Brian is an only child whose father is a president of a large corporation, while his mother is a lawyer at a busy law firm. Brian has always enjoyed the company of other children partly, he believes, because he wasn't around children much except at school. He is particularly intrigued with young children's development and is thinking of majoring in early-childhood education in college. His
parents are not happy with Brian's decision, and his father puts a great deal of pressure on him to major in business or pre-law. Brian isn't sure what to do. His situation is an example of
a. identity achievement.
b. negative identity.
c. psychosocial moratorium.
d. role confusion.
d
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When should class discussion take place if the teacher uses read-alouds?
a. Before the reading c. After the reading b. During the reading d. All of the above
Setting the stage for play includes
a. providing a physical space conducive to children's play b. checking to make sure that areas have clear boundaries c. providing areas for rough and tumble play d. all of the above
Glasser's quality school is one that:
a. provides educational experiences primarily in the cognitive domain and fewer experiences in the affective domains. b. helps students satisfy one or more psychological needs and adds quality to students' lives. c. provides educators with excellent work environments, with the idea that instructional efforts will increased, thus raising students' academic achievement. d. provides smaller schools, called "learning communities" in which students are expected to control other students' behavior.
When an employee knows what to do, as well as the best way to do it, yet fails to perform at an optimal level, the employee may have a
a. knowledge deficiency b. skill deficiency c. structural deficiency d. motivational deficiency