CMN 147 Final Questions and Answers Latest Updated 2024
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Course
CMN 571
Institution
CMN 571
CMN 147 Final Questions and Answers Latest Updated 2024
Why do 9-14 month olds side with their in-group?
Evolutionary. People in the same group will protect you.
Did 9-14 month olds have any preference for good or bad behavior?
Yes. They preferred to side with prosocial/helpful behavior
...
CMN 147 Final Questions and Answers
Latest Updated 2024
Why do 9–14-month-olds side with their in-group? - answer Evolutionary. People in the
same group will protect you.
Did 9–14-month-olds have any preference for good or bad behavior? - answerYes.
They preferred to side with prosocial/helpful behavior
When did 9–14-month-olds side with bad behavior? - answer When the perpetrator was
part of their in-group.
Why do kids collect things? - answerThey're trying to make sense of the world. Picking
something to sort by shape, color, etc. gives them some control over the world.
What happens when young kids see something outside of their world view, like
someone with a large scar? A person of a different race? - answerThe kid fixates on
anything outside their view, as they need to reorder their world view to fit them
Why is it hard to promote inclusion to 5-6 year olds? - answer1. Actual structure of the
shows, e.g. Arthur and the camp emphasizing gender conflict for 80% of the episode
before saying it's better to work together.
2. Innate considerations of loyalty
What is a 5-6 year old's innate consideration of loyalty? - answer6 year olds were more
inclusive unless watching with their best friends. They're better at applying fantasy to
reality, and since 80% of the episode is about excluding people outside of their in-group,
the 6 year old applies that to keeping their best friend 'safe' in their existing group.
What is an insert and does it work? - answer1. An insert is a short message at the
beginning of the episode that tells the viewer what the lesson is supposed to be.
2. Yes, inserts work for kids with low ToM. While they don't understand others'
perspectives innately, they will understand if you tell them.
What is the most important thing, developmentally, for an adolescent to do? -
answerForm and keep peer groups
What is alloparenting? - answerIndividuals other than the parents act in a parental role.
It takes a village.
, Why is alloparenting important? - answer1. Forming secure and warm attachments with
others is important for development.
2. Attachments should make kids feel: safe, seen, secure, soothed
What is a product of forming and maintaining groups? - answerExclusion. To protect the
group, we create reasons to exclude others.
What are the rates of bullying reported among adolescents aged 11-15? - answer1.
35% report engaging in gossip on a monthly basis
2. 32% report that they are the target of this gossip
3. 10% report that this has happened through social media
How does watching media exacerbate teen exclusion and bullying? - answerModeling
of behavior. Adolescents don't know how to act, so they watch shows and act based on
what they see there. If that behavior is accepted, they keep acting that way.
Did exposure to socially aggressive media make adolescents more socially aggressive?
- answerYes, but only girls. They already engage in more social aggression than boys,
and media makes this worse. Meanwhile, boys may engage in more physical
aggression.
How does social media affect internalization of norms? - answer1. It immediately show
us what are accepted as norms. Otherwise, kids would need to pay attention to their
environment to figure it out.
2. Goal of adolescents is to connect with people, and this allows us to do it 24/7
What ideals did Facebook make adolescents internalize? - answerSocial and romantic
ideals
What ideals did Instagram make adolescents internalize? - answer1. Social
2. Romantic
3. Professional
4. Sexual
Was internalizing ideals from social media connected to negative mental health? -
answerNot really, except:
1. More use of Facebook decreased mental health
2. internalization of sexual norms hurt mental health
Do these effects differ around the world? - answerRemarkably, these effects look pretty
similar around the world, with little differentiation as a function of culture
What is separation-individuation? - answerWhen an adolescent starts separating
themselves from their parents in order to form their own identity. A product of this is
seeking other intimate relationships
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