psychology
Across
- 1. Inventory - testing instruments designed to help students learn more about themselves, as well as identify careers that would be a good fit based on their interests
- 4. - a person's innate capacity for learning specific abilities or knowledge
- 7. Test - designed to systematically elicit information about a person's motivations, preferences, interests, emotional make-up, and style of interacting with people and situations
- 12. Bias - a prejudice or highlighted distinction in viewpoint that suggests a preference of one culture over another
- 15. - re-examine and make alterations to (written or printed matter).
- 16. - the action or process of flowing
- 17. Intelligence - the ability to manage both your own emotions and understand the emotions of people around you
- 18. - the capacity to be inherited.
- 19. Theory - a theory of intelligence with three key abilities
- 20. - the extent to which a particular computational theory matches up with what we know about human psychology
- 21. - process, strategies, or techniques psychologist used collect data
- 23. Quotient - a measure of a person's reasoning ability
Down
- 2. - move out of or away from something and come into view.
- 3. - the process of brain augmentation through "neuroplasticity."
- 5. Factor Theory - a cognitive theory of emotion
- 6. - the process of establishing norms for a test
- 8. - a standard or range of values that represents the typical performance of a group or of an individual
- 9. - a consequence, effect, or outcome of something
- 10. - When students can see their own progress in learning and mastering a subject or skill
- 11. - the rules of a group of people that mark out what is appropriate, allowed, required, or forbidden for various members in different situations
- 13. - a measure of whether something stays the same, i.e. is consistent
- 14. - the extent to which a test measures what it claims to measure
- 20. System - a value below the point where a particular percent of scores or observations falls
- 22. empirically testable proposition about some fact, behavior, relationship, or the like, usually based on theory