The Basics
Nature vs. Nurture
Growing Up
Outside Influences
Family Ties
100

This is the study of how children grow physically, mentally, emotionally, and socially from birth through adolescence

What is Child Development?

100

This term refers to traits and characteristics passed down genetically from parents, such as eye color or blood type

What is Nature?

100

During this stage (Birth–1 year), children experience fast physical growth and focus on bonding with caregivers

What is Infancy?

100

This factor includes the physical surroundings, such as safety, noise level, and access to outdoor play

What is environment?

100

This traditional family structure consists of two parents and one or more children

What is a Nuclear Family?
200

This area of development involves thinking, learning, and problem-solving

What is Cognitive Development?

200
This term refers to traits and behaviors learned from your environment and experiences, such as manners or language

What is Nurture?

200

In this stage, language grows from single words to short sentences, and walking turns into running

What is the Toddler stage (ages 1–3)?

200

A child who lacks this specific nutrient in their diet may have trouble concentrating, illustrating the "Health & Nutrition" factor

What is iron?

200

This family type is formed when two separate families merge into one

What is a Blended Family?

300

These are predictable patterns or "skills" that most children achieve by a certain age, such as walking by 12 months

What are developmental milestones?

300
This experiment by Albert Bandura proved that children learn by watching others, showing the power of nurture

What is the Bobo doll experiment?

300

This stage is when fine motor skills like using scissors improve and children learn to share and work in teams

What is Preschool (ages 3–5)?

300

This factor includes family income and education level, which can affect a child's opportunities and stress levels

What is Socioeconomic Status?

300
This family structure includes two or more related adults living together, which allows for shared household responsibilities

What is an extended family?

400

Studying child development is important because it aids in early detection of these

What are developmental delays?

400

This famous case study of identical twins separated at birth showed that genetics can be powerful even when life experiences are different

Who are the "Jim Twins" (Jim Lewis and Jim Springer)

400

Grief in children isn't just about death; it can come from these other big life changes

What are moving, divorce, or losing a pet?

400

This influence includes shared beliefs and customs that shape a child's values and behaviors

What are Culture and Traditions?

400

This type of family provides temporary care for children who cannot live with their biological families at that given time

What is a Foster Family?

500

List three careers mentioned in U1 L1 - What is Child Development? that use child development knowledge

Who are Teachers, Pediatricians, Social Workers, Child Psychologists, or Early Childhood Educators?

500

In U1 L2 "Nature vs. Nurture", "Nature" is compared to a spark, while "Nurture" is compared to this, which keeps the fire growing

What is the fuel (or the environment that keeps it burning)?

500

According to U1 L3 "Stages of Development", these three things help most when supporting children through emotional growth and grief

What are Consistency, Honesty, and Listening?

500

This factor involves supportive and consistent interactions with caregivers, peers, and teachers

What are relationships?

500

This family structure occurs when grandparents take on the primary caregiving due to circumstances like illness or financial hardship

What is a Grandparent-led family?