 |
| 1 |  |  Throughout his adult life, Erik Erikson identified with ____ , a nation where he lived for only a few months of his life. |
|  | A) | Germany |
|  | B) | The United States |
|  | C) | The United Kingdom |
|  | D) | Norway |
|  | E) | Denmark |
|
|
 |
| 2 |  |  In contrast to Freud, Erikson |
|  | A) | placed more emphasis on unconscious motivation. |
|  | B) | placed more emphasis on the ego. |
|  | C) | de-emphasized social and historical influences on personality. |
|  | D) | all of the above. |
|
|
 |
| 3 |  |  Erikson built on Freud's theory by |
|  | A) | elevating social factors over biological ones. |
|  | B) | emphasizing the id as the key to personality development. |
|  | C) | accepting Jung's idea of a collective unconscious. |
|  | D) | both a and b. |
|
|
 |
| 4 |  |  According to Erikson, which of these is the most important aspect of the ego? |
|  | A) | self-conscious ego |
|  | B) | perceived ego |
|  | C) | ego identity |
|  | D) | realistic ego |
|
|
 |
| 5 |  |  During childhood, Erikson said, the ego |
|  | A) | develops from the superego. |
|  | B) | is weak and flexible. |
|  | C) | is dormant. |
|  | D) | does not exist |
|
|
 |
| 6 |  |  To Erikson, the ego develops |
|  | A) | within a social structure. |
|  | B) | independent of historical factors. |
|  | C) | most rapidly during adulthood. |
|  | D) | only after the id stops developing. |
|
|
 |
| 7 |  |  Some societies hold that they are special and somehow more important than other societies. Erikson referred to this belief as |
|  | A) | an ethnocentric imperative. |
|  | B) | a Napoleonic complex. |
|  | C) | a narcissistic illusion. |
|  | D) | pseudospecies. |
|
|
 |
| 8 |  |  Erikson believed that healthy development rests on |
|  | A) | a conflict between syntonic and dystonic tendencies. |
|  | B) | a conflict between masculine and feminine elements. |
|  | C) | an unresolved Oedipus complex. |
|  | D) | a resolved Oedipus complex. |
|  | E) | a strong superego. |
|
|
 |
| 9 |  |  The epigenetic principle states that |
|  | A) | some societies believe themselves to be special. |
|  | B) | the ego develops from the dying id. |
|  | C) | the ego develops in a sequence, with each stage emerging from and being built on a previous stage. |
|  | D) | central to individual development are those traits and tendencies inherited from our ancestral past. |
|
|
 |
| 10 |  |  Erikson believed that ___ is the basic strength of infancy |
|  | A) | hope |
|  | B) | faith |
|  | C) | will |
|  | D) | love |
|  | E) | industry |
|
|
 |
| 11 |  |  The psychosocial crisis of early childhood is |
|  | A) | basic trust versus basic mistrust. |
|  | B) | intimacy versus isolation. |
|  | C) | industry versus inferiority. |
|  | D) | autonomy versus shame and doubt. |
|  | E) | compromise versus cooperation. |
|
|
 |
| 12 |  |  Erikson's early childhood stage corresponds with which of Freud's stages? |
|  | A) | oral |
|  | B) | anal |
|  | C) | phallic |
|  | D) | genital |
|  | E) | oedipal |
|
|
 |
| 13 |  |  According to Erikson, ____ is a feeling of self-consciousness and of being looked at or exposed. |
|  | A) | shame |
|  | B) | guilt |
|  | C) | doubt |
|  | D) | threat |
|  | E) | exhibitionism |
|
|
 |
| 14 |  |  To Erikson, the original model for human playfulness is |
|  | A) | the mother-child bond. |
|  | B) | the Oedipus complex. |
|  | C) | thumb-sucking. |
|  | D) | basic mistrust. |
|  | E) | basic trust. |
|
|
 |
| 15 |  |  The basic strength of the play age is _____. |
|  | A) | fidelity |
|  | B) | purpose |
|  | C) | care |
|  | D) | autonomy |
|  | E) | playfulness |
|
|
 |
| 16 |  |  Will is the basic strength of |
|  | A) | infancy. |
|  | B) | early childhood. |
|  | C) | the play age. |
|  | D) | adolescence. |
|
|
 |
| 17 |  |  Heidi is beginning to make new friends of her age. For the first time in her life, she has developed a relationship with adults who are not in her family. Heidi is in which of Erikson's stages? |
|  | A) | early childhood |
|  | B) | adolescence |
|  | C) | infancy |
|  | D) | genital period |
|  | E) | school age |
|
|
 |
| 18 |  |  The genital-locomotor psychosexual mode marks this stage. |
|  | A) | infancy |
|  | B) | play age |
|  | C) | adolescence |
|  | D) | young adulthood |
|  | E) | early childhood |
|
|
 |
| 19 |  |  The psychosocial crisis of the school age is |
|  | A) | autonomy verses shame and doubt. |
|  | B) | trust versus mistrust. |
|  | C) | identity versus identity confusion. |
|  | D) | industry versus inferiority. |
|
|
 |
| 20 |  |  Generalized sensuality characterizes the psychosexual stage of ______. |
|  | A) | adolescence |
|  | B) | young adulthood |
|  | C) | adulthood |
|  | D) | old age |
|  | E) | preadolescence |
|
|
 |
| 21 |  |  Bauer and McAdams found some support for their hypothesis that midlife changes are strongest in |
|  | A) | marital status. |
|  | B) | personal stagnation. |
|  | C) | changes in careers. |
|  | D) | changes in religion. |
|
|