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PRETEST

The document discusses adolescence and contains multiple choice questions about defining adolescence, peer pressure, tasks teens deal with during adolescence, circumstances that contributed to the extension of adolescence, common adolescent thinking patterns, how new cognitive abilities affect teens, examples of rebellion, how wise parents approach independence, what causes emotional fluctuations, and risky behaviors boys engage in to prove manhood.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
203 views

PRETEST

The document discusses adolescence and contains multiple choice questions about defining adolescence, peer pressure, tasks teens deal with during adolescence, circumstances that contributed to the extension of adolescence, common adolescent thinking patterns, how new cognitive abilities affect teens, examples of rebellion, how wise parents approach independence, what causes emotional fluctuations, and risky behaviors boys engage in to prove manhood.

Uploaded by

milaflor zalsos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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1.

Define Adolescence:

A. Process or state of growing to maturity


B. Process of growing from adulthood to old age
C. When you get old
D. When you are a child

2. Peer pressure is

A. Always negative
B. Means conforming to your friends
C. Increases throughout adolescence
D. Has not effect on adults

3. Which of the tasks that teen are dealing with?

A. Overcoming insecurities with the changing body


B. Adjusting to new intellectual abilities
C. Achieving new and more mature relations with age-mates of both
sexes
D. All of the above

4. What circumstances kept young people from going to work early in life and
helped contribute to the extension of adolescence?
A. Moving off of farms
B. Child labor laws
C. Compulsory education laws
D. All of the above

5. Which of the following is a common thinking of adolescents?


A. It won't happen to me (invincibility)
B. Imaginary audience (everyone is looking at me)
C. Personal fable ( no one else can possibly understand)
D. Egocentric thought ( thoughts focus on self)
E. All of the above
6. New cognitive (mental) abilities lead teens to:
A. Argue so they try out their new thinking abilities
B. Give up completely on schoolwork
C. Have difficulty in reversing a situation
D. Believing everything they see
7. An example of a serious rebellion is:
A. Tattoo
B. Trouble with law
C. Purple hair color
D. Gothic dress

8. As the adolescence moves towards independence, the wise parents:


A. Read the teen's email
B. Keep firm control for the teen's well being
C. Give the teen the opportunity to make more choices and
decisions and acts as a resource
D. Restrict the teen clothing styles and dress

9. Emotional fluctuations in adolescence are caused by:

A. Hormonal changes and brain in development


B. Hormonal imbalances
C. Lead to a need for professional counselling
D. Environmental factors

10. Boys are especially risky behaviour during adolescence. The peer pressure
to prove "manhood" is often done in the following ways.
A. Street Racing
B. Multiple Sex "Scores"
C. Joining gangs, Fighting
D. Binge Drinking
E. All of the Above

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