8TH EDITION
• AUTHOR(S)ERIC MASH
TEST BANK
1) Reference
Ch. 1 — Historical Views: Emergence of Social Conscience
Stem: A 10-year-old girl from a low-income neighborhood
presents with persistent school absences, hygiene problems,
and irritability. Her teacher notes family food insecurity and
inconsistent care; there is no evidence of primary psychotic or
neurodevelopmental disorder. As a clinician trained in
historically informed developmental formulations, which
conceptual emphasis best guides an initial service plan?
A. Focus on biologically based medication trials to reduce
irritability and improve school attendance.
B. Emphasize family- and community-level interventions
addressing socioeconomic stressors and access to services.
,C. Prioritize individual psychodynamic psychotherapy to
uncover intrapsychic conflicts causing school avoidance.
D. Recommend long-term residential placement to remove the
child from the stressful home environment.
Correct answer: B
Rationale — Correct (B): The emergence of social conscience
emphasized how social determinants (poverty, instability) shape
child psychopathology and the need for community and family-
level interventions. This vignette points to environmental
stressors as primary drivers of functioning, so connecting to
food, school, and family supports aligns with historically
informed public health and social-conscience approaches.
Rationale — Incorrect (A): Immediate medication-focused
biological approach overlooks environmental etiologies and
would not address attendance or basic needs.
Rationale — Incorrect (C): Individual psychodynamic therapy
may miss pressing material needs and systemic barriers
affecting the child’s functioning.
Rationale — Incorrect (D): Residential placement is a drastic
response without first attempting community-based supports
and addresses symptoms by separation, not underlying social
determinants.
Teaching point: Address social determinants first; social-
conscience models favor community/family interventions.
,Citation: Mash, E. J. (2024). Child Psychopathology (8th ed.). Ch.
1.
2) Reference
Ch. 1 — Early Biological Attributions
Stem: A 6-year-old boy has chronic, severe temper outbursts
and hyperactivity since preschool. His pediatrician suspects a
neurobiological basis and refers for neurodevelopmental
testing. Drawing on the arc of early biological attributions, what
is the most integrative diagnostic stance when biological risk is
suspected?
A. Treat symptoms as exclusively genetic and begin medication
without multidisciplinary assessment.
B. Assume neurobiology fully explains behavior and recommend
permanent classroom segregation.
C. Conduct a multidisciplinary evaluation (medical,
developmental, family history) and integrate biological findings
with psychosocial context.
D. Reject biological explanations and attribute all behavior to
parenting and social learning.
Correct answer: C
Rationale — Correct (C): Early biological attributions
highlighted biological influences but modern interpretation
(from Mash Ch.1) recommends integrative assessment—
, medical, developmental, and contextual—to avoid reductionism
and guide targeted intervention.
Rationale — Incorrect (A): Immediate medication without
comprehensive assessment ignores developmental context and
differential diagnoses.
Rationale — Incorrect (B): Permanent segregation based solely
on presumed biology is historically rooted but ethically and
clinically inappropriate.
Rationale — Incorrect (D): Rejecting biological contributions
ignores evidence and risks incomplete formulation.
Teaching point: Biological risk warrants integrated
multidisciplinary assessment, not diagnostic reductionism.
Citation: Mash, E. J. (2024). Child Psychopathology (8th ed.). Ch.
1.
3) Reference
Ch. 1 — Early Psychological Attributions
Stem: A 14-year-old adolescent with persistent social
withdrawal is described as “shy” by family but reports low
mood after parental divorce. Considering early psychological
attributions (e.g., psychodynamic and behavioral perspectives),
which initial clinical formulation best balances those historical
traditions?