HUMAN GROWTH & DEVELOPMENT EXAM – PRACTICE QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS (VERIFIED ANSWERS) PLUS RATIONALES 2026 Q&A | INSTANT
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CORE DOMAINS
Prenatal Development and Teratology
Infancy and Early Childhood Milestones
Cognitive Development Theories (Piaget, Vygotsky)
Psychosocial and Emotional Development (Erikson, Bowlby)
Adolescence and Identity Formation
Adult Development and Aging
Language Acquisition and Communication
Research Methodologies in Developmental Psychology
Moral Development and Ethics
Death, Dying, and Bereavement
INTRODUCTION
This comprehensive practice assessment is designed to evaluate a deep understanding of human development across the entire lifespan. It focuses on the physiological, cognitive, and
socio-emotional changes that occur from conception through late adulthood. The exam utilizes a blend of foundational theory and complex, scenario-based questions to mirror the
challenges faced by practitioners in clinical, educational, and social service settings. By emphasizing real-world application and ethical decision-making, this assessment ensures that
candidates possess the critical thinking skills necessary to support diverse populations. Each question is accompanied by a verified rationale to reinforce core concepts and bridge the
gap between theoretical knowledge and professional practice.
1. A researcher is studying the same group of children at ages 5, 10, and 15 to track the development of social skills. Which research design is being utilized?
A. Cross-sectional
B. Sequential
🟢 C. Longitudinal
D. Microgenetic
🔴 RATIONALE: Longitudinal designs follow the same subjects over an extended period to observe changes and stability in specific traits or behaviors as they age.
2. According to Piaget, a child who can perform conservation tasks but lacks the ability to think abstractly is in which stage of cognitive development?
,A. Sensorimotor
B. Preoperational
🟢 C. Concrete Operational
D. Formal Operational
🔴 RATIONALE: During the Concrete Operational stage (roughly ages 7-11), children develop logical thinking about physical objects and master conservation, but they cannot
yet manipulate hypothetical or abstract concepts.
3. An infant cries when her mother leaves the room and is easily soothed when the mother returns, quickly resuming play. This behavior is indicative of which attachment
style?
🟢 A. Secure
B. Anxious-Ambivalent
C. Avoidant
D. Disorganized
🔴 RATIONALE: Secure attachment is characterized by the child’s ability to use the caregiver as a secure base, showing distress upon separation but seeking and receiving
comfort upon reunion.
4. Which of the following teratogens is most commonly associated with low birth weight, premature birth, and an increased risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)?
A. Alcohol
🟢 B. Nicotine
C. Thalidomide
D. Toxoplasmosis
🔴 RATIONALE: Nicotine constricts blood vessels and reduces oxygen flow to the fetus, which is a primary cause of restricted growth and respiratory complications after birth.
5. In Erikson’s stages of psychosocial development, the primary task of middle adulthood (ages 40-65) is:
A. Identity vs. Role Confusion
B. Intimacy vs. Isolation
🟢 C. Generativity vs. Stagnation
D. Integrity vs. Despair
🔴 RATIONALE: Generativity involves the desire to contribute to the next generation through parenting, mentoring, or creative work, whereas stagnation is a sense of lack of
purpose.
6. A 4-year-old child insists that the moon follows them while they are riding in a car. This is an example of:
A. Object permanence
🟢 B. Animism
, C. Centration
D. Reversibility
🔴 RATIONALE: Animism is the preoperational belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities and intentions.
7. Which theorist emphasized the "Zone of Proximal Development" as the gap between what a learner can do independently and what they can do with guidance?
A. B.F. Skinner
B. Jean Piaget
🟢 C. Lev Vygotsky
D. Albert Bandura
🔴 RATIONALE: Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory posits that social interaction and "scaffolding" within the Zone of Proximal Development are essential for cognitive growth.
8. A teenager begins to experiment with different hairstyles, clothing, and social groups while questioning their parents' political views. Erikson would categorize this as:
🟢 A. Identity vs. Role Confusion
B. Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
C. Industry vs. Inferiority
D. Initiative vs. Guilt
🔴 RATIONALE: During adolescence, individuals seek to establish a coherent sense of self and personal values, which is the hallmark of the Identity vs. Role Confusion stage.
9. What is the leading cause of death among emerging adults in developed nations?
A. Cardiovascular disease
B. Cancer
🟢 C. Unintentional injuries
D. Suicide
🔴 RATIONALE: Risk-taking behavior and environmental factors make accidents (unintentional injuries), particularly motor vehicle accidents, the primary cause of mortality in this
age group.
10. A child learns that a "dog" is a four-legged animal. When they see a sheep, they call it a "dog." This process of fitting new information into an existing schema is called:
🟢 A. Assimilation
B. Accommodation
C. Equilibrium
D. Scaffolding
🔴 RATIONALE: Assimilation occurs when new experiences are interpreted through the lens of existing mental frameworks without changing the framework itself.
11. According to Kohlberg, an individual who makes moral decisions based on the desire to avoid punishment is at which level of moral development?
DOWNLOAD PDF.
CORE DOMAINS
Prenatal Development and Teratology
Infancy and Early Childhood Milestones
Cognitive Development Theories (Piaget, Vygotsky)
Psychosocial and Emotional Development (Erikson, Bowlby)
Adolescence and Identity Formation
Adult Development and Aging
Language Acquisition and Communication
Research Methodologies in Developmental Psychology
Moral Development and Ethics
Death, Dying, and Bereavement
INTRODUCTION
This comprehensive practice assessment is designed to evaluate a deep understanding of human development across the entire lifespan. It focuses on the physiological, cognitive, and
socio-emotional changes that occur from conception through late adulthood. The exam utilizes a blend of foundational theory and complex, scenario-based questions to mirror the
challenges faced by practitioners in clinical, educational, and social service settings. By emphasizing real-world application and ethical decision-making, this assessment ensures that
candidates possess the critical thinking skills necessary to support diverse populations. Each question is accompanied by a verified rationale to reinforce core concepts and bridge the
gap between theoretical knowledge and professional practice.
1. A researcher is studying the same group of children at ages 5, 10, and 15 to track the development of social skills. Which research design is being utilized?
A. Cross-sectional
B. Sequential
🟢 C. Longitudinal
D. Microgenetic
🔴 RATIONALE: Longitudinal designs follow the same subjects over an extended period to observe changes and stability in specific traits or behaviors as they age.
2. According to Piaget, a child who can perform conservation tasks but lacks the ability to think abstractly is in which stage of cognitive development?
,A. Sensorimotor
B. Preoperational
🟢 C. Concrete Operational
D. Formal Operational
🔴 RATIONALE: During the Concrete Operational stage (roughly ages 7-11), children develop logical thinking about physical objects and master conservation, but they cannot
yet manipulate hypothetical or abstract concepts.
3. An infant cries when her mother leaves the room and is easily soothed when the mother returns, quickly resuming play. This behavior is indicative of which attachment
style?
🟢 A. Secure
B. Anxious-Ambivalent
C. Avoidant
D. Disorganized
🔴 RATIONALE: Secure attachment is characterized by the child’s ability to use the caregiver as a secure base, showing distress upon separation but seeking and receiving
comfort upon reunion.
4. Which of the following teratogens is most commonly associated with low birth weight, premature birth, and an increased risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS)?
A. Alcohol
🟢 B. Nicotine
C. Thalidomide
D. Toxoplasmosis
🔴 RATIONALE: Nicotine constricts blood vessels and reduces oxygen flow to the fetus, which is a primary cause of restricted growth and respiratory complications after birth.
5. In Erikson’s stages of psychosocial development, the primary task of middle adulthood (ages 40-65) is:
A. Identity vs. Role Confusion
B. Intimacy vs. Isolation
🟢 C. Generativity vs. Stagnation
D. Integrity vs. Despair
🔴 RATIONALE: Generativity involves the desire to contribute to the next generation through parenting, mentoring, or creative work, whereas stagnation is a sense of lack of
purpose.
6. A 4-year-old child insists that the moon follows them while they are riding in a car. This is an example of:
A. Object permanence
🟢 B. Animism
, C. Centration
D. Reversibility
🔴 RATIONALE: Animism is the preoperational belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities and intentions.
7. Which theorist emphasized the "Zone of Proximal Development" as the gap between what a learner can do independently and what they can do with guidance?
A. B.F. Skinner
B. Jean Piaget
🟢 C. Lev Vygotsky
D. Albert Bandura
🔴 RATIONALE: Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory posits that social interaction and "scaffolding" within the Zone of Proximal Development are essential for cognitive growth.
8. A teenager begins to experiment with different hairstyles, clothing, and social groups while questioning their parents' political views. Erikson would categorize this as:
🟢 A. Identity vs. Role Confusion
B. Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
C. Industry vs. Inferiority
D. Initiative vs. Guilt
🔴 RATIONALE: During adolescence, individuals seek to establish a coherent sense of self and personal values, which is the hallmark of the Identity vs. Role Confusion stage.
9. What is the leading cause of death among emerging adults in developed nations?
A. Cardiovascular disease
B. Cancer
🟢 C. Unintentional injuries
D. Suicide
🔴 RATIONALE: Risk-taking behavior and environmental factors make accidents (unintentional injuries), particularly motor vehicle accidents, the primary cause of mortality in this
age group.
10. A child learns that a "dog" is a four-legged animal. When they see a sheep, they call it a "dog." This process of fitting new information into an existing schema is called:
🟢 A. Assimilation
B. Accommodation
C. Equilibrium
D. Scaffolding
🔴 RATIONALE: Assimilation occurs when new experiences are interpreted through the lens of existing mental frameworks without changing the framework itself.
11. According to Kohlberg, an individual who makes moral decisions based on the desire to avoid punishment is at which level of moral development?