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Book Cover
Human Development: Updated, 7/e
James Vander Zanden, Ohio State University
Thomas Crandell, Broome Community College
Corinne Crandell, Broome Community College

Early Childhood 2 to 6: Physical and Cognitive Development

Factual Multiple Choice



1

The most accurate statement regarding physical growth is that
A)children grow in an even, sequential pattern
B)the only time of fast growth is in the teen years
C)about twice as much growth occurs between the ages of 1 and 3 as between the ages of 3 and 5
D)slender children tend to grow faster than the average, while broadly built children grow more slowly
2

Which of the following is not a correct statement concerning children's coordination?
A)Some 5 percent of youngsters have noticeable difficulties with coordination.
B)Clumsy boys have just as many friends as their coordinated peers.
C)Children with coordination problems are at a greater risk for significant social problems.
D)Motor skills form a large part of a youngster's self-concept.
3

In terms of activity performance, which of the following would be an example of a motor-skill developmental delay for a typical 3-year-old?
A)cannot ride a tricycle
B)cannot turn pages of a book
C)cannot use a scissors to cut straight line
D)cannot copy squares
4

At age 5, a child's brain will
A)weigh 30 percent of an adult's
B)weigh 60 percent of an adult's
C)weigh 90 percent of an adult's
D)weigh 99 percent of an adult's
5

In 1993 the majority of deaths (52 percent) for children ages 5-14 were due to
A)malnutrition
B)abuse
C)injuries
D)suicide
6

Wechsler's description of intelligence is
A)the possession of a fund of knowledge
B)a capacity for acquiring knowledge and functioning rationally and effectively
C)a type of metamemory
D)the retention of what has been experienced
7

Who is the psychologist who viewed intelligence as a general ability and devised the first widely used intelligence test?
A)Charles Spearman
B)David Wechsler
C)J. P. Guilford
D)Alfred Binet
8

Spearman advanced an opposing view of intelligence; that is, intelligence is
A)a single, general intellectual capacity
B)a general intellectual ability employed for reasoning and problem solving with special factors peculiar to given tasks
C)identified as 120 distinct factors
D)seven distinct intelligences: linguistic, logical-mathematical, spatial, musical, body-kinesthetic, and two forms of personal intelligence
9

Psychologists who view intelligence as a process, as compared to an ability, are not so much interested in ________we know, but in ________ we know.
A)what; how
B)why; how
C)how; what
D)what; when
10

Research done by Sternberg, who has an information-processing view of intelligence (where people can solve problems in everyday life as well as on tests), holds that
A)some skills are trainable
B)gifted children can ignore irrelevant information
C)gifted and nongifted children can improve their performance
D)all of the above
11

Based on data on IQ performance from family resemblance studies, Bouchard and his colleagues found that which correlation was the highest?
A)between parent and child, same sex
B)between dizygotic, same sex twins
C)between monozygotic twins, reared together
D)between monozygotic twins, reared apart
12

A numerical expression of the degree of relationship between two variables (events, conditions) which tells the extent to which two measures tend to go together is called the ________ coefficient.
A)standard deviation
B)median deviation
C)correlation
D)mean covariance
13

Environmentalists, who believe intelligence is learned, contend that studies of adopted children are biased because adoptive agencies traditionally attempt to place these children in an environment that is
A)economically superior to the one in which they were born
B)geographically different from the one in which they were born
C)religiously, ethnically, and racially similar to the one in which they were born
D)linguistically similar to the one in which they were born
14

Sociologist C. Jencks has introduced the third element of gene-environment interaction to the nature-nurture controversy, which is
A)associated primarily with genetic factors
B)associated primarily with environmental factors
C)a result of the combining of genes and environment
D)a measure of family resemblance
15

Piaget said children first develop the capacity to represent the external world internally through symbols during which period?
A)preoperational
B)sensorimotor
C)concrete operational
D)formal operational
16

The concept that the quantity or amount of something stays the same regardless of changes in its shape or position is called
A)conservation
B)transformation
C)roles
D)centering
17

Recent critiques of Piaget's theory focus on a child's ability to
A)talk to others
B)decenter
C)be sociocentric
D)be preoperational
18

Wellman's research on the theory of mind reveals that 3-year-olds can
A)predict people's future actions
B)explain their past actions
C)both a and b
D)neither a nor b
19

Children around 7 and 8 years old are able distinguish between cause and effect, known as
A)causality
B)recall
C)inherent knowledge
D)recognition
20

Contemporary developmental psychologists (in contrast to Piaget) in measuring children's counting capabilities, would support that
A)there is no connection between the acquired ability to count and operations the child is capable of
B)preschoolers seem to have an implicit understanding for number concepts
C)counting is not an "easy" cognitive task for young children
D)young children seem to possess some basic knowledge of "quantity" after they acquire such knowledge from their experiences
21

When a child understands that words must go in a specific order , then they have grasped
A)morphology
B)phonology
C)syntax
D)pragmatics
22

Chomsky's LAD stands for
A)language assimilation development
B)linguistic appropriation device
C)linguistic accelerated development
D)language acquisition device
23

Vygotsky's concept, known as the zone of proximal development (ZPD) states that
A)development takes place at the approximate zone of human interaction
B)children's developmental zone is approximately between the ages of 2 and 7
C)tasks that are learned alone are better understood than those learned with others
D)tasks that are too difficult to master alone are mastered with the help of a skilled partner
24

Information from the senses is preserved just long enough to permit the stimuli to be scanned for processing. This provides a relatively complete, literal copy of the physical stimulus and best describes
A)short-term memory
B)sensory information storage
C)long-term memory
D)rehearsal
25

Individual awareness and understanding of one's mental process is ________; whereas understanding one's own memory processes is ________.
A)short-term memory; long-term memory
B)metacognition; short-term memory
C)metamemory; metacognition
D)metacognition; metamemory
26

A memory strategy that helps children organize information for recall and includes rhyming, clustering, and ordering is
A)rehearsal
B)categorizing
C)meta-rehearsal
D)syntax recall
27

Piaget asserts that ________ is the foundation for social interchange in children.
A)egocentrism
B)reciprocity
C)autonomy
D)morality