A) Due to retroactive inhibition, Harry will get a lower grade on the quiz than Sam.
B) Due to proactive inhibition, Harry will get a higher grade on the quiz than Sam.
C) Due to retroactive facilitation, Harry will get a lower grade on the quiz than Sam.
D) Due to proactive facilitation, Harry will get a higher grade on the quiz than Sam.
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Multiple Choice
A) A student tries to make sense of a poorly written and confusing magazine article.
B) A teacher assigns a laboratory activity using cumbersome equipment that students can only use successfully by working in pairs.
C) A student practices playing the F major scale on his violin until he can play it perfectly.
D) Four students in a study group divide the day's reading assignment into four sections. Each student reads a section and then teaches the material to the other group members.
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Multiple Choice
A) Reinforcement is essential for learning, but not for performance.
B) Reinforcement is distracting, so interferes with learning.
C) Responses can be learned even when they are not reinforced.
D) Reinforcement is important only if the organism is unmotivated.
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Multiple Choice
A) People tend to organize unorganized information.
B) People are more likely to remember general ideas than word-for-word information.
C) Practicing for a long time all at once is more effective than practicing for short periods on different occasions.
D) People sometimes change information into a form they can learn and remember more easily.
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Multiple Choice
A) Focus on how people solve problems
B) Propose that people learn in distinctly computer-like ways
C) Deal primarily with how people develop the ability to think abstractly
D) Explain how people interpret and remember the events they experience
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A) "Modern technology allows us to study thought processes very precisely."
B) "By studying people's responses to various stimuli, we can draw inferences about thought processes that may underlie those responses."
C) "We study mental events, which aren't the same thing as thinking."
D) "We can determine what people are thinking simply by asking them to describe their thoughts. The things they say are observable behaviors that we can measure objectively."
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Multiple Choice
A) Learning how to fly a kite
B) Learning the months of the year in order
C) Learning French grammar
D) Learning the capitals of European countries
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Multiple Choice
A) He never reinforced any given response in the same way twice.
B) He reinforced a response the same way for several trials, then abruptly changed the type or amount of reinforcement.
C) He asked subjects what they were expecting a particular response to accomplish.
D) He gave his subjects a lengthy survey that included two or three questions concerning their expectations about the experiment.
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Multiple Choice
A) Mr. Atherton plans classroom activities that are likely to elicit desirable student behaviors.
B) Mr. Birleffi makes sure that he performs classroom tasks in exactly the same way he wants his students to perform them.
C) Mr. Camacho tells his students both what they should do and what they should not do as they use the equipment in his chemistry lab.
D) Mr. Darwin has students recall personal experiences related to new concepts they are studying.
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Multiple Choice
A) Closure
B) Prägnanz
C) Proximity
D) Similarity
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Multiple Choice
A) It has been a major force guiding learning research ever since the work of Tolman and the Gestaltists in the 1930s.
B) It has been the dominant perspective in learning research only in the past five or six decades.
C) Its roots can be traced to the work of verbal learning theory, which in turn evolved from Jean Piaget's research in Switzerland.
D) It gained prominence only when psychologists began to cast aside the need for objectivity in psychological research.
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A) information processing theory
B) individual constructivism
C) social constructivism
D) Prägnanz
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Multiple Choice
A) Learning how to fly a kite
B) Learning the months of the year in order
C) Learning French grammar
D) Learning the capitals of European countries
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Multiple Choice
A) Organisms sometimes reinforce themselves (e.g., by feeling proud) .
B) Organisms behave in order to attain particular goals.
C) Behavior can be altered by reinforcement, but not by punishment.
D) When organisms discover that a particular response is no longer reinforced as it has previously been, they increase the frequency of that response for a short time.
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Multiple Choice
A) Mental events can be studied indirectly by observing behavior.
B) Humans often learn by relating new information to what they already know.
C) Researchers can study mental events only by abandoning objectivity.
D) Humans sometimes learn differently than other species do.
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A) Ms. Anthony, a high school biology teacher, draws a hierarchy on the board showing how mammals, fish, birds, reptiles, and amphibians are all vertebrates, and how vertebrates and invertebrates are both animals.
B) Mr. Bottenberg, a fourth grade teacher, suggests that his students try to learn their spelling words by thinking about similarly spelled words that they already know.
C) Mr. Conrad, a junior high school soccer coach, asks his players to practice passing the ball to one another as they run down the field, then openly praises those players who are passing skillfully.
D) Ms. Danforth, a third grade teacher, introduces her class to the topic of multiplication by showing them how it relates to addition.
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