Moral Development
Prenatal Development
Cognitive Development
Earlier/Later adulthood
Language development
100
the child internalizes the standards of others and judges right and wrong according to those standards.
What is Conventional level?
100
behavioral style; characteristic way of responding to the environment.
What is Temperament?
100
Adolescents can apply logic to abstract problems and hypothetical situations.
What is The Formal Operations stage?
100
verbal ability and accumulated knowledge increases over life span.
What is crystallized intelligence?
100
short sentences containing only essential content words.
what is Telegraphic Speech?
200
moral conduct is under internal control; this is the highest level and the mark of true morality.
What is Postconventional level?
200
The basis of attachment in infant monkeys is contact comfort.
What is Harlow?
200
When working real-world problems children are able to apply logical operations to problems that be tested in the real world
what is Concrete Operations stage?
200
signifies end of reproductive capacity in women usually occurs between 45 and 55
What is menopause?
200
biological growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior.
What is Cognition?
300
moral reasoning is governed by the physical consequences of an act rather than one’s own internalized standards of right and wrong.
What is Preconventional level?
300
changes that occur according to the infant’s own genetically predetermined biological timetable of development
What is maturation?
300
Infants act on the world through their senses and motor activities and develop object permanence
What is the Sensorimotor stage?
300
Identified 5 stages in coming to terms with death.
whose is Elizabeth Kübler-Ross ?
300
acknowledges the role of infants' inborn capacity for acquiring language.
What is Interactionist Approach?
400
who proposed a stage theory of moral development?
Kohlberg
400
The amount of variability in a train that is attributable to hereditary factors.
What is heritability?
400
process for incorporating new objects, events, experiences, and information into existing schemes
What is Assimilation?
400
The process of modifying existing schemes in order to incorporate or adapt to new experiences.
What is accommodation?
400
studies physical, cognitive, and social change throughout the life span.
What is Developmental Psychology?
500
prenatal period when certain body structures develop
What is the critical period?
500
plans of action to be used in similar circumstances.
What is Schemes?
500
A basic life function that enables an organism to adapt to its environment.
What is intelligence?
500
theory suggests that language is acquired through imitation and and reinforcement.
What is learning?