"Who am I?"
"What is love?"
"I got a feeling"
"Do the right thing"
"Context, context, context!"
100

Name one critique commonly cited against Erikson’s theory.

Stages are vague, difficult to test empirically, culturally biased, people may encounter stages concurrently or in different orders

100

Theorist who proposed that infant-caregiver attachments are evolutionarily advantageous and that these attachments influence a child's internal working model

Bowlby

100

This process helps infants regulate emotion by looking to caregivers for cues.

Social referencing

100

Kohlberg’s stage of moral development that involves trying to avoid punishment and seek out rewards

Preconventional Morality

100

This model explains how immigrants maintain or change cultural identity.

Berry's Acculturation Model

200

At which developmental stage does self-esteem tend to be the LOWEST?

Adolescence

200

This type of attachment is characterized by distress when a caregiver leaves but comforted upon return.

Secure attachment

200

The ability to recognize, understand, and manage emotions.

Emotional Intelligence
200

Gilligan's main critique of Kohlberg's theory of moral development

Gender Bias

200

How people view themselves in reference to their racial and cultural social groups

Ethnic identity

300

This theory looks at identity as an evolving life story.

Narrative identity (McAdams & McLean)

300

Baumrind's parenting style that involves high warmth and low control/structure

Permissive

300

This theory says that older adults prioritize emotionally meaningful goals / relationships

Socioemotional Selectivity Theory (Carstensen)

300

This theory says that behaviors such as aggression are learned through observing models

Social Learning Theory (Bandura)

300

The effects of childcare depend on... 

The quality of childcare (for example, how well the care providers are trained, appropriateness of materials, the ratio of care providers to children)

400

A life stage proposed by Arnett that covers ages 18-25 and involves identity moratorium.

Emerging Adulthood

400

In comparison to children, adolescents' friendships are based more on... 

Psychological closeness

400

Levinson originally estimated that about 80% of men experience a midlife crisis. Based on more recent evidence, what is the actual percentage?

~15-20%

400

Dual processing theory calls quick, automatic reactions ___ responding.

Hot

400

This term refers to the psychological stress that arises from awareness of negative stereotypes about one’s group.

Stereotype threat (I would also accept self-fulfilling prophecy)

500

Describes biologically based, early-appearing style of emotional and behavioral responding to the world; viewed as the foundation of personality

Temperament

500

Name a gender difference in friendships

Possible correct answers: Girls tend to have fewer close friends than boys, boys are more likely to spend time together in groups rather than one-on-one, boys tend to emphasize shared activities whereas girls tend to emphasize emotional closeness, girls tend to resolve conflicts more effectively, girls tend to be more helpful whereas boys tend to be more physically aggressive

500

Adolescents experience more intense and variable emotions, partly due to this brain region maturing.

Prefrontal cortex/limbic system

500

The cycle of violence involves three stages: tension building, the acute act of violence, and then... 

Loving contrition

500

What are some factors that could help explain racial differences in academic achievement?

Racial discrimination, differences in socioeconomic status