Across
- 4. The process of modifying schemas when familiar schemas do no work.
- 6. An individual's basic natural disposition that is evident from infancy.
- 9. Developing individual from the third month after conception until birth.
- 10. The idea that children form a close relationship to their earliest caregivers and that this pattern can affect aspects of the children's later life.
- 12. Harmful substances, such as alcohol or drugs, that can cause birth defects.
- 13. The process of trying out existing schemas on objects that fit those schemas.
- 14. Firm, punitive, and unsympathetic parents who value obedience from the child and authority for themselves.
- 17. Patterns of work, appearance and behaviour that a society associates with being male or female or other gender identities.
- 18. A new fertilised cell.
Down
- 1. Stage's 3 and 4 of Kohlberg's Moral Reasoning Theory.
- 2. Mental representations (generalisations) of categories of objects, events and people.
- 3. Stages 1 and 2 of Kohlberg's Moral Reasoning Theory. Moral reasoning that is not yet based on the conventions or rules that guide social interactions in society.
- 5. Structures in every cell that contain genetic information in the form of genes.
- 7. Stages 5 and 6 of Kohlberg's Moral Reasoning Theory.
- 8. A pattern of physical and mental defects found in babies born to women who abused alcohol during pregnancy.
- 11. The ability to control one's emotions and behaviour.
- 15. The developing individual from two weeks to two months after fertilisation.
- 16. The field of psychology that documents the course of social, emotional, moral, and intellectual development throughout the lifespan.
