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Human Growth and Development CLEP test questions and answers.

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Human Growth and Development CLEP test questions and answers.

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  • October 5, 2023
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Human Growth and Development CLEP
test questions and answers
nature vs. nurture controversy - answer it is agreed that both have some influence in
development, but some people think it is more one than the other.
biologically built vs. environment


tabula rasa - answer this is what the human mind is at birth (according to the nurture side of the
nature versus nurture controversy), like a blank slate that experience writes on


Discontinuity or Stage Theories - answer Argues that development progresses through a series
of stages. Each stage involves a specific task. Once the stage is completed the child moves on to
the next stage. The developing person is changing qualitatively, not quantitatively.


Continuity Theories - answer Suggest that development is best described as a steady growth
process. Developmental change is described as occurring in small steps or increments. (Skills
and behavior improve but they do not change in a qualitatively.)


Child Development vs. Life Span - answer Some theories of development argue that
development is complete at the end of childhood/adolescence (Sigmund Freud and Jean Piaget
are examples).
Life Span theories of development argue that growth and change continue to occur throughout
the entire life span (Erick Erickson took a life span perspective).


universality vs. context specific - answer a theory that applies to all cultures and time periods
(such as Piaget proposed for his theory)
Bronfenbrenner is an example of the alternative view which points out that there are
differences in development depending on the culture/environment (such as in collectivist
cultures versus individualistic cultures)

,Collectivist cultures - answer Places greater value on the common good than individual
achievement


Individualistic cultures - answer values individual achievements and the pursuit of individual
goals


accommodation - answer by Piaget. modifying an existing scheme


assimilation - answer by Piaget. taking new information from the world and incorporating it into
an existing scheme


Scheme - answer by Piaget. basic thought about the world, objects, events


disequilibrium - answer what happens when a child understands the world in a particular way
(their scheme) then sees something happen that can't fit into that understanding.


constructivism - answer Piaget's position that argues that children construct schema (organized
patterns of thought or action) based on experiences they have actively exploring the
environment.


Piaget's stages of cognitive development - answer sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete
operations, formal operations (each stage represents a qualitatively different way of thinking
instead of just acquiring more information over time)


sensorimotor stage - answer 0-2 years old. Lacks concept of object permanence until the end of
this stage (understanding that objects continue to exist even when their presence can't be
sensed) & knows what they can do with their senses.
By the end of this stage they also have symbolic representation (when one thing stands for
another thing) and deferred imitation (imitating a model's behavior awhile after it was
observed). Piaget.

,preoperational stage - answer 2-7 years old. They think symbolically (e.g. language),
are egocentric (have trouble seeing things from others' perspectives),
use transductive reasoning (not reasoning logically about cause and effect),
use animitic thinking (projecting human abilities and traits onto inanimate objects),
and think semilogically. Piaget.


concrete operations - answer 7-11 years old. Can understand transformation (an object
changing form is still the same object),
reversibility (starting at the conclusion and working back to the start),
conservation (an objects mass, volume, weight, etc. doesn't change because its appearance
changes),
can group things into categories,
and think logically as long as it is not abstract. Piaget.


Formal operations - answer 12+ years old. They can handle hypotheticals/abstract and scientific
reasoning, logical and systematic thinking (algebra, literary, metaphor). Although he thought not
all people reach this stage of cognitive development, the end goal is hypothetico-deductive
reasoning. Piaget.


information processing approach - answer a relatively new approach that uses the computer as
a metaphor for the human mind (they use the two-store model of memory)


learning theory or the behaviorist perspective - answer describes developmental change as a
product of learning (nurture side of nature vs. nurture & are continuity theories). Learning is a
change in observable behavior (and behavior is controlled by stimuli in the environment).
(key people: Pavlov, Watson, Skinner, Bandura)


John Watson - answer founded the Behavioral Psychology in 1913. (he believed that at birth we
only have these emotions: love, anger, and fear)

, learning theory/the behaviorist perspective = describes developmental change as a product of
learning (nurture side of nature vs. nurture & are continuity theories).


Pavlov's classical conditioning - answer (sometimes called type S (stimulus) conditioning)
Making a connection between two stimuli. The US already produces the UR (together producing
a reflex) which is the desired response to the neutral stimulus.
{First letter = unconditioned(maybe UC)/conditioned
Second letter = stimulus/response}


Before conditioning: US -> UR
Conditioning: neutral stimulus [-> no response] + US -> UR
After learning: CS -> CR (unless the original S is taken away, which would lead to extinction aka
going back to the original behavior)


higher conditioning = when a new neutral stimulus is associated with a CS


Stimulus generalization - answer When something from conditioning (or uncondtioned) carries
over to another related area. You are afraid of spiders, you might become afraid of other bugs
because they are so similar.


stimulus discrimination - answer only showing the reflexive classical conditioning (or UC)
response for the specific/exact stimulus (not similar ones like generalization)


Watson and Little Albert - answer The psychologist classically conditioned the infant to be afraid
of a white rat, by pairing the white rat (a neutral stimuli) with a frightening, loud noise, causing
the infant to associate the rat with the noise.


type R (response) or operant conditioning - answer by Skinner.
-Reinforcement is to increase (+) the behavior.
-Punishment is to decrease (-) the behavior.

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