The four types of parenting.
What is authoritarian, authoritative, permissive, and uninvolved?
The five areas of MyPlate.
What is fruit, vegetables, grains, protein, and dairy?
These are the terms for how you see yourself as a person versus how highly you value yourself.
What is self concept versus self-esteem?
This is the type of learning in which a child learns by watching and mimicking others.
What is imitation?
This is the amount of signs (ASL) a caregiver should teach a toddler at a time.
What is 5?
The four types of parenting are based on these four characteristics, according to Diana Baumrind.
What is parental control, maturity demand, clarity of communication, and nurturance?
The approximate number of calories a toddler should consume in a day.
What is about 1000-1400?
The three main reasons for bad behavior in toddlers.
What is frustration, the desire for independence, and the realization of being a separate person (negativism)?
These are the four ways of learning in toddlerhood.
What is Incidental Learning, Trial and Error, Imitation, and Directed Learning?
This is a 3 year old's "favorite" word.
What is why?
This theorist expressed the idea that parenting is common sense.
Who is Benjamin Spock?
The most major gross motor skill in toddlers.
What is walking?
This is stage 2 of Erik Erikson's theory.
What is Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt?
This is the term for when toddlers believe that all objects that move are alive.
What is concept development?
Articulation problems, stuttering, and not understanding words are signs of this.
What is speech impairment?
This is the disciplinary term for moving a child's attention away from a negative behavior to a positive one.
What is redirection?
This is the term for skillful use of the hands and fingers. For instance, turning a page in a book.
What is dexterity?
These are the five emotions developed during toddlerhood.
What is anger, fear, jealousy, love/affection, and empathy?
This is the term for reducing statements or ideas to its basic form.
Example: A child is holding a yellow crayon and says "green?" The adult responds by saying "yellow." No further discussion occurs.
What is reduction?
This is the stage of Jean Piaget's theory in which a toddler solves problems in a sequence.
What is stage 6?
These are the three ways to guide a child's behavior.
This is the term for when a toddler can use information gathered by their senses to draw a conclusion about what is happening.
What is sensory integration?
This is the ultimate goal of guidance for toddlers.
What is self-discipline?
These are the ten guided learning techniques that a caregiver should use. Name at least 5 for points.
What is time & affection, allow time for thinking, give only as much time as needed, model problem solving, maintain a positive attitude, keep explanations simple, exploration and discovery, encouragement to draw own conclusions, help understand the world, and take breaks?
These are the seven intellectual abilities of toddlerhood. Name at least 5 for points.
What is attention, memory, perception, reasoning, imagination, creativity, curiosity?