Piaget & Stages
Erikson & Psychosocial
Learning Theories
Bloom and Thinking Levels
Other Theorists
100

Stage from birth to 2 where infants learn through senses and actions; object permanence emerges.

Sensorimotor

100

First stage (birth–18 months) — the central conflict that builds hope when resolved.

Trust vs. Mistrust

100

Theorist who studied the Bobo Doll and observational learning.

Albert Bandura

100

The lowest level of Bloom’s taxonomy — recall of facts.

Remembering
100

Theorist who proposed the Hierarchy of Needs.

Who is Abraham Maslow?

200

Stage (2–7) marked by symbolic play and egocentrism.

Preoperational

200

Stage (18 months–3 years) where children practice independence.

Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt

200

Theory that behavior is shaped by consequences—name the theorist.

B.F. Skinner

200

Level where students must compare parts and show relationships.

Analyzing

200

Name the theory that intelligence is multi-dimensional with 8 types.


Howard Gardner (Multiple Intelligences)

300

Stage (7–11) when children understand conservation and think logically about concrete events.

Concrete Operational

300

Stage (3–5 years) centered on _____________.

initiative vs. guilt

300

Term for temporary supports teachers give students to perform tasks within their ZPD.

Scaffolding

300

Level asking students to judge value using evidence (higher-order).

Evaluating

300

Name the stage label and age range where children develop object permanence.

Sensorimotor (birth–2)

400

Stage developing around 12+ where abstract and hypothetical reasoning appears.

Formal Operational

400

Stage (5–12 years) where competence is the desired outcome—name the conflict.

What is Industry vs. Inferiority?

400

Term Bandura used for a learner’s belief in their ability to succeed.

Self-efficacy

400

Level that asks students to design or create an original product.

Creating

400

Which theorist emphasized social interaction as central to cognitive development and coined ZPD?

 Lev Vygotsky

500

Give one classroom activity appropriate for the pre operational stage.

- playing dress-up with community helper costumes

- building a city or town with blocks

- playing restaurant and assigning roles

500

Classroom implication of Erikson’s stages for adolescents (identity formation).

Supporting identity exploration through choices, reflective activities, and affirming feedback

500

Bronfenbrenner’s layer that includes cultural values, laws, and custom

Macrosystem

500

Design a short classroom prompt that assesses “Analyzing” for child development content.

identify similarities and differences

500

Give a classroom implication that connects Bronfenbrenner and family–school partnerships

Engage families in classroom events, communicate learning goals, and create home–school projects that honor cultural practices.

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