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PVN 101 CH 9 KEY TERMS

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adoptive familyFamily unit with adoptive children who are chosen and taken into the family by legal process and raised as the family's own
ageismProcess of systemic stereotyping of and discrimination against people because of their advanced age
autocratic family patternFamily unit with unequal relationships; parents attempt to control with strict, rigid rules and expectations
blended (reconstituted) familyFamily unit formed by parents who bring unrelated children from prior marriages into a new, joint living situation. Also known aas a stepfamily
cephalocaudalGrowth and development that proceeds from the head toward the feet. The infant's head is large compared with the rest of the body
chromosomesThreadlike structures in the nucleus of a cell that function in the transmission of genetic information.
cohabitationalso referred as social contract family
conception (fertilization)beginning of pregnancy
concrete operational phasePhase of Piaget's theory in which thoughts become increasingly logical and coherent so that the child is able to classify, sort, and organize facts while still being incapable of generalizing or dealing with abstractions; occurs between 7 and 10 years of age
democratic family patternFamily style in which the adult members are considered equal and children are treated with respect and recognized as individuals
depressionAn emotional disorder brought on by an imbalance of the neurotransmitter serotonin in the brain, which brings about exaggerated feelings of sadness, melancholy, emptiness, worthlessness, and frustration. Fatigue, inability to concentrate, short-term memory loss, and sleep pattern disturbance, as well as slowed body functions, can be seen with this disorder
developmentGradual process or change and differentiation from a simple to a more advanced level of complexity
disengagement stagePeriod of family life when the grown children depart from the home. In some family units this stage is brief because the adult children return to live in the family home.
engagement or commitment stagePeriod when the couple prepares for marriage and becomes free of parental domination
establishment stagePeriod in a couple's life between their wedding and the birth of their first child.
expectant stageThe period of family life that begins when conception occurs and continues through the pregnancy
extended familyA family group consisting of the biologic parents, their children, the grandparents, and other family members
formal operational thought stagePiaget's phase that begins during adolescence, permitting abstract reasoning and systematic scientific problem solving
foster familyFamily unit that cares for, supervises, and nnurtures children whose parents are unable to care for them
growthIncrease in the size of an organism or any of its parts
homosexual familyFamily group made up of same-sex adults who share bonds of emotional commitment and roles of childbearing
life expectancyAverage number of years an individual will probably live
matriarchal family patternA style in which the female assumes primary dominance in areas of child care and homemaking; also called matrilocal.
nuclear familyA family unit consisting of the biologic parents and their offspring
parenthood stageBegins at the birth or adoption of the first child.
patriarchal family patternA family style in which the male assumes the dominant role
preoperational thought stagePiaget's phase of child development during the period of 2 to 7 years of age, when the child focuses on the use of language as a tool. The child has the emerging ability to reason.
presbycusisA normal loss of hearing acuity, speech inteligibility, auditory threshold, and pitch associated with aging
presbyopiaDefect in vision in advancing age involving loss of accommodation or recession of near vision; due to loss of elasticity of crystalline lens
proximodistalGrowth and development that moves from the center toward the outside. The infant gains control of the shoulders before developing control of the hands and fingers
schemaInnate knowledge structure that allows a child to organize his or her mind
school violenceAnything that physically or psychologically injures schoolchildren or damages school property
senescence stageThe last stage of the life cycle that requires the older adult to cope with a long range of changes
sensorimotor stageThe development phase of childhood encompassing the period from birth to 2 years of age, according to Piaget's psychology. In this stage, an infant's knowledge of the work comes about primarily through sensory impressions and motor activities
single-parent familyFamily group that occurs when one parent leaves the nuclear family because of divorce, separation, desertion, or death. May also be the result of unwed parents living alone or the decision of a single person to adopt a child
social contract familyUnmarried couple living together and sharing roles and responsibilities similar to those of the nuclear family structure
teratogenAny substance, agent, or process that interferes with normal prenatal development, causing the formation of one or more developmental abnormalities in the fetus.
zygoteCell formed by the union of two reproductive cells; the fertilized ovum resulting from the union of a sperm and ovum from the time it is fertilized until, as a blastocyst, it is implanted in the uterus


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