McGraw-Hill OnlineMcGraw-Hill Higher EducationLearning Center
Student Center | Instructor Center | Information Center | Home
Career Opportunities
Glossary
Child's World Image Gallery
Guide To Electronic Research
Internet Guide
Study Skills Primer
PowerWeb
Learning Objectives
Chapter Outline
Chapter Overview
Multiple Choice Quiz
Matching Quiz
Fill in the Blanks
True or False
Glossary
Flashcards
Crossword Puzzles
Web Links
Feedback
Help Center


A Child's World: Infancy through Adolescence, 9/e
Diane E. Papalia, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Sally Wendkos Olds
Ruth Duskin Feldman

Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood

Fill in the Blank Quiz



1

concrete operations: Third stage of Piagetian cognitive development (approximately from ages 7 to 12), during which children develop logical but not thinking.
2

class : Understanding of the relationship between the whole and its parts.
3

: Type of logical reasoning that moves from a general premise about a class to a conclusion about a particular member or members of the class.
4

: Type of logical reasoning that moves from particular observations to a general conclusion.
5

seriation: Ability to order items along a .
6

inference: Understanding of the relationship between two objects by knowing the relationship of each to a third object.
7

conservation: In Piaget's terminology, awareness that two objects that are equal according to a certain measure (such as length, weight, or quantity) remain equal in the face of perceptual (for example, a change in shape), so long as nothing has been added to or taken away from either object.
8

horizontal décalage: In Piaget's terminology, a child's inability to transfer learning about one type of to other types, hence, the child masters different types of tasks at different ages.
9

morality of : First of Piaget's two stages of moral development, characterized by rigid, simplistic judgments.
10

morality of : Second of Piaget's two stages of moral development, characterized by flexible, subtle judgments and formulation of one's own moral code.
11

working memory: -term storage of information being actively processed.
12

central : In Baddeley's model, element of working memory that controls the processing of information.
13

long-term memory: Storage of virtually capacity, which holds information for very long periods.
14

: Understanding of processes of memory.
15

mnemonic strategies: Techniques to aid .
16

memory aids: Mnemonic strategies using something outside the person, such as a list.
17

rehearsal: Mnemonic strategy to keep an item in working memory through conscious .
18

: Mnemonic strategy consisting of categorizing material to be remembered.
19

elaboration: Mnemonic strategy of making mental associations involving items to be remembered, sometimes with an imagined scene or .
20

tests: Tests that measure children's general intelligence, or capacity to learn.
21

tests: Tests that assess how much children know in various subject areas.
22

- School Ability Test: Group intelligence test for kindergarten through twelfth grade.
23

Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-III): Individual intelligence test for schoolchildren, which yields and scores as well as a combined score.
24

Assessment Battery for Children (abbreviated ): Nontraditional individual intelligence test for children ages 2½ to 12½, which seeks to provide fair assessments of minority children and children with disabilities.
25

theory of multiple intelligences: 's theory that distinct, multiple forms of intelligence exist in each person.
26

triarchic theory of intelligence: Sternberg's theory describing three types of intelligence: (analytical ability), (insight and originality), and (practical thinking).
27

element: In Sternberg's triarchic theory, term for the analytic aspect of intelligence, which determines how efficiently people process information and solve problems.
28

element: In Sternberg's triarchic theory, term for the insightful aspect of intelligence, which determines how effectively people approach both novel and familiar tasks.
29

element: In Sternberg's triarchic theory, term for the practical aspect of intelligence, which determines how effectively people deal with their environment.
30

Sternberg Triarchic Abilities Test (STAT): Test that seeks to measure , , and intelligence in verbal, quantitative, and figural (spatial) domains.
31

cultural : Tendency of intelligence tests to include items calling for knowledge or skills more familiar or meaningful to some cultural groups than to others, thus placing some test-takers at an advantage or disadvantage due to their cultural background.
32

culture-free: Describing an intelligence test that, if it were possible to design, would have culturally linked content. Compare culture-fair.
33

culture-fair: Describing an intelligence test that deals with experiences common to various cultures, in an attempt to avoid cultural . Compare culture-free.
34

: Awareness of a person's own mental processes.
35

English- : Approach to teaching as a second language in which instruction is presented only in English from the outset of formal education.
36

education: A system of teaching foreign-speaking children in two languages--their native language and English--and later switching to all-English instruction after the children develop enough fluency in English.
37

: Fluent in two languages.
38

mental : Significantly subnormal cognitive functioning.
39

attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): Syndrome characterized by persistent inattention, impulsivity, low for frustration, distractibility, and considerable activity at inappropriate times and places.
40

dyslexia: Developmental disorder in learning to .
41

(abbreviated ): Disorders that interfere with specific aspects of learning and school achievement.
42

: Ability to see things in a new light, resulting in a novel product, the identification of a previously unrecognized problem, or the formulation of new and unusual solutions.
43

convergent thinking: Thinking aimed at finding the one " " answer to a problem. Compare divergent thinking.
44

thinking: Thinking that produces a variety of fresh, diverse possibilities. Compare convergent thinking.
45

: Approach to educating the gifted, which broadens and deepens knowledge and skills through extra activities, projects, field trips, or mentoring.
46

: Approach to educating the gifted, which moves them through the entire curriculum, or part of it, at an unusually rapid pace.