An example of explicit memory is reciting the alphabet.
Answer the following statement true (T) or false (F)
False
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A meta-analysis of 50 studies (Hill & Tyson, 2009) indicates that the most important way parents can help their children in school is through
a. home-based involvement such as helping children with homework. b. school-based involvement such as parents volunteering at school. c. academic socialization in which parents convey to children the value of education. d. enrolling them in the most expensive school possible.
Roger holds a number of negative stereotypes about women; specifically, he thinks that most women are manipulative, vain, and lazy. In trying to understand why Roger holds these stereotypes, which of the following questions would a social psychologist be MOST likely to ask?
a. Does Roger feel so intimidated by women that he expresses these negative stereotypes in order to "cover up" his deep-seeded lack of self-esteem? b. Did Roger have a difficult relationship with his mother as a young child that might have fostered negative attitudes toward all women? c. Does Roger have a physical brain abnormality? d. Has Roger been exposed to these stereotypes in the media, or has he perhaps had a few limited (but negative) interactions with women that might have helped to perpetuate these stereotypes?
What was a goal of St. Thomas Aquinas?
a. To convert a large number of Aristotelians to Christianity b. To demonstrate that Christianity existed in accord with other religions c. To Apply the scientific method in solving theological problems d. To strengthen the position of the church through reason
Research has found evidence that attitudes can be learned through vicarious self-perception, which occurs when we infer ______.
a. our own attitudes by observing the freely performed actions of others, with whom we identify b. the attitudes of those with whom we identify by observing our own freely performed behavior c. the functions of our own attitudes by examining the circumstances predicting others’ behavior d. the affective content of our own attitudes by examining our memories for our interactions with others