Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

CHFD331 Quiz 3

Satisfactory Essays
1063 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
CHFD331 Quiz 3
Part 1 of 1 -
14.499996 Points

Question 1 of 35
0.3 Points
Only a small number of children eight to eighteen have television sets in their rooms.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 2 of 35
0.3 Points
When adults see signs of rule breaking, like littering, they are more likely to litter.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 3 of 35
0.3 Points
Parenting manuals stress injury prevention for teens as well as for younger children.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 4 of 35
0.3 Points
More than 50 percent of children eight to eighteen report parents have rules for television watching.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 5 of 35
0.3 Points
Researchers face many difficulties in classifying parents' use of physical punishment.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 6 of 35
0.3 Points
Mothers are more likely to use physical means of discipline than fathers.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 7 of 35
0.3 Points
Preschoolers who had contact with prosocial peers at the beginning of the school year showed more prosocial behavior in their behavior late in the school year.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 8 of 35
0.3 Points
European American children watch more television than children of African American and Latino/Latina background.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 9 of 35
0.3 Points
For children, even those under six, screen activities are the most frequent daily activity.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 10 of 35
0.3 Points
Like Piaget, Lawrence Kohlberg believed that children went through two stages to arrive at the mature concept of morality based on justice.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 11 of 35
0.3 Points
Although a culture may present a set of values and approved ways of behaving, individuals may struggle against the values even if they abide by them in their behavior.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 12 of 35
0.3 Points
Time-out is best used for aggressive, dangerous, or destructive behaviors.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 13 of 35
0.3 Points
Teens with the highest sexual content in their media use were twice as likely to initiate sexual intercourse in the next two years as teens with the lowest exposure.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 14 of 35
0.3 Points
Parents of young children want parenting programs that show experts solving parents' problems.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 15 of 35
0.3 Points
Children agree with most experts that spanking is an unacceptable form of punishment.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 16 of 35
0.4 Points
Women appear more accepting of childlessness than men.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 17 of 35
0.4 Points
Fathers who wanted babies sooner were more nurturing with babies than the average.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 18 of 35
0.4 Points
Studying co-parenting in a middle-class families, James McHale found almost all parents reported good relationships with their own parents.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 19 of 35
0.4 Points
More than fifty percent of parents who have a baby when unmarried will marry within five years.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 20 of 35
0.4 Points
How parents make the decision to have a baby has little relation to the way they care for the baby after birth.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 21 of 35
0.4 Points
Medications taken by the mother during pregnancy may also be passed to the fetus.

True False

Answer Key: True

Question 22 of 35
0.4 Points
Couples making a successful transition to parenthood are successful because they have fewer problems to cope with than those experiencing stress in the transition.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 23 of 35
0.4 Points
When fathers take an active role in child care, both parents report their marriage is more satisfying.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 24 of 35
0.4 Points
Parents who have traditional beliefs about sharing work responsibilities at home experience difficulties after babies are born.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 25 of 35
0.4 Points
Mothers with unintended pregnancies are more likely to seek prenatal care in the first three months because they are concerned they are pregnant.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 26 of 35
0.4 Points
Most babies of teenage mothers are born to unmarried women.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 27 of 35
0.4 Points
Between 1998 and 2000, fewer than twenty percent of single fathers attempted to establish paternity of their baby.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 28 of 35
0.4 Points
Parents are most satisfied after the baby's birth when their sex role attitudes match their actual responsibilities.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: True

Question 29 of 35
0.4 Points
Older mothers are disadvantaged in terms of age and ability to be patient and understanding with children.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 30 of 35
0.4 Points
First-time expectant parents talk to each other and plan how they will parent the new baby.

A. True B. False

Answer Key: False

Question 31 of 35
0.4 Points
The next five questions are from Dinkmeyer. To decide who owns the problem you need to ask questions. Which one doesn't fit?

A.Are my rights being disrespected?

B.How can I get my way?

C.Will anyone get hurt?

D.Is my child too young to be responsible for this problem?

Answer Key: B

Question 32 of 35
0.9 Points
The person who owns the problem is responsible for solving it. The following are false with regards to this except..

A.The parent CAN'T help the child solve it.

B.The parent CAN help the child solve it.

C.If the child owns it- they should not accept help in solving it.

D.Always call grandma for the right answer.

Answer Key: B

Question 33 of 35
0.9 Points
Family meetings need to have rules. Which one doesn't fit?

A.Make a list of topics. You can add to it before the meeting.

B.Meet when convenient. Regular times will not always work with parent and child's schedules.

C.Take notes so you know who said what!

D.Everyone should get a chance to talk. The parent needs to share the floor here.

Answer Key: B

Question 34 of 35
0.9 Points
Consequences are:

A.About bad behavior.

B.About bad kids.

C.About bad parents.

D.About bad doers.

Answer Key: A

Question 35 of 35
0.9 Points
To explore alternatives you need to do all of the following except:

A.Understand the problem, brainstorm ways to solve it.

B.Use the idea, discuss the idea.

C.Choose an idea.

D.Choose choices.

Answer Key: D

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Pt1420 Quiz 6

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Out of all of the 16 arguments, I think that the first and the eleventh are the most compelling. The reason for this is because freedom of speech is important, and giving opinions would not only be helpful to certain things, but it is only fair. Another reason is that practicality and wisdom are both very good to have, and it would come in handy when it comes to voting and things such as that.…

    • 332 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    CHRD331 Quiz 5

    • 844 Words
    • 9 Pages

    From ages five to ten, boys and girls have approximately the same height and weight.…

    • 844 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the study, each parent had different views on the use of television in the home. Some parents believed in encouraging their child to watch educational programs such as Sesame Street, Teletubbies, and Baby Mozart, while others forbid or strictly limited television of any kind and some parents did not moderate their child’s television watching at all. In every occasion however, the children being recorded/studied lived in homes where there was at least one older child present.…

    • 897 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    CHFD331 Quiz 2

    • 911 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Follow-up studies of children attending an intensive two-year preschool program, the High Scope Perry Project, found that the effects of the program did not last.…

    • 911 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    CHFD331 Quiz 4

    • 789 Words
    • 9 Pages

    When depressed mothers of toddlers were able to maintain positive, responsive parenting, their children's behavior problems decreased over time.…

    • 789 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Children often watch tv with their parents for many different reasons whether it is to bond, or even because you only have one tv. Most adults do not censor their kids with tv although they should. This can cause the child to change their behavior. They may think that…

    • 601 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Percocet

    • 1131 Words
    • 5 Pages

    People prohibit their kids from watching TV mostly because they are trying to protect them, I think. I don’t personally think anything on TV is really that bad that your kids need “protecting” from, but I know that a lot of parents are more protective then I see myself being one day. Some parents only let their kids watch…

    • 1131 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Kohlberg's theory of moral development was originally an adaptation of Piaget's theory which was deemed to be unreliable because it was solely based on interviews of young children. Kohlberg's theory is based on the response to a ‘moral dilemma' to which there is no correct answer. The dilemma posed the question of ‘Law against morality'. Is it right to steal a drug to keep someone alive even though the act of larceny is illegal? It was first issued to children, then people of all ages to assess the extent of their moral development. From his research using this dilemma and other similar ones, Kohlberg comprised three different levels and seven stages of moral development that people (should) experience from childhood through to adulthood.…

    • 1404 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Kohlberg focused on the moral development of children, and provided groundbreaking research to defend his theory. In his study, Kohlberg gave children and adults numerous moral dilemmas and asked them what they would do in these situations and why. Through gathering his research, Kohlberg concluded that as children grow older, they develop increasingly complex views of morality. He proposed that the development of moral reasoning by six stages grouped into three general levels of morality: preconventional, conventional and…

    • 1236 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Many of our inner standards take the form of judgments as to what is right and what is wrong. They constitute the moral and ethical principles by which we guide our conduct. Lawrence Kohlberg refined, extended, and revised Piaget's basic theory of the development of moral values. Like Piaget, Kohlberg focused on the moral judgements in children rather than their actions. The manner in which moral judgments develop has been studied extensively by Kohlberg, through the questioning of boys seven years old and up. Kohlberg presented his subjects with a…

    • 1479 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Based on research carried out in 2002, more than 90% of parents in the USA use physical punishment. It suggest without making empirical conclusion that parents who do not use physical…

    • 1099 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    American children between 8 and 18 years of age spend an average of 6 hours and 21 minutes each day using entertainment media (television, commercial or self-recorded video, movies, video games, print, radio, recorded music, computers, and the Internet). Children between 0 and 6 years of age spend an average of almost 2 hours each day using screen media (television, movies, computers) (Rideout, VJ et al, 2003). Televisions are also commonly present in bedrooms, with 19% of infants, 29% of 2- to 3-year-olds, 43% of 4- to 6-year-olds, and 68% of children 8 years and older having a television in their bedrooms. The effects of having a television in a child's bedroom are only beginning to be studied, but the early indications are alarming. Children with a television in their bedroom increase their television-viewing time by approximately 1 hour per day (Roberts, DF et al, 2005). Their risk of obesity increases 31%, and their risk of smoking doubles. In addition, if children have a television in their bedroom, parents are less able to monitor what is seen; parents are less able to have consistent rules for children's media use; children participate in fewer alternative activities such as reading, hobbies, and games; and children perform more poorly in school (Borzekowski, DL et al, 2005).…

    • 1791 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    “The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no TV for children younger than 2 and no more than two hours a day of high-quality programming for kids of an older age. Many children…

    • 1561 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    house in America has 2.6 television sets and 56% of children have a TV in their room. Teenagers spend…

    • 746 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Media Impect

    • 2015 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Most American homes (99%) have a television set, and “over half of all children have a…

    • 2015 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays