Theorists
Intelligences
Milestones
Language
Other
100

What does Maria Montessori believe?

Promoting the usage of 5 senses for a more complex understanding and/or promoting personal care and care for the environment.

100

What elements make up information processing?

Attention, memory, processing speed, organization of thinking, and metacognition.

100

What are the milestones of 7-8 month olds (social engagement, attention to language, and communicative intent/effort) ?

Social: engages with adults, eye contact, vocalizes, references back, imitates

Attention: responds to name, follows commands with gesture

Communicative: eye contact, vocalizes, gestures to indicate wants

100

What is language?

The process of making sounds and developing and sharing meaning about the world and your experience in it.

100

What is scaffolding?

The teaching method that helps students learn more by working with a teacher or more advanced students.

200

What does Noam Chomsky believe?

He believes that all individuals possess a universal grammar.

200

What is the theory of multiple intelligences and who proposed it?

It challenges the ideas of a single IQ, where human beings have one central “computer” where intelligence is housed. Howard Gardner proposed the theory.
200

What are the milestones for 12 to 15 months (social engagement, attention to language, and communicative intent/effort)?

Social: follows commands without gesture, initiates more, points, follows point of another

Attention: follows commands without gesture, gestures to song, points to body parts

Communicative: points to indicate wants, first words

200
What is holophrastic speech?

Single words that convey complete ideas.

200

What are the limitations of standardized testing?

Cultural bias, reliance on language as a basis for testing, stereotype threat, time limitations, unequal access to resources, test anxiety, and personal trials prior

300

Why does Carol Gilligan object Kohlberg’s theory?

She believes that women approach ethical problems differently than men.

300

What happens to children who have their left hemispheres surgically removed?

They can re-learn, slowly and with lots of practice, how to speak. The right hemisphere can take over for the missing left, but it is not as efficient in its work.

300

What are the milestones for 18 month olds (social engagement, attention to language, and communicative intent/effort)?

Social: engages with others, imitates, initiates social exchange, showing behaviour

Attention: follows many and more complex commands, points to pictures in a book

Communicative: uses words to indicate wants, uses words in pretend play

300

What is telegraphic speech?

When putting words together, children use the words that are the most meaningful.

300

What is ADHD? What is dyslexia?

ADHD: attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder is when individuals have trouble paying attention, controlling impulsive behaviours, or being overly active.

Dyslexia: when an individual has difficulty learning to read or interpret words, letters, and other symbols, but that does not affect general intelligence.

400

Which theorist talks about the zone of proximal development, and what does this term mean?

Vygotsky. 

The zone of proximal development refers to what we can do with the help of an adult, technology, or the more knowledgeable other. It is the distance between what a learner is capable of doing unsupported, and what they can do supported. 

400

What is the difference between fluid versus crystallized intelligence?

Fluid: Involves being able to think and reason abstractly and solve problems. This ability is considered independent of learning, experience, and education.

Crystallized: Based upon facts and rooted in experience. As we age, and accumulate new knowledge and understanding, crystallized intelligence becomes stronger.

400

What are the milestones for 24 month olds (social engagement, attention to language, and communicative intent/effort))

Social: demands attention, lots of showing behaviour, engages constantly

Attention: understands the environment, understands complex directives, understands other people’s conversations

Communicative: knows 200 or more words, uses 2-word combinations or longer, uses language for wide range of purposes, pretend play more complex

400

What is receptive language? What is productive language?

Receptive language is the understanding of spoken and written word, before acquiring.

Productive language is the ability to use the spoken or written word. 

400

What is the theory of mind?

The understanding that people don’t share the same thoughts and feelings as you do develops during childhood.

500

What are Kohlberg’s 6 stages of moral development?

  • Obedience and punishment

  • Self-interest

  • Accord and conformity

  • Authority and maintenance of social order

  • Social contract

  • Universal ethical problems

500

What are Gardner’s 8 intelligences?

Verbal-linguistic, logical-mathematical, visual-spatial, musical intelligence, naturalistic, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal.

500

If the left hemisphere becomes the language center for most adults, what happens if in childhood, it is compromised by disease?

Brain seizures such as those resulting from epilepsy and Rasmussen’s syndrome have a devastating effect on the brain development in some children. 

M
e
n
u