Infancy/Childhood
Piaget/Kohlberg
Adolescence
Adulthood
Old Age
100
process primarily reflects the role of nature in human development
What is maturation?
100
identify Piaget's four stages of cognitive development
What is sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, formal operational
100
Activities that are only illegal when committed by children and adolescents are known as ___________________.
What is status offenses?
100
Difference between homogomy and heterogomy
What is homogomy choose spouse similar to you; heterogomy choose spouse different from you.
100
the study of death
What is thantology?
200
Between what two ages do young children experience most dramatic gains in height and weight
What is birth to 2
200
a person at this level of cognitive development can handle algebra
What is formal operational?
200
The point at which an adolescent feels confused about making a decision about his or her future roles is called an ______
What is identity crisis?
200
First period is called ___________
What is menarche?
200
another name for mercy killing
What is euthansia?
300
Reasons child abuse tends to run in families
What is hard to break cycle; learn by example from own parents.
300
A personal on this cognitive level understands the law of conservation.
What is concrete operational?
300
This person accepts the values taught as a young child, and does not make an attempt to form his/her own and allows these to influence his career choice and blocks potential for growth.
What is forclosure?
300
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross’s five stages of grief that one experiences when facing death include:
What is Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance
300
paperwork you fill out to let family and medical staff know what interventions if any that you want when you are terminally ill
What is a living will?
400
3 factors that affect social development
What is attachment, child care, parenting styles, child abuse, self esteem?
400
describe the preoperational stage/characteristics
What is egocentric, animistic, artificialistic thinking, no sense of law of conservation?
400
No clear idea or identity; constantly searching Constantly searching for meaning in life and for identity No real commitment to values and personal goals
What is identity diffusion?
400
developmental tasks of middle adulthood
What is • Strengthening one’s relationship with one’s spouse • Assuming leadership roles in social and civic activities • Achieving mastery in one’s career • Adjusting to physical changes that occur in middle age • Making decisions about how to spend one’s “second adulthood” • Pursuing one’s passions • Coping with one’s aging parents
400
4 concerns of terminally ill people
What is being left alone, loss of mastery of oneself, being replaced by someone else and separation from one’ s family.
500
Identify and describe three classifications of parenting styles
What is Authoritarian- • Parents set rigid rules and demand obedience. • Children have little input into how their lives are governed. • Parents don’t trust their children to make decisions.  Results: moody, poor self-esteem, don’t get along with others , poor decision makers Authoritative- Parents take on role of authority figure; not dictator They make rules and enforce them. They listen and offer suggestions Results: self reliant, friendly, positive, self confident Permissive- • Parents let children do as they please • Few rules are made or enforced  Results: child doesn’t learn about unacceptable behavior and its consequences
500
Basic differences between pre conventional, conventional, and post conventional moral reasoning
What is pre conventional- Based their judgments on the consequence of behavior conventional-Makes judgments in terms of whether an act conforms to conventional standards of right and wrong reasoning based on a person’s own moral standards of goodness Here, moral judgments reflect one’s personal values, not conventional standards post conventional-
500
This person is actively trying different activities, career choices etc. in an attempt to figure himself out.
What is identity moritorium?
500
developmental tasks of late adulthood
What is • Adjusting to physical changes and keeping active • Maintaining concern about other people so one doesn’t become preoccupied with one’s own physical changes • Shifting interests from work to retirement or leisure activities • Adjusting to changes in financial status
500
physical and cognitive changes that occur in late adulthood
What is Hearing, sight decreases Body functions slow down Problems with short term memory; problems making decisions when under pressure