Across
- 3. Monkey Experiment: explored the importance of contact comfort during infancy.
- 6. Goal-oriented strategies that people use to explore and learn about the world around them
- 10. Four Stages of Cognitive Development (Characteristics/Descriptions)
- 11. 7-11, Elementary age, Logical reasoning skills are developed using fractions, multiplication/division, and reading chapter books.
- 13. attitude and behavior of an individual
- 16. VERY STRICT, Low responsiveness, my way or the highway, demand perfection
- 17. 11 and older. Abstract thinking and hypothetical reasoning skills
- 18. Late adulthood. How did I live my life; with regret or in words of wisdom?
- 20. Firm but fair, has rules and boundaries but is responsive to the child's problems, research has shown this to be the best parenting style.
- 22. Little to no rules, VERY responsive to the child, more of a friend than a parent
- 23. Learning how to walk and go to the bathroom, Can I do things by myself or am I reliant on my caretakers? Guilt
- 24. SCHOOL AGE CHILDREN
- 25. Stages of Psychosocial Development (Characteristics/Descriptions)
- 26. I take care of myself, can I play well with others, do I take charge? Preschool age
Down
- 1. Period before adulthood
- 2. Children don’t learn the idea of conservation until they reach the concrete operational stage
- 4. Will I be alone forever? Can I find companionship? College to early adulthood.
- 5. 2-7: Pretend play is important, children learn to read, the alphabet, basic addition, subtraction, and counting
- 7. Children in the preoperational stage remain very egocentric (self-centered)
- 8. Teenage years. Who am I? What role do I play in society?
- 9. Modification or adaptation to an existing schema
- 12. 0-2, children learn through exploring their senses and development of their motor skills
- 14. Can I trust the world? Am I safe? Babies
- 15. They aren’t around much, no rules, not responsive
- 19. Middle adulthood. Do I contribute to my community, church, or school? Or am I experiencing a midlife crisis?
- 20. comparison or similarity to an existing schema Object Permanence: Peek a boo, children in Piaget’s sensorimotor stage don’t quite understand that things don’t disappear
- 21. this is when a child is very impressionable and learns through observation usually during critical periods of development. (Konrad Lorenz and the Geese study)