Chapter 3 Review: Nature vs. Nurture
- “Nurture works on what nature endows.” Explain the significance of this quote.
- What’s the biological difference between fraternal and identical twins?
- T-F: One’s basic temperament tends to remain consistent over time.
- What type of study attempts to identify how specific genes influence specific behaviors?
- Define heritability.
- If two environments are exactly the same, than heritability as a source of difference is considered ______(more / less) significant.
- If two environments are very different, than heritability as a source of difference is considered ______(more / less) significant.
- Be able to explain specifically the significance of each of the following in relation to the nature / nurture debate. (Be sure to specify which specific factor applies to each.)
- Bouchard’s Minnesota twin study
- Adoption studies
- Rosenzweig and Krech (Rat study)
- Belyaev’s Fox study
- Explain the basic premise of evolutionary psychology.
8. Identify how each of the following environmental factors influence gender development:
a. Gender identityb. Gender rolec. Gender Typing
Chapter 4: Developmental Psychology
- What are teratogens? Provide three examples.
- Identify three physical and three behavioral characteristics associated with Fetal Alcohol Syndrome.
- Identify four specific capabilities of newborns that prove human babies are born with certain instincts that perpetuate survival. (Reflexes)
- What did Harlowe’s monkey experiments prove concerning newborn attachment?
- What is imprinting? What species practice this form of attachment?
- According to research, why is touch considered such a critical component of new born development?
- How do psychologists test for the cognitive functions of babies?
- Contrast the general characteristics of Mary Ainsworth’s secure, insecure avoidance and insecure anxiety attachments in childhood development.
- Explain, from a physiological perspective, why adolescence is referred to as a period of “stress and storm.”
- Identify the differences between primary and secondary sex characteristics between the genders.
- Cite any three examples of brain maturation in the adolescent that might explain their sometimes risky, impulsive behavior. (From the National Geographic article.)
- Review the major characteristics of both the adolescent and adult stages.
- Review the 4 stages of Piaget’s Cognitive development. Match each description with one of Piaget’s cognitive stages and the principle described within that stage.
- Tony realizes for the first time that the bottle still exists even though he can’t see it in the refrigerator.
- Brenda understands that the water in the tall skinny glass contains the same amount as the short wide glass.
- Susan stands in front of the TV and cannot understand why her brother behind her can’t see the screen.
- Tina argues that the man should not be arrested for stealing vegetables from his neighbor’s garden because his children are starving.
- Lily associates her schema of a cat with all small furry four legged animals.
- The ability to add, subtract and multiply.
- A child being anxious if someone other than their family holds them.
- Give an example of a statement that each of the following types of parenting styles might say to their children.
- Authoritarian:
- Authoritative:
- Permissive:
- Explain why the correlation between authoritative parenting and social competence does not necessarily imply cause and effect.
- For each of the following descriptions, identify what stage of Kohlberg’s moral development applies.
- “I’m not stealing that candy bar, I could get in big trouble.”
- He should not be arrested for stealing that medicine to save his wife. The right to life is more important than a law against theft.”
- “I’m not egging that car. What would my parents think of me?”
- “I’m telling on Tommy because I want to visit the treasure box.”
- Summarize briefly an overview of Erikson’s psychosocial theory.
- Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson
- According to each respective theorist above, at what stage of development would a three year old be?
- At what stage of development would a twelve year old be?
- List and briefly describe each stage of Elisabeth Kubler-Ross’ 5 Stages of Grief.