PERDEV

Cards (176)

  • 3 aspects of human development
    physical, cognitive, psychosocial
  • infants age
    0 to 1
  • toddler age
    1 to 3
  • preschooler age
    3 to 5
  • middle school
    6 to 11
  • adolescent age
    12 to 18
  • adulthood age
    18 to 65
  • young adult age
    18 to 25
  • mature adult
    25 to 55
  • older adult
    55 to 75
  • who is the founder of cognitive theory?
    Jan piaget
  • sensorimotor (0-2)
    sensual
  • preoperational (2-7)
    mental abstract
  • concrete operational (7-11)
    solving problems
  • formal operational (11-adulthood)
    hypothetically thinking
  • covers the capacity to learn, speak, understand, to reason, and create
    cognitive
  • includes social interactions with other people, emotions, attitudes
    phycosocial
  • passed by generations
    heredity
  • external world
    environment
  • natural progression of brain
  • natural progression of brain
    maturation
  • since birth (hereditary) under biological theory
    nature
  • outside/environment under biological theory
    nurture
  • who is the founder of biological theory?
    Charles darwin
  • also known as behaviorism
    behavioral
  • all behaviors are acquired through?
    conditiong
  • interaction with environment shapes our?
    personality
  • who is the founder of behavioral theory?
    John b Watson and bf skinner
  • where is under Ivan Pavlob?
    behavioral
  • who is under the psychosexual?
    sigmund freud
  • examin the ___concept that shape our emotion, attitudes etc.
    unconscious
  • do it cause you are happy
    ID
  • this is the reality
    ego
  • will balance and decide
    superego
  • emphasizes the freewill and individual experiences
    humanist theory
  • who are under the humanist theory?
    Carl Rogers and Abraham maslow
  • he said that you need self actualization
    abraham maslow
  • he said that it is within yourself and he is also the founder of psychotherapy
    Carl rogers
  • certain basic traits
    traits theory
  • to know or to have self knowledge
    socrates