100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Exam (elaborations)

Gerontology Exam Study Guide Questions and Answers 100% Pass

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
25
Grade
A+
Uploaded on
05-12-2024
Written in
2024/2025

Gerontology Exam Study Guide Questions and Answers 100% Pass Define the study of gerontology. - the study of the human aging process from maturity to old age, as well as the study of the older adult as a special population. Provide an understanding that aging is a powerful process and that growth and development do continue in later life. - Aging is only your body changing over time. You continue to grow and develop as time moves on as well as learning new things Establish the impact on society of the increasing adult population that is living longer. - In today's world people are living longer than ever before which is creating a huge need for housing and other needs. This also impacts the elderlies because of the stereotyping that happens nowadays. chronological - number of years after birth biological - the changes reducing efficiency of organ systems Psychological - memory, learning, adaptive capacity, personality and mental functioning Social - referring to social roles, relationships, and the overall social context in which we grow old Explain factors that contribute to the social problem of ageism today and how attitudes about the elderly have changed since early America. - With ageism today we often look down on elders and fear them and the thought of growing older scares most people. Back in early america people looked up to elders because they were wise and had lots of knowledge and were appreciated more. personal ageism - person's attitudes, ideas, and beliefs that are unfair against older people Institutional ageism - establish rules, missions that discriminate against older people Page 2/25 Crafted for Academic Insight by KatelynWhitman. All rights reserved © 2025 Intentional ageism - rules that are biased against older people with knowledge Unintentional ageism - practice without person responsible for recognizing the unfairness Distinguish the various generations (general period of time). - early life, midlife, and late life, Baby boomers 1946-64, Millennials Describe and explain the reasons for the increase in the elderly population. - With advances in medicine and healthy lifestyles the elderly are living longer stereotypes - generalized beliefs or opinions based on individual experience, often produced by irrational thinking why stereotyping is common in societies and why they are inaccurate depictions of reality. - It is common in societies because it is easy for people to make quick assessments of other people. It is either indirect or direct and is usually inaccurate. We generalize by putting people into categories and we oversimplify reality. Also it can be positive or negative. Illness (stereotyping negative) - many younger people always think that older people are sick or get sick often, mental decline (stereotyping negative) - younger people view older p

Show more Read less
Institution
Gerontology
Course
Gerontology










Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Gerontology
Course
Gerontology

Document information

Uploaded on
December 5, 2024
Number of pages
25
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Exam (elaborations)
Contains
Questions & answers

Subjects

Content preview

Gerontology Exam Study Guide Questions and
Answers 100% Pass


Define the study of gerontology. - ✔✔the study of the human aging process from maturity to old age, as

well as the study of the older adult as a special population.


Provide an understanding that aging is a powerful process and that growth and development do

continue in later life. - ✔✔Aging is only your body changing over time. You continue to grow and

develop as time moves on as well as learning new things


Establish the impact on society of the increasing adult population that is living longer. - ✔✔In today's

world people are living longer than ever before which is creating a huge need for housing and other

needs. This also impacts the elderlies because of the stereotyping that happens nowadays.


chronological - ✔✔number of years after birth


biological - ✔✔the changes reducing efficiency of organ systems


Psychological - ✔✔memory, learning, adaptive capacity, personality and mental functioning


Social - ✔✔referring to social roles, relationships, and the overall social context in which we grow old


Explain factors that contribute to the social problem of ageism today and how attitudes about the elderly

have changed since early America. - ✔✔With ageism today we often look down on elders and fear them

and the thought of growing older scares most people. Back in early america people looked up to elders

because they were wise and had lots of knowledge and were appreciated more.


personal ageism - ✔✔person's attitudes, ideas, and beliefs that are unfair against older people


Institutional ageism - ✔✔establish rules, missions that discriminate against older people



Page 1/25
Crafted for Academic Insight by KatelynWhitman. All rights reserved © 2025

,Intentional ageism - ✔✔rules that are biased against older people with knowledge


Unintentional ageism - ✔✔practice without person responsible for recognizing the unfairness


Distinguish the various generations (general period of time). - ✔✔early life, midlife, and late life, Baby

boomers 1946-64, Millennials


Describe and explain the reasons for the increase in the elderly population. - ✔✔With advances in

medicine and healthy lifestyles the elderly are living longer


stereotypes - ✔✔generalized beliefs or opinions based on individual experience, often produced by

irrational thinking


why stereotyping is common in societies and why they are inaccurate depictions of reality. - ✔✔It is

common in societies because it is easy for people to make quick assessments of other people. It is either

indirect or direct and is usually inaccurate. We generalize by putting people into categories and we

oversimplify reality. Also it can be positive or negative.


Illness (stereotyping negative) - ✔✔many younger people always think that older people are sick or get

sick often,


mental decline (stereotyping negative) - ✔✔younger people view older people as forgetful and don't

know what is going on around them.


Golden agers (stereotyping Positive) - ✔✔lively, adventurous, active, sociable, witty


Perfect grandparents (stereotyping positive) - ✔✔kind, loving, family oriented, generous, grateful


Explain the problems with defining "who is old." - ✔✔No clear definition;


-chronologically: it is 65+


-biology: how well one functions



Page 2/25
Crafted for Academic Insight by KatelynWhitman. All rights reserved © 2025

, -social standards: when someone is too old to be looking a certain way


Explain the legal definition of old and where it was established. - ✔✔On retirement, a person's lifestyle

generally changes dramatically, creating a point of entry from one phase of life to another that has

become a social event for celebration and congratulations


Explain variations in biological decline. - ✔✔Genetic variation describes naturally occurring genetic

differences among individuals of the same species. This variation permits flexibility and survival of a

population in the face of changing environmental circumstances.


Explain how self-concept affects aging. - ✔✔Is the way in which people see themselves as being


Describe college students' stereotypes of the elderly and how these differ from reality. - ✔✔They have

mixed emotions on the elderly. They base it mainly on a biological model of decrement and excludes

personality, skill, and interactional factors. This can be a particularly problematic perspective among

students training for the health and healing professions. Most college kids don't think the elderly have

enough money to live on.


Describe media portrayals of the elderly and the problems with these portrayals. - ✔✔They have a very

negative outlook on elderly people. They both reflect and create perception that has a strong impact on

our views of life. They want you to look younger to be more attractive and be desirable. They tell you to

not be old and stay as young as you can.


Authoritarian personality - ✔✔less-educated, rigid, untrusting, insecure people are the ones who hold

prejudices


Frustration-aggression hypothesis - ✔✔those who are frustrated, perhaps by poverty and low status, take

it out in aggression toward others


Selective perception - ✔✔we see what we expect to see and selectively ignore what we do not expect to

see


Page 3/25
Crafted for Academic Insight by KatelynWhitman. All rights reserved © 2025

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
Reputation scores are based on the amount of documents a seller has sold for a fee and the reviews they have received for those documents. There are three levels: Bronze, Silver and Gold. The better the reputation, the more your can rely on the quality of the sellers work.
KatelynWhitman West Virginia University
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
1105
Member since
2 year
Number of followers
482
Documents
34017
Last sold
2 hours ago
Golden Quill Emporium Store

Get Yourself Well-Researched Study Materials to Ace Your Online& Actual Exam Tests with Confidence. STUDY LIKE A PRO WITH A WELL FORMATTED Q&A MATERIALS.

3.6

239 reviews

5
95
4
39
3
54
2
20
1
31

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions