Development Foundations
Prenatal & Infancy
Childhood Development
Adolescence
Adulthood & Aging
100

What type of development follows a predictable sequence

Continuous (Sec 9.1)

100

The first prenatal stage is called?

Germinal (sec 9.2)

100

What is the age range of Piaget's Preoperational Stage?

Ages 2-7 years (sec 9.4)

100

What is the developmental life stage in which a child’s body undergoes hormonal, physical, and neurological changes that lead to sexual maturity and reproductive capability.

Puberty (9.6)

100

The term "recall" in this life stage is?

the ability to retrieve past learning or experience without needing external clues

200

What is discontinuous development?

Development that happens in distinct stages

200

What is the name for harmful prenatal agents in development?

Teratogens

200

If a child shows inability to see other perspectives, it is called?

Egocentrism

200

Name of developmental stage, typically in adolescence, in which a person actively explores and questions who they are in order to form a clearer and more stable sense of self.

Identity Crisis

200

Erikson's "Generativity" stage refers to what characteristics?

The act of giving back to society

300

What is the debate about genetics vs environment called?

Nature vs Nurture

300

Attachment style where a baby becomes very upset when the caregiver leaves and is hard to comfort when they return?

Ambivalent (sec 9.3)

300

What is the life stage called Piaget suggested where children begin thinking logically about concrete events but struggle with abstract ideas?

Concrete operational (sec 9.4)

300

The term "Formal operations" refers to what in this life stage?

Ability for abstract thinking

300

Erikson’s late adulthood stage is when a person reflects on their life and either develops a sense of fulfillment and acceptance or feels regret and dissatisfaction. Name the fullfilment and acceptance behavior of this stage. 

Integrity

400

Developmental theory that says personality traits stay relatively stable from childhood to adulthood

Continuity (sec 9.1)

400

What attachment style is characterized by a lack of attachment to caregiver?

Reactive Disorder (sec 9.3)

400

Freud stage that focused focused on genitals (from childhood)

Phallic

400

Name the common adolescent experience in which a person believes others are constantly watching, judging, or focusing on them, even when they are not.

Imaginary Audience

400

What is the most common neurological disorder in late life stages that is characterized severe memory loss?

Alzheimer's

500

The brain’s ability to change (rewire) and adapt after injury or through experience is known as?

Plasticity

500

When a child has a preference for family caregivers over others, the style is is called?

Attachment (sec 9.3)

500

The stage of childhood from Erikson where childen display competence vs inferiority

Industry (Industriousness)

500

An unusually high sense of uniqueness and invulnerability (believing one is invincible) is called what?

Personal Fable

500

What is the name of culturally shared expectations and timing of life events (like retirement or aging milestones), which influence how people evaluate whether their lives are progressing “on time” or off schedule

Social clock