Site MapHelpFeedbackFill in the Blank Quiz
Fill in the Blank Quiz
(See related pages)



1

preoperational stage: In Piaget's theory, the second major stage of cognitive development (approximately from age 2 to age 7), in which children become more sophisticated in their use of thought but are not yet able to use
2

: In Piaget's terminology, ability to use mental representations (words, numbers, or images) to which a child has attached meaning.
3

: In Piaget's terminology, a limitation of preoperational thought that leads the child to focus on one aspect of a situation and neglect others, often leading to illogical conclusions.
4

: In Piaget's terminology, to think simultaneously about several aspects of a situation; characteristic of operational thought.
5

conservation: In Piaget's terminology, awareness that two objects that are equal according to a certain measure (such as length, weight, or quantity) remain equal in the face of alteration (for example, a change in shape) so long as nothing has been added to or taken away from either object.
6

: In Piaget's terminology, a limitation on preoperational thinking consisting of failure to understand that an operation can go in two or more directions.
7

transduction: In Piaget's terminology, a preoperational child's tendency to mentally link particular experiences, whether or not there is logically a relationship.
8

: In Piaget's terminology, inability to consider another person's point of view; a characteristic of preoperational thought.
9

animism: Tendency to attribute to objects that are not .
10

: Ability to put oneself in another person's place and feel what that person feels.
11

theory of mind: Awareness and understanding of mental
12

: Process by which a child absorbs the meaning of a new word after hearing it only once or twice in conversation.
13

pragmatics: The practical knowledge needed to use language for purposes.
14

speech: Speech intended to be understood by a listener.
15

speech: Talking aloud to oneself with no intent to communicate.
16

recognition: Ability to identify a encountered stimulus. Compare recall.
17

recall: Ability to reproduce material from . Compare recognition.
18

memory: Memory that produces a script of familiar routines to guide behavior.
19

script: General remembered outline of a familiar, event, used to guide behavior.
20

memory: Long-term memory of specific experiences or events, linked to time and place.
21

memory: Memory of specific events in one's own life.
22

Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale: Individual intelligence test used with children to measure memory, orientation, and practical judgment.
23

Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence--Revised (WPPSI-R): Individual childhood intelligence test for children ages 3 to 7, which yields verbal and scores as well as a combined score.







Papalia Updated 9eOnline Learning Center

Home > Chapter 10 > Fill in the Blanks