust, and emotional support

100

A contemporary childhood concern where 1 or more children/adults harass or target a specific child for systematic abuse

Bullying
100

Ages where children read familiar stories, self-correct when they make a mistake while reading aloud, and write by organizing stories in a logical sequence

Age 6-7

100

The belief that IQ scores top into the g-factor (general intelligence factor that Spearman claimed underlies all cognitive abilities), while others believe an IQ score can predict a person's cognitive potential in all life tasks

Pro "g"-factor

200

When people are eager to achieve, being more responsible, and recognize their talents + interests 

Industry

200

They stimulate personal development, helps a child learn to manage emotions and handle conflicts (a symmetrical one-to-one relationship)

Friendships

200

Higher in proactive and reactive aggression (vs. victims and controls)

Bully

200

Ages where children read books independently, understand and use paragraphs, and correctly use punctuation 

Age 7-8

200

The belief that IQ is only valid as a test of academic performance, while others think that the one-dimensional quality called "g" does not exist because people have unique intellectual talents

Anti "g"-factor

300

If no recognition from parents, teachers, peers, then children can develop a sense of inferiority and low self-esteem

Inferiority 

300

A group concern 

Popularity

300

Highest in reactive and proactive aggression (vs. all categories), the most aggressive group, and may demonstrate both external + internal tendencies

Bully-victim

300

Age where children explore, understand and analyze more complex tests, read to extract information, and identify metaphors and analogies

Age 9-13

300

The facet of intelligence involving performing well on academic-type problems

Analytic Intelligence

400

Tendency to to feel good or bad about ourselves

Self-Esteem

400

Does rational aggression and popularity work better for girls or boys?

Girls

400
Lower reactive aggression (vs. controls), and not proactively aggressive

Classic victim

400
A standard intelligence test for children, measuring performance in a variety of areas

WISC

400

The facet of intelligence involved in producing novel ideas or innovative work

Creative Intelligence

500

Academic, obedience, performance, popularity, and looks

Areas used to determine one's self-esteem

500

True or False: Friends don't protect and enhance the developing self

False

500

Anxious, shy, low on the social hierarchy, and unlikely to fight back

Internal Tendencies

500

How are the scores of a WISC test arranged?

They are aligned in a normal distribution
500

The facet of intelligence involved in knowing how to act competently in real-world situations

Practical Intelligence

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