Relationality and Ideology
Intersectionality-Based Lens
Parents & Caregivers
Social-Ecological Perspective
Mental Health
100

The view that children do not develop in isolation is _____.

What is relationality?

100

This term, coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, describes how systems of oppression interconnect and impact individuals who hold multiple marginalized identities.

What is intersectionality?

100

This capacity allows children to adapt positively in the face of adversity, often fostered by supportive parenting practices.

What is resilience?

100

This is the relationship that the social-ecological perspective observes in order to explain development and behaviour. 

What is the relationship between an individual and their physical environment?

100

Events or experiences that include the following types: single incident, repetitive, developmental, relational, intergenerational, historical, and collective

What is trauma?

200

Evidence shows that children naturally respond with _____ when faced with dehumanizing ideologies.

What is resistance? 

200

Non-binary youth face unique identity challenges due to this societal expectation that prescribes fixed gender roles and identities.

What is gender binary?

200

This term describes the system of family influences, socioeconomic status, and community that significantly shapes a child’s development.

What is the ecological model?

200

This American psychologist is credited with the development of the socio-ecological model.

Who is Urie Bronfenbrenner?

200

Childhood events including forms of abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction that have impacts on health in adulthood are known as this.

What are adverse childhood experiences?

300

A racialized child and their family are living in a lower-income neighbourhood with precarious housing conditions. At school, there is high police presence and students often experience punitive discipline. They do not have a family doctor. This is the ecological level impending upon this child's healthy development.

What is the macrosystem?

300

In the context of child development, this framework emphasizes the importance of understanding the combined influence of race, gender, and socioeconomic status.

What is an intersectional framework?

300

This concept, introduced by John Bowlby, emphasizes the emotional bond between a child and their primary caregiver and its impact on the child’s social and emotional development.

What is attachment theory?

300

The structural quality of these three physical environments can influence a child's exposure to cumulative risks and contribute to suboptimal socially developmental outcomes.

What are the home, the day-care, and the school?

300

Infants are particularly vulnerable to this type of trauma, especially when mothers are emotionally dysregulated in their response to their child.

What is relational trauma?

400

Social workers can do these 3 things in response to dominant ideologies to support socially disadvantaged groups.

What is critically analyzing unquestioned practices, explicitly naming the implicit taken-for-granted "truths," and challenging power structures that continue to marginalize oppressed peoples?

400

The ten intersectionality characteristics that can influence a child’s development and experiences are:

What are race, gender, age, ability, sexual orientation, socioeconomic status, religion, language, nationality, and family structure?

400

This term refers to temporary care services that provide relief to primary caregivers, allowing them a break from their caregiving responsibilities.

What is respite care?

400

In one of the week's readings, a study showed that natural environmental stimulations enhance these two forms of development in the first years of children's lives. 

What are motor function and social maturity?

400

This attachment style is associated with increased mental health challenges in children.

What is a disorganized attachment style?

500

The 4 characteristics of developmental relationships are _____.

What is enduring emotional attachment, reciprocity, progressive complexity of joint activity, power balance (that allows for transferability to new settings)?

500

This term describes disparities in access to resources and opportunities that intersect to shape children’s development, as discussed in intersectional and anti-oppressive approaches.

What are the social determinants of health?

500

The parenting outcome known as___, characterized by low parental involvement and older siblings being the sole caregivers of their younger siblings.

What is parentification?

500

These are the four dimensions of the socio-ecological model that are used to describe climate anxiety among youth.

What are the chronosystem, the exo/macrosystem, the micro/mesosystem, and the individual?

500

Mental health is one of six aspects of this perspective that is comprised of a general view of skills and knowledge needed for children's long-term success.

What is the whole-child approach?

M
e
n
u