Explore early childhood emotional and social growth with this quiz. Topics include alternative discipline methods like time-out, fostering conscience in impulsive children, addressing gender stereotypes, understanding friendship perspectives, and the impact of media on aggression.
By ensuring a secure attachment relationship and firmly correcting misbehavior
Through the use of requests, suggestions, and explanations
Through reward and punishment tactics
By threatening to withdraw parental love
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By not using the pronouns "he" and "she"
By pointing out exceptions to stereotypes in the community
By organizing experiences into gender schemas
By discouraging cross-gender activities and behaviors
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Based on abstract qualities, like fairness.
Pleasurable play and sharing of toys.
Having enduring, long-term qualities.
Based on sharing thoughts and feelings.
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Develops; dissipates
Increases; decreases
Increases; stays the same
Declines; rises
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Has no reliable relationship to later aggression.
Is related to later aggression for children with low IQs.
Predicts later aggression only for young children.
Predicts aggressive behavior in early adulthood.
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Hide their true feelings in most social interactions.
Listen and not speak until asked to do so.
Communicate positive feelings and inhibit unpleasant ones.
Communicate all of their feelings, both positive and negative.
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Insecure.
Modest.
Cooperative.
Inhibited.
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Accountability and an apology.
Lasting changes in behavior.
A strong emotional bond with their child.
Immediate compliance.
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Parents in all cultures recognize the importance of structured daily play activities.
Unlike individualistic cultures, collectivist societies stress group harmony during play.
Children in collectivist societies spend more time in solitary play than children in individualistic societies.
Children engage in very similar play patterns in all cultures.
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Lack the necessary social skills to play with peers.
Lag behind in cognitive development.
Would prefer to play with another person.
Engage in positive and constructive solitary activities.
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Difficulty connecting thinking to feelings.
A tendency to rely on adults to explain others' feelings.
Difficulty interpreting and responding to others' feelings.
An impressive ability to interpret, predict, and change others' feelings.
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Amorphous.
Abstract.
Concrete.
Ill-defined.
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Mothers' play has a greater effect on both sons' and daughters' competence than fathers' play.
Fathers' play has a greater effect on both sons' and daughters' competence than mothers' play.
Mothers' play is strongly linked to daughters' competence and fathers' play to sons' competence.
Mothers' play is strongly linked to sons' competence and fathers' play to daughters' competence.
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Emotional; physical
School; home
Deliberate; moral
Moral; social-convention
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Feel free to choose and make decisions for themselves.
Become more contrary than they were as toddlers.
Expect the world to be good and gratifying.
Gain a sense of purposefulness and are eager to tackle new tasks.
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Personal distress; prosocial
Empathy; altruistic
Autonomy; independent
Self-esteem; altruistic
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Girls' social skills are limited, causing difficulty in maintaining multiple relationships.
Boys imitate group behavior modeled by men, and girls imitate group behavior modeled by women.
These behaviors are encouraged in preschool settings.
Sex hormones affect human play styles.
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The child's misdeeds.
The child's academic accomplishments.
Family celebrations.
Relatives who live far away from the family.
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Lack of social experience
In-group favoritism
Cognitive immaturity
Psychoanalytic misunderstanding
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By 4 years
After 5 years
Around 3 years
Before 2 years
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Associative play, nonsocial activity, and cooperative play.
Nonsocial activity, parallel play, and associative play.
Parallel play, cooperative play, and social activity.
Make-believe play, onlooker behavior, and solitary play.
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Often attribute their child's misdeeds to a bad disposition.
Often reach out to friends or family for help and support.
Fit into a common "abusive personality type."
Lacked discipline in their own childhoods.
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Cultural values; moral behavior
Reward and punishment; genetics
Peer relationships; environmental influences
Moral behavior; thinking and reasoning
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Often hold biased social expectations and misinterpret others' behavior.
Avoid spending time with other children because it is unpleasant.
Are often charming and socially skilled around adults.
Typically do not have any siblings.
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