Navigation » List of Schools » Prince George Community College » Psychology » Psychology 2070 – Human Growth and Development » Summer 2022 » Final Exam
Below are the questions for the exam with the choices of answers:
Question #1
A a decrease in the maximum heart rate
B farsightedness from a stiffening lens
C heart disease from smoking cigarettes
D lack of menstruation after menopause
Question #2
A promotes understanding of social and ethical issues involving death.
B is associated with increased death anxiety.
C is inappropriate for school-age children.
D is primarily geared toward medical professionals.
Question #3
A usually quick and painless.
B brought on by a cessation of brain functioning.
C a process in which organs stop functioning in a sequence that varies from person to person.
D characterized by a loss of heartbeat and respiration.
Question #4
A increases with age.
B decreases with age.
C is unknown.
D peaks in early adulthood.
Question #5
A is associated with a rise in antisocial behavior, particularly for older adolescents.
B interferes with adolescent autonomy and identity development and predicts long-term adjustment problems.
C informs parents of the changing needs and expectations of their children, signaling that adjustments in the parent-child relationship are necessary.
D often escalates into intense parent-child disagreements and a sharp rise in sibling rivalry.
Question #6
A The right to die was of greater concern before the 1950s because vaccinations had not yet eradicated many terminal illnesses.
B The Quinlan and Schiavo cases created federal right-to-die legislation.
C All U.S. states have laws that honor patients’ wishes concerning withdrawal of treatment, but no uniform right-to-die policy exists.
D No U.S. states have laws that honor patients’ wishes concerning withdrawal of treatment in cases of a persistent vegetative state.
Question #7
A falls; motor vehicle collisions
B falls; cardiovascular disease
C motor vehicle collisions; cancer
D cancer; cardiovascular disease
Question #8
A Parkinson’s disease
B Alzheimer’s disease
C Subcortical dementia
D Cerebrovascular dementia
Question #9
A consult with other people.
B use practical problem-solving strategies.
C make decisions based on emotion.
D select attractive-looking options.
Question #10
A About 70 percent of U.S. elders participate in regular exercise.
B Physically active seniors are at high risk for injury.
C As many as 75 percent of elderly men and 80 percent of elderly women are not active enough.
D “Taking it easy” is the best treatment for many chronic diseases.
Question #11
A women but tends to decrease for men.
B executives and salaried employees only.
C high-income workers only.
D workers at all occupational levels.
Question #12
A the production of estrogen drops.
B menstrual cycles become irregular and the reproductive organs increase in size.
C the production of estrogen increases.
D monthly cycles gradually increase in length until menstruation stops altogether.
Question #13
A higher SES.
B greater death anxiety.
C better physical health.
D less reminiscence.
Question #14
A guilt and shame.
B self-indulgence.
C selflessness.
D role confusion.
Question #15
A improved medical care and increased economic security among elders.
B increased cohabitation among older adults.
C more negative cultural attitudes toward elder suicide.
D increased prevention efforts sponsored by the AARP.
Question #16
A when elders have the capacity to view their own lives in the larger context of all humanity.
B when elders attempt to adapt to the mix of triumphs and disappointments that are an inevitable part of life.
C when elders feel they have made many wrong decisions, yet time is too short to find an alternate route to integrity.
D with the realization that the integrity of one’s own life is part of an extended chain of human existence.
Question #17
A are federally subsidized units for low-income elders.
B offer a range of housing alternatives, from independent or congregate housing to full nursing home care.
C are limited to ten or fewer residents, who live in private bedroom-bathroom suites that surround a communal space.
D provide a hospital-like setting with extreme restrictions on autonomy and social integration.
Question #18
A Employment and gender identity
B Gratifying social ties
C Occupational prestige and high income
D Extroversion and neuroticism
Question #19
A A culture’s “belief in the species” is a major motivator of generative action, according to Erikson.
B Parenting is the primary means of realizing generativity and, therefore, childless middle-aged adults become stagnant.
C Generativity is motivated by the sense that one’s days are numbered and the sense of quiet desperation that ensues.
D Adults can be generative in parenting or other family relationships, but not in the workplace or community.
Question #20
A bargain with the dying person when he or she is in denial, as this facilitates acceptance.
B be understanding about the dying person’s denial and agree that his or her condition is not terminal.
C not prolong denial by distorting the truth about the person’s condition.
D make decisions about medical interventions for the dying person until he or she reaches acceptance.
Question #21
A blurred vision from macular degeneration
B high blood pressure from prolonged stress
C weight gain from a sedentary lifestyle
D lung cancer from smoking cigarettes
Question #22
A do not believe in a common justice morality and, thus, act less prosocially than lower-stage adolescents.
B realize that behaving in line with their beliefs is vital for creating and maintaining a just social world.
C view moral understanding as merely academic and unrelated to moral action.
D tend to place greater weight on caring than on justice-based reasoning.
Question #23
A Wisdom does not predict physical or psychological well-being.
B A small number of adults of diverse ages rank among the wise.
C Older adults are wiser than younger adults.
D People in human-service careers have low wisdom scores.
Question #24
A loneliness
B constructing a split dream
C family conflict
D a marital breakup
Question #25
A often rebel against their parents in early adolescence.
B generally choose friends who share those values.
C almost always come from affluent families.
D often feel excessive pressure to get good grades.
Question #26
A emphasize hoped-for-gains rather than feared declines.
B focus more on child rearing than on career development.
C experience life-threatening health episodes-if not in themselves, then in their partners and friends.
D feel physically stronger and more robust than in early adulthood.
Question #27
A that life is random.
B of spiritual connections.
C that their sense of security is threatened.
D of their own vulnerability.
Question #28
A There is no relationship between educational attainment and health.
B The health of individuals with limited education steadily improves throughout the lifespan.
C Economically advantaged individuals sustain better health over most of their adult lives.
D The health of lower-income individuals steadily improves throughout the lifespan.
Question #29
A care aimed at relieving pain and other symptoms, such as nausea and insomnia.
B home care or an inpatient setting with a homelike atmosphere.
C life-saving measures such as respirators.
D emergency room treatment.
Question #30
A Gordon, a boy who has a strong feminine gender identity
B Maria, a girl who has a strong feminine gender identity
C Gabriella, a girl who has an androgynous gender identity
D Luis, a boy who has a strong masculine gender identity
Question #31
A is consistent with the prevailing Western stereotype of late adulthood.
B is an example of stereotype threat.
C suggests that she is in denial.
D may help her live a longer life.
Question #32
A any environmental agent that causes damage during the prenatal period.
B a synthetic hormone used to prevent miscarriage.
C a neurological growth period for the fetus.
D a limited time span during which a part of the body is biologically prepared to develop rapidly.
Question #33
A reversibility.
B animistic thinking.
C magical thinking.
D an inability to conserve.
Question #34
A the zone of proximal development
B the dynamic systems approach
C scaffolding
D transitive inference
Question #35
A using deliberate mental activities that improve recall.
B a repetitive communication style.
C thinking about thought.
D using scripts to tell stories.
Question #36
A hunger is consistently satisfied.
B the parents are perfectly in tune with their baby’s needs.
C the balance of care is sympathetic and loving.
D toddlers are successfully toilet trained.
Question #37
A separation anxiety.
B social referencing.
C stranger anxiety.
D goodness of fit.
Question #38
A because prosocial acts often occur spontaneously and then are positively reinforced.
B by observing and imitating people who demonstrate appropriate behavior.
C because they feel empathy-based guilt.
D largely through operant conditioning.
Question #39
A both a cause and consequence of
B more important than nutrition in predicting
C caused by serious hormonal imbalances and predicts
D unrelated to
Question #40
A sensorimotor
B preoperational
C concrete operational
D formal operational
Question #41
A the effects of punishment and reinforcement on behavior.
B changes in thinking.
C unconscious motives and drives.
D nature over nurture.
Question #42
A cognition
B maturation
C equilibrium
D modeling
Question #43
A operant conditioning
B observational learning
C psychoanalytic
D classical conditioning
Question #44
A unconscious impulses and drives.
B stimuli and responses.
C clinical case studies.
D natural selection and survival of the fittest.
Question #45
A individual development is continuous, rather than discontinuous.
B events that occur during infancy and early childhood have the strongest impact on the life course.
C development is static and stable.
D development is affected by a blend of biological, psychological, and social forces.