Java Games: Flashcards, matching, concentration, and word search.

Chapter 13- Key Terms Matching

AB
social clockA developmental timetable based not on biological maturation but on social norms, which set the stages of life and the behaviors considered appropriate to each of them.
midlife crisisA period of unusual anxiety, radical self-reexamination, and sudden transformation that is widely associated with middle age but that actually has more to do with developmental history than with chronological age.
ecological nicheThe particular lifestyle and social context that adults settle into because it is compatible with their individual personality needs and interests.
gender convergenceA tendency for men and women to become more similar as they move through middle age.
social convoyCollectively, the family members, friends, acquaintances, and even strangers who move through life with an individual.
familismThe belief that family members should support one another, sacrificing individual freedom and success, if necessary, in order to preserve family unity.
fictive kinA term used to describe someone who becomes accepted as part of a family to which he or she has no blood relation.
empty nestThe time in the lives of parents when their children have left the family home to pursue their own lives.
kinkeeperA caregiver who takes responsibility for maintaining communication among family members.
sandwich generationThe generation of middle-aged people who are supposedly "squeezed" by the needs of the younger and older members of their families.
relative deprivationThe idea that people compare themselves to others in their group and are satisifed if they are no worse off than the group norm.
extrinsic rewards of workThe tangible benefits, usually in the form of compensation (e.g., salary, health insurance, pension), that one receives for doing a job.
intrinsic rewards of workThe intangible gratifications (e.g., job satisfacation, self-esteem, pride) that come from within oneself as a result of doing a job.
mentorA skilled and knowledgeable person who advises or guides an inexperienced person.
flextimeAn arrangement in which work schedules are flexible so that employees can balance personal and occupational responsiblities.
telecommutingWorking at home and keeping in touch with the office via computer, telephone and fax.
stressorAny situation, event, experience, or other stimulus that causes a person to feel stressed.
allostatic loadThe total, combined burden of stress and disease that an individual must cope with.
organ reserveThe capacity of human organs to allow the body to cope with unusual stress.
problem-focused copingA strategy often used by younger adults to deal with stress in which they tackle a stressful issue directly.
emotion-focused copingA strategy often used by older adults to deal with stress in which they change their feelings about the stressor rather than changing the stressor itself.


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Metropolitan Community College

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