4th Edition
By Wendy Dunn & Grace Craig
Chapter 1: Introduction to Human Development
Complete Chapter | 65 Questions with Answers and Rationales
1. Which of the following best defines lifespan human development?
A) The study of childhood growth patterns from birth to adolescence
B) The scientific study of growth, change, and stability throughout the human
lifespan
C) The examination of genetic influences on behavior from conception to birth
D) The analysis of cognitive changes that occur only during early childhood
Answer: B
Rationale: Lifespan human development is a scientific field that examines how people
grow, change, and remain stable across the entire course of life, from conception
through death. This comprehensive approach considers physical, cognitive, and
socioemotional domains at every stage. Unlike options that focus only on childhood or
,specific periods, the lifespan perspective recognizes that development is a continuous,
lifelong process influenced by multiple interacting factors, including biology,
environment, culture, and historical context.
2. According to the textbook, the three primary domains of human development
are:
A) Biological, psychological, and spiritual
B) Physical, cognitive, and socioemotional
C) Nature, nurture, and culture
D) Genetic, environmental, and social
Answer: B
Rationale: Developmental scientists universally organize human development into
three interconnected domains. Physical development includes body growth, motor
skills, brain development, and health changes. Cognitive development encompasses
thinking, memory, problem-solving, language, and creativity. Socioemotional
development involves relationships, emotions, personality, moral reasoning, and social
understanding. These domains interact continuously throughout life, with changes in
one domain often influencing the others. For example, physical maturation during
adolescence influences cognitive abilities and socioemotional relationships.
3. The concept of "continuity versus discontinuity" in development addresses
whether:
A) Genetics or environment matters more
B) Development is gradual and cumulative or occurs in distinct stages
, C) Culture influences development universally or specifically
D) Early experiences permanently shape adult outcomes
Answer: B
Rationale: The continuity perspective views development as a smooth, gradual process
where skills and abilities accumulate incrementally over time, similar to a tree growing
taller each year. The discontinuity perspective, in contrast, emphasizes distinct stages or
qualitative shifts where individuals undergo dramatic transformations that
fundamentally change how they think, feel, or behave. For example, Piaget's theory of
cognitive development is a discontinuity approach, proposing that children move
through qualitatively distinct stages of thinking. This debate influences how researchers
study development and how practitioners approach interventions at different ages.
4. Which theoretical perspective emphasizes that humans have an innate capacity
for goodness and strive for self-actualization?
A) Psychodynamic theory
B) Behaviorism
C) Humanistic theory
D) Cognitive theory
Answer: C
Rationale: Humanistic theory, developed primarily by Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers,
emerged as a response to both psychoanalysis and behaviorism. This perspective
emphasizes that humans are inherently good and possess an innate drive toward
personal growth and self-actualization—the fulfillment of one's highest potential.
Humanistic theorists focus on subjective experiences, free will, and the potential for
positive development, concepts that distinguish this perspective from more deterministic
theories. Maslow's hierarchy of needs illustrates how basic needs must be met before
individuals can pursue self-actualization.