Samenvatting How Children Develop 5e editie - Siegler, et al.

Nederlandse samenvatting met Engelse bulletpoints en oefenvragen van het boek How Children Develop, 5e editie, geschreven door R. Siegler, J. R. Saffran, N. Eisenberg, J. DeLoache en E. Gershoff.

Check supporting content in teasers:
Study guide with How Children Develop by Siegler a.o.
Check page access:
Public
Check more or recent content:

Boeksamenvattingen, BulletPoints en ExamTickets bij How Children Develop van Siegler

Summaries and study notes with How Children Develop by Siegler et al. - Bundle
ExamTickets - How Children Develop from Siegler e.a. - 5th edition

ExamTickets - How Children Develop from Siegler e.a. - 5th edition

Exam Tickets

  • Genotype and phenotype can be separated because in genotype the word 'gene' is present. Phenotype begins with the 'ph' = physical: external characteristics.
  • A tip to keep crystallized and fluid intelligence apart: a crystal needs a long time to form, so crystallized intelligence is the form of intelligence that gradually gets higher and higher during life, because more and more knowledge is being collected. On the other hand, fluid intelligence has a peak during the 20th year of life, which you can remember when you are around your 20th life year in your most optimal physical state, in which (among other things) your sporting performances will be at its peak. In addition, fluid intelligence requires a certain degree of flexibility because it is about understanding relationships between concepts that are new. Flexibility also decreases with aging.
  • Chapter 16 is one of the most important chapters from the entire book. Here the core principles from the book are treated once again; in addition, connections are made between all the different subjects. This chapter is therefore important to understand and know well.
  • Three reasons why the development of children is studied: (1) to help parents learn how to deal with negative emotions of their children, (2) to develop a responsible policy and (3) to better understand the nature of people.
  • A tip for separating and visualizing reliability and validity. Imagine yourself a dartboard, you want to get your darts in the bullseye. Imagine, you have ten arrows ('measurements') and you throw them all in the bull's eye: in the statistics your research would now be both valid (because you have thrown them all into the bullseye) and are reliable (all measurements sit at the same point). However, suppose that the measurements are all at the top left of the dartboard, your measurement is reliable (repetition provides the same result), but not valid (not in the rose).
  • The development process of the fertilized egg consists of four processes, to be remembered with the letters M-Cm-Cd-AM itose: cell division, this takes place from 12 hours after fertilization; Celmigration: the displacement of newly formed cells away from their original location; Celdifferentiation: all embryonic stem cells can develop in any type of cell, these cells will now specialize in structure and function; Apoptose: cell killing, here, for example, the membranes between fingers and toes are removed.
  • REM and non-REM sleep can be distinguished by remembering that the letters REM represent Rapid Eye Movement, REM sleep is characterized by rapid eye movements and is thus an active sleep phase, while the non-REM sleep is not.
  • Piagets theory consists of the following stages, which are to remember with S - PO - CO - FO: the phase sensorimotoric, preoperational phase, the concrete operational phase, and the formal operational phase.
  • To summarize how the different theories, describe learning of the child: Piaget's theory sees a child
.....read more
Access: 
JoHo members
How Children Develop by Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg - Practice Questions

How Children Develop by Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg - Practice Questions

Questions

1. Why and how is child development studied?

1. Which statement is true?
  1. It is not possible to suppose that children tell the truth in court.
  2. Specifically, young children are susceptible for suggestive questioning, when questions are repeated again and again.
  • A. Only statement 1 is true.
  • B. Only statement 2 is true.
  • C. Both statements are true.
  • D. Both statements are false.
2. Which statement is true? Children can experience negative effects when they... 
  • A. Have been in an unstable environment longer than 1 month after birth. 
  • B. Have been in an unstable environment longer than 3 months after birth.
  • C. Have been in an unstable environment longer than 6 months after birth.
  • D. Have been in an unstable environment longer than 1 year after birth.
3. Which general conclusion can be drawn about continuous/discontinuous development, despite some disagreement over the topic?
  • A. Development is mainly a continuous process.
  • B. Development is mainly a discontinuous process, as proved in the stage theories.
  • C. It depends on how you look at it and how often you look.
  • D. Development is sometimes a continuous and sometimes a discontinuous process.

2. What does prenatal development look like?

1. When does a fertilized egg be called 'fetus'? 
  • A. Directly after conception.
  • B. After three weeks.
  • C. After nine weeks.
  • D. After three months.
2. What is cell differentiation?
  • A. The process that takes place 12 hours after fertilization.
  • B. The process whereby cells specialize in structure and function.
  • C. The process of movement of newly formed cells away from their original location.
  • D. The process whereby redundant cells are destroyed. 
3. Which of the following is no consequence of being small for gestational age?
  • A. Learning problems.
  • B. Social problems.
  • C. Increased risk of infections.
  • D. Insufficient growth.

3. What is the relation between nature and nurture?

1. Which of the following is true?
  1. Adoption studies examine whether siblings who grew up apart, are more different than siblings who were raised together.
  2. Adoptive twin studies compare identical twins who grew up together versus identical twins who were raised apart.
  • A. Only statement 1 is true.
  • B. Only statement 2 is true.
  • C. Both statements are true.
  • D. Both statements are false.
2. Which statement about heritability is true?
  • A. Heritability gives information about certain populations. 
  • B. Heritability gives information about individuals. 
  • C. High heritability means that a certain trait is unchangeable.
  • D. Heritability gives information about differences between certain groups. 

4. Which theories of cognitive development exist? 

1. Which concept of Piaget is defined by the following: The process by which people process incoming information according to concepts they already understand.
  • A. Modification
  • B. Equilibration
  • C. Assimilation
  • D. Accommodation
2. Which of the following is the right order of Piaget's stages?
  • A. Sensorimotor stage, preoperational stage, concrete operational stage, formal operational stage.
  • B. Sensorimotor stage, preoperational stage, formal operational stage, concrete operational stage.
  • C. Preoperational stage, sensorimotor stage, concrete operational stage, formal operational stage.
  • D. Preoperational stage, sensorimotor stage, formal operational stage, concrete operational
.....read more
Access: 
JoHo members
How Children Develop by Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg - BulletPoints (EN)

How Children Develop by Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg - BulletPoints (EN)

Why and how is child development studied? - BulletPoint 1

  • Plato argued that self-control for children and discipline for parents are the purpose of good parenting and education. He also believed that knowledge is innate. Aristotle stressed the importance of the individual character of children. Hereby, the quality of parenting is important. Aristotle believed that knowledge is acquired through experiences. Locke argued that parents should raise their children with discipline.
  • Nature is our biological heritage, the genes we receive from our parents, the innate aspects of a human being. Nurture is the environment, both physical and social, influencing our development, the acquired aspects of a human being. Nature and nurture interact. The genome (the complete set of hereditary information) influences behavior and experiences, but behavior and experiences also influence the genome. This discovery has given rise to the epigenetics, the study of stable changes in gene expression that are mediated by the environment. Evidence for the enduring epigenetic impact of early experiences and behaviors comes from research on methylation, a biochemical process that reduces expression of a variety of genes. To conclude, both genes and environment are important in development.
  • A continuous development is the idea that changes with age occur gradually, in small steps, quantity is important. A discontinuous development is the idea that changes with age include sudden large steps, quality is important. According to the stage theories, development consists of four large steps which are discontinuous, and age related. One of the best-known stage theories is Piaget's theory of cognitive development, the development of thinking and reasoning. This theory holds that children go through four stages of cognitive growth, each characterized by distinct intellectual abilities and ways of understanding the world. However, many researchers have concluded that developmental changes are mostly gradual.
  • In the development of effortful attention, brain activity, genes and learning experiences play a role. Effortful attention involves voluntary control of one's emotions and thoughts. Difficulty in exerting effortful attention is associated with different behavioral problems.
  • The scientific method is an approach to test beliefs that involves choosing a question, formulating a hypothesis (testable predictions of the presence or absence of phenomena or relations), testing the hypothesis, and drawing a conclusion. Different measures exist to test hypotheses. These measures need to possess reliability, validity and relevance to the hypothesis. Reliability is the degree to which independent measurements of a given behavior are consistent. Interrater reliability is the amount of agreement in the observations of different raters who witness the same behavior. Test-retest reliability is the degree of similarity of a participant's performance on two or more occasions. Validity is the degree to which a test measures what it is intended to measure. Internal validity is the degree to which effects observed within experiments can be attributed to the factor that the researcher is testing. External validity is the degree to which results can be generalized beyond the particulars of the research.

What does prenatal development look like? – BulletPoint 2

  • Gametes
.....read more
Access: 
JoHo members
Samenvatting How Children Develop 5e editie - Siegler, et al.
How Children Develop - Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg samenvatting bij de 4e druk

How Children Develop - Siegler, Deloache & Eisenberg samenvatting bij de 4e druk


.....read more
Access: 
JoHo members
Work for WorldSupporter

Image

JoHo can really use your help!  Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world

Working for JoHo as a student in Leyden

Parttime werken voor JoHo

Check all content related to:
How to use more summaries?


Online access to all summaries, study notes en practice exams

Using and finding summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter

There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.

  1. Starting Pages: for some fields of study and some university curricula editors have created (start) magazines where customised selections of summaries are put together to smoothen navigation. When you have found a magazine of your likings, add that page to your favorites so you can easily go to that starting point directly from your profile during future visits. Below you will find some start magazines per field of study
  2. Use the menu above every page to go to one of the main starting pages
  3. Tags & Taxonomy: gives you insight in the amount of summaries that are tagged by authors on specific subjects. This type of navigation can help find summaries that you could have missed when just using the search tools. Tags are organised per field of study and per study institution. Note: not all content is tagged thoroughly, so when this approach doesn't give the results you were looking for, please check the search tool as back up
  4. Follow authors or (study) organizations: by following individual users, authors and your study organizations you are likely to discover more relevant study materials.
  5. Search tool : 'quick & dirty'- not very elegant but the fastest way to find a specific summary of a book or study assistance with a specific course or subject. The search tool is also available at the bottom of most pages

Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?

Quicklinks to fields of study (main tags and taxonomy terms)

Field of study

Access level of this page
  • Public
  • WorldSupporters only
  • JoHo members
  • Private
Statistics
1378 1
Comments, Compliments & Kudos:

Add new contribution

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.