A) The interview method has limited value for studying infrequent behaviours.
B) Individuals may distort the way that events happened.
C) It is difficult to gather information about participants' subjective experiences.
D) It does not enable the researcher to examine the subject in an in-depth manner.
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Multiple Choice
A) View A: measuring the height of a boy at yearly intervals from birth to age 18
B) View B: examining changes in height from one year to the next from birth to age 18
C) Both view A and view B make changes in height look continuous.
D) Both view A and view B make changes in height look discontinuous.
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Multiple Choice
A) race.
B) socioeconomic status.
C) culture.
D) sociocultural context.
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Multiple Choice
A) Children whose parents argue in their presence are more likely than other children to try illegal drugs.
B) Which parental behaviours are associated with an increased likelihood of teenage illegal drug use?
C) What are the differences between children whose parents argue in their presence and those whose parents do not argue in their presence?
D) There are many differences between children whose parents argue in their presence and those whose parents do not argue in their presence.
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Multiple Choice
A) dividing participants by hair color
B) allowing participants to choose which group to join
C) dividing participants by where their names fall on an alphabetic list
D) flipping a coin for each participant
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Multiple Choice
A) Two or more groups of participants vary on one or more variables at the outset.
B) The participants within one group are given an experience that differs in only one way from the experience given to participants in the other group.
C) The participants in different groups behave differently after the experiences.
D) The different experiences are concluded to have caused the subsequent difference in behaviour.
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Multiple Choice
A) level of agreement between different observers of the same behaviour.
B) improvement of children over time in abilities such as mathematics.
C) degree to which a test measures what it is intended to test.
D) degree of similarity in the results of the same measure when it is given at two different times.
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Multiple Choice
A) Childcare outside of the home is a relatively new phenomenon.
B) Childcare outside of the home does not harm children.
C) Childcare outside of the home diminishes the bond between mother and child.
D) Childcare outside of the home was rare even 50 years ago.
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Essay
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View Answer
Multiple Choice
A) sociocultural context
B) genes
C) children's choice of environments
D) treatment by parents and others
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Multiple Choice
A) continuity and discontinuity in development.
B) age differences on a particular variable.
C) the processes that produce changes.
D) cause and effect relationships.
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Multiple Choice
A) external validity.
B) relevance to the hypothesis.
C) reliability.
D) interrater agreement.
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Multiple Choice
A) Piaget
B) Scarr
C) Freud
D) Erikson
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Multiple Choice
A) Environment plays a crucial role in the expression of genes.
B) The expression of genes plays a crucial role in one's environment.
C) Some genetic influences operate regardless of environment.
D) Current research methods often do not allow researchers to separate the influences of genetics and environment.
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Multiple Choice
A) a naturalistic interview
B) a structured interview
C) naturalistic observation
D) structured observation
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