Class 2
Class 3
Class 4
Class 5
Class 6
Class 7
100

What Are the different Stages in Bloom's Taxonomy from bottom to top

Remember, Understand, Apply, Analyze, Evaluate, Create

100

What are the three levels that Kohlberg proposed for development?

Level one: Preconventional

Level two: Conventional

Level three: Post Conventional

100

What are the three components of Self-Regulation Learning?

Metacognition

Strategy Development

Motivation

100

What are the four systems in Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Model?

Microsystem

Mesosystem

Exosystem

Macrosystem

100

What is the differences between Growth and Fixed mindsets?

fixed mindset: belief that intelligence and ability are static

Growth mindset: belief that abilities can develop through effort and learning

100

What is the definition of Motivation?

describes the wants or needs that direct behavior towards a goal


200

What is Behaviorism?

Is a psychological approach that focuses on observable behaviors rather than internal mental processes.

200

What are three memory improvement strategies?

Repetition and retrieval

Scaffolding

Chunking

Multimodal instruction

Advance Organizers

Metacognitive strategies

200

What is Metacognition?

Is people's awareness of their own thinking and hot their thinking works.

200

What are the three components of Self-determination Theory

Autonomy

Belonging

Competence

200

what are the three components of the Triarchic Reciprocal Model for social cognitive theory?


200

What is Maslow's Hierarchy of needs?

a psychological theory that proposes human behavior is motivated by a five-tier pyramid of needs, starting with basic survival needs and moving toward higher-level psychological needs

300

What are the four stages of cognitive development according to Jean Piaget?

Sensory - Infancy

Preoperational - early childhood to early elementary

Concrete Operational - Later elementary to middle school

Formal Operations - middle and senior high school

300

What are the four different types of Memory systems?

Sensory

Short term

Working 

Long term

300

What is Rote Memorization?

is a learning method based on repetition, where information is learned and recalled without a deep understanding of its meaning

300

What is Self-Efficacy?

Is defined as an individual's Beliefs and judgments of their capabilities to manage and execute necessary courses of action.

300

What are the three causality dimensions of Weiner's Attribution Theory?

Loss of control

Stability

Controllability

300

What are the four types of goals?

Proximal

Distal

Mastery

Performance

400

What is the Zone of Proximal Development?

Area where the child can master a task if given appropriate help and support.

400

What are the three stages of Memory Processes?

1) Encoding

2) Storage

3) Retrieval

400

Why should Teacher "Assume Nothing" when it comes to a students learning?

What is obvious to us, might often be not obvious to students. They must be taught how to use each strategy before the can actually use the strategy.

400

What is a possible result when Self-Determination needs are not met?

Outcomes include:

increased negative emotions, behaviors focused on self-protection, and decreased cognitive flexibility and self-determined motivation often resulting in maladaptive functioning and stagnation in personal growth.

400

What was the basis of Albert Bandura's social learning theory?

Believed that people also learned vicariously through observations of models in their social environment.

400

What is the purpose for feedback?

feedback tells a student whether their current efforts have fallen short of the goal or if their efforts have reached the goal.

500

Why is belonging important for the classroom?

Learning environments significantly impact students' sense of belonging, which is crucial for academic success and positive development, yet this belonging is often undermined for marginalized groups by historically Eurocentric norms, requiring educators to proactively create inclusive, respectful classroom structures.

500

What are the stages of development proposed by Erikson?

Trust vs Mistrust

Autonomy vs Shame and doubt

Initiative vs Guilt

Industry vs Inferiority

Identify vs Confusion

Intimacy vs isolation

generativity vs stagnation

Ego integrity vs despair

500

How can a teacher support strategy development over time? 

-Practicing strategies over time

-Repeating and reviewing over the course of the term/unit/year

-being open to teaching multiple strategies, but not overloading students who are struggling.

500

How can you start to develop your teacher self-efficacy right now?

1) be willing to learn and grow

2) be intellectually curious and open minded

3) Be aware

4) Develop good work/life balance strategies

5) work to your own identified strengths

6) pick your battles wisely

7) Keep a sense of humor

8) reflect, Reflect, REFLECT

500

List three different Self-Regulated learning teaching practices

complex tasks

control over challenges

support for individual differences

embedded assessment

control over challenges 

teacher support

choice

self assessment 

500

What do we mean when motivation is a spectrum?

motivation is not simply an "either/or" state (e.g., you are either motivated or you are not), but rather a continuum ranging from a complete lack of motivation to the highest form of self-driven, intrinsic motivation