Chapter 15
Leadership, Educational Psychology And Foundations 320 with Joyce/hemphill at University of Wisconsin - Madison
About this deck
By: Emily Finch
Created: 2011-05-05
Size: 28 flashcards
Views: 7
Created: 2011-05-05
Size: 28 flashcards
Views: 7
About StudyBlue
STUDYBLUE makes things that make you better at school.
Things like online flashcards with photos and audio.
Things like personalized quizzes and friendly reminders about when (and what) to study next.
Think of it as a digital backpack™: access to all of your study materials online and on your phone.
STUDYBLUE exists to make studying efficient and effective for every student, for free. Join us.
“Simply amazing. The flash cards are smooth, there are many different types of studying tools, and there is a great search engine. I praise you on the awesomeness.”
Dennis
Dennis
Sign up (free) to study this.
Nonsocial Activity
unoccupied, onlooker behavior and solitary play.
Parallel Play
nonsocial activity shifts to a limited form of social participation in which a child plays near other children with similar materials but does not try to influence the behavior
Associative Play
children engage in separate activities but exchange toys and comment on another's behavior
Cooperative play
a more advanced type of interaction, children orient toward a common goal, such as acting out a make-believe theme
Rough and Tumble Play
friendly chasing and play-fighting
Dominance Hierarchy
a stable ordering of group members that predicts who will win when conflict arises
Friendships
close relationships involving companionship in which each partner wants to be with the other
Peer Acceptance
refers to likeability- the extent to which a child is viewed by a group of agemates, such as classmates as a worthy social partner
Sociometric Techniques
use in order to assess peer acceptance, researches usually use self-reports called sociometric techniques which measure social preferences
Peer Reputation
young peoples judgements of the peers most of their classmates admire, which identify peers high in social prominence
Popular Prosocial children
the majority of popular children combine academic and social competence
Popular Antisocial children
consists of aggressive youngsters. enhance their own status by ignoring excluding or spreading rumors about other children.
Rejected Agressive Children
the largest subgroup, show severe conduct problems, high rates of conflict, physical and relational aggression, and hyperactive, impulsive behavior
Rejected Withdrawn children
a smaller subgroup are passive and socially awkward
Peer Groups
collectives that generate unique values and standards for behavior and a social structure of leaders and followers
Cliques
groups of about five to seven members who are friends and therefore tend to resemble one another in family background, attitudes, values and interests
Crowd
often several cliques with similar values form a larger, more loosely organized group called a crowd
Traditional classroom
the teacher is the sole authority for knowledge, rules, and decision making and does mot of the talking. Students are relatively passive, listening and responding when called on.
Constructivist Classroom
encourages students to construct their own knowledge
Social Constructivist Classroom
children participate in a wide range of challenging activities with teachers and peers with whom they jointly construct understandings
Communities of Learners
where teachers guide the overall process of learning but no other distinction is made between adult and child contributors. all participate in joint endeavors and have the authority to define and resolve problems
Educational Self- Fulfilling prophecies
children may adopt teachers positive or negative views and start to live up to them
Inclusive Classrooms
students with learning difficulties learn alongside typical students in the regular educational setting for part or all of the school day
Learning Disabilities
great difficulty with one or more aspects of learning, usually reading
About this deck
By: Emily Finch
Created: 2011-05-05
Size: 28 flashcards
Views: 7
Created: 2011-05-05
Size: 28 flashcards
Views: 7
About StudyBlue
STUDYBLUE makes things that make you better at school.
Things like online flashcards with photos and audio.
Things like personalized quizzes and friendly reminders about when (and what) to study next.
Think of it as a digital backpack™: access to all of your study materials online and on your phone.
STUDYBLUE exists to make studying efficient and effective for every student, for free. Join us.
“Simply amazing. The flash cards are smooth, there are many different types of studying tools, and there is a great search engine. I praise you on the awesomeness.”
Dennis
Dennis