10th Edition by Laura E. Berk
Chapters 1 - 15> Download as Pdf File < UPDATED
,Table of Contents
Part I: Theory and Research in Child Development
Chapter 1 History, Theory, and Applied Directions
Chapter 2 Research Strategies
Part II: Foundations of Development
Chapter 3 Biological Foundations, Prenatal Development, and Birth
Chapter 4 Infancy: Early Learning, Motor Skills, and Perceptual Capacities
Chapter 5 Physical Growth
Part III: Cognitive and Language Development
Chapter 6 Cognitive Development: Piagetian, Core Knowledge, and Vygotskian
Perspectives
Chapter 7 Cognitive Development: An Information-Processing Perspective
Chapter 8 Intelligence
Chapter 9 Language Development
Part IV: Personality and Social Development
Chapter 10 Emotional Development
Chapter 11 Self and Social Understanding
Chapter 12 Moral Development
Chapter 13 Development of Sex Differences and Gender Roles
Part V: Contexts for Development
Chapter 14 The Family
Chapter 15 Peers, Media, and Schooling
,CHAPTER 1
HISTORY, THEORY, AND APPLIED DIRECTIONS
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1) The field of child development
A) is devoted to understanding human constancy and change throughout the lifespan.
B) is part of a larger, interdisciplinary field known as developmental science.
C) focuses primarily on children’s physical and emotional development.
D) focuses primarily on infants’ and children’s social and cognitive development.
ANSWER: B
Page Ref: 4
2) The common goal of investigators who study child development is to
A) understand how physical growth and nutrition contribute to health and well-being throughout the lifespan.
B) understand more about personality and social development.
C) analyze child-rearing practices and experiences that promote children’s well-being.
D) describe and identify those factors that influence the consistencies and changes in young people during
the first two decades of life.
ANSWER:
D
Page Ref: 4
3) Which of the following factors contributed to the study of child development in the twentieth century?
A) The beginning of public education led to a demand for knowledge about what and how to teach children
of different ages.
B) Parents were having more children and researchers became interested in the effects of family size
on children’s well-being.
C) Pediatricians were pressured by insurance companies to improve children’s health, which inspired
nutritional research.
D) High rates of childhood depression inspired new areas of research into children’s anxieties and
behavior problems.
ANSWER:
A
Page Ref: 4
, 4) Which of xthe xfollowing xstatements xis xtrue xabout xthe xfield xof xchild xdevelopment?
A) Scientific xcuriosity xis xthe xprevailing xfactor xthat xled xto xthe xstudy xof xchildren, xand xcurrent xresearchers
xprimarily xanswer xquestions xof xscientific xinterest.
B) The xfield xof xchild xdevelopment xis xconsidered xinterdisciplinary xbecause xit xhas xgrown xthrough xthe
xcombined xefforts xof xpeople xfrom xmany xfields.
C) Child xdevelopment xis xthe xarea xof xstudy xdevoted xto xunderstanding xconstancy xand xchange
xthroughout xthe xlifespan.
D) Most xof xwhat xwe xknow xabout xchild xdevelopment xcomes xfrom xpsychologists xand xmedical
xprofessionals. xANSWER: xB
Page xRef: x4
5) Development xis xoften xdivided xinto xwhich xof xthe xfollowing xthree xbroad xdomains?
A) infancy, xchildhood, xand xadolescence
B) social, xcultural, xand xhistorical
C) physical, xcognitive, xand xemotional xand xsocial
D) biological, xsocial, xand
xintellectual xANSWER: xC
Page xRef: x4