A) Piaget studied children rather than nonhuman species.
B) Piaget's ideas were incompatible with behaviorist theory.
C) Most of Piaget's writings were in French.
D) Piaget used research methods that were unconventional in the eyes of American psychologists.
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Multiple Choice
A) Isabelle pushes a classmate off the swing so that she can use it.
B) Edward tries not to cry when his mother drops him off on the first day of kindergarten.
C) Richard actively manipulates a new toy to find out what it does.
D) Laura asks herself, "Hmm, where did I put my social studies book?"
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Multiple Choice
A) A second-grade teacher encourages students to 1) speculate about possible explanations regarding why kites of different shapes fly differently and then 2) test each explanation systematically.
B) A ninth-grade science uses a three-dimensional model of the solar system to illustrate her explanation of why it's warmer in summer than in winter.
C) When a high school student claims that people should "Make love, not war," his teacher urges him to consider whether such an approach would have been advisable when the Fascist movement was gaining ground in Europe in the late 1930s and early 1940s.
D) When 7-year-old Martin says that two nickels are worth more than one dime because there are two of them and they're bigger, his teacher asks, "How can that be? Two nickels are worth ten cents, and one dime is also worth ten cents."
Essay Questions
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Multiple Choice
A) Bobby's learning is delayed because he does not know 500 words.
B) Bobby's current understanding of language builds upon his previous basic learning of language from the sensorimotor stage.
C) Bobby will be delayed in entering the concrete operational stage because at age 3 he should be able to participate in conversations with other children.
D) Bobby does not have object permanence.
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Multiple Choice
A) egocentrism
B) conservation
C) use of schemes
D) compartmentalization
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Multiple Choice
A) equilibration
B) class inclusion
C) the clinical method
D) reciprocal teaching
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Essay
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Multiple Choice
A) Younger students haven't attained conservation.
B) Younger students haven't acquired proportional reasoning.
C) Younger students can't learn complex equations.
D) Younger students don't know their math facts well enough.
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Multiple Choice
A) How are an apple and a blueberry alike?
B) If you have 8 Macintosh apples and 2 Golden Delicious apples, then do you have more Macintoshes or more apples?
C) An apple pie is cut into 4 pieces. A blueberry pie of the same size is cut into 12 pieces. How many pieces of blueberry pie do you need to have the same amount as 3 pieces of the apple pie?
D) If we have one row of blueberries spread like so: o o o o o o and another row of blueberries spread like so: o o o o o o
Then does one row have more blueberries than the other?
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Multiple Choice
A) Students benefit from inquiry learning activities only when they're given total control over the topic to study and how to study it.
B) Inquiry learning activities require students to use various reasoning processes to examine the phenomena under investigation.
C) Inquiry learning activities can be effective even when they involve "experimentation" with virtual "objects" in a computer program.
D) Inquiry learning activities can create a heavy cognitive load, which exceeds children's working memory capacities.
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Multiple Choice
A) Formal instruction can have a significant impact on children's cognitive development.
B) Incomplete brain maturation limits how much children at any particular age can do.
C) Through their everyday experiences, children learn some of the basic patterns in their environment even without intentionally trying to do so.
D) Cognitive development is better characterized as a series of seven rather than four) general stages.
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Multiple Choice
A) Children are naturally disposed to think about their environment in particular ways; in a sense, some basic knowledge about the world is "pre-wired."
B) Children actively construct their own view of the world from their experiences with the environment.
C) Children repeatedly parrot their parents' and teachers' beliefs, eventually internalizing these beliefs as their own "knowledge."
D) Initially, children unconsciously develop a rather complex and confused view of the world, but this view becomes simpler and more straightforward as time goes on.
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Multiple Choice
A) object directed
B) person centered
C) goal directed
D) pleasure seeking
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Multiple Choice
A) Making sure students always remain in equilibrium
B) Providing some structure to guide students' explorations
C) Providing an abstract overview of the discovery session ahead of time
D) Encouraging students to interpret their observations in ways that confirm their initial expectations
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Multiple Choice
A) Two children work together on a crossword puzzle that includes the week's new spelling words.
B) A teenage boy worries that his friends might think he's a "nerd" if he refuses a can of beer at a party.
C) The students in a cooperative learning group debate different ways of solving a difficult math problem.
D) Two students help each other prepare for a quiz by giving each other practice test questions.
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Multiple Choice
A) Is in a state of equilibrium
B) Is in her zone of proximal development for numerical tasks
C) Can assimilate diverse mathematical tasks into a single mega-scheme
D) Has a central conceptual structure for numbers
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A) Experiencing disequilibrium
B) Having difficulty with conservation
C) Having difficulty with class inclusion
D) Accommodating when he should be assimilating
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Multiple Choice
A) It helps them get things they want.
B) It gives them a means for symbolically thinking about objects and events.
C) It takes up much of their mental energy and so helps to keep them from being easily distracted.
D) It enhances their self-efficacy, because they are now aware that they can communicate effectively with other human beings.
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Multiple Choice
A) formal operations
B) preoperational
C) concrete operations
D) sensorimotor
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Multiple Choice
A) A child assimilates without accommodating.
B) A child doesn't encounter any new or challenging ideas.
C) A child revises existing schemes to better understand new phenomenon.
D) A child has difficulty explaining new events using existing schemes.
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