True or False EDU 215 Final
When planning a creative classroom environment, it is necessary to design and manage safe traffic patterns.
True
When teachers struggle to do more than what is minimally required and do not receive intrinsic or extrinsic rewards, their motivation to teach creatively is diminished.
True
Children's creativity must be assessed by specially trained teachers in art or music.
False
Creative expression is purely for enrichment and should be reserved for those children who have already completed their work.
False
Creative teachers establish a classroom climate that discourages alternative solutions.
False
Creativity and art are independent of culture and values.
False
Creativity is limited to the arts.
False
Drama cannot easily be integrated throughout subject areas.
False
During outdoor play, the ratio of adults to children is relatively unimportant.
False
Formative assessment occurs after the learning has taken place.
False
Generally speaking, most playgrounds in school and centers are well designed to encourage physical activity and exercise.
False
Good observations accurately record only nonverbal observable behavior of the child.
False
Good observations include high-inference, value-laden terminology.
False
Good observations use indirect observational data.
False
In order not to hurt other children's feelings, teachers should not "single out" children who are talented.
False
Instruction is not necessary for younger children to be successful with pantomime.
False
It is not necessary to provide young children with private space because they only need group interaction.
False
Literacy materials and tools should be kept apart from other centers.
False
Many of the questions and tasks that young children encounter in school have more than one correct answer.
False
Mastery of techniques drives creativity.
False
Multicultural education is appropriate for urban environments but inappropriate in rural settings where groups of students are not ethnically diverse.
False
Outdoor play should be reserved for a free-release of tension and excess energy.
False
Planning for instruction is more important than planning physical space.
False
Praise should be general and non-specific.
False
Pruning is the brain process that builds neurons.
False
Published scales should be viewed as the ultimate indicator when assessing a child's play.
False
Social environments play a minor role in providing opportunity for excellence to flourish.
False
Space, whether planned or unplanned, affects children's behavior and attitude in the classroom.
False
Story drama should not be used with poor readers.
False
Story play is based on the idea that children can learn to read and write more easily if they use an author's published book for children.
False
Teachers should focus on children with learning difficulties because gifted children will perform fine on their own.
False
Teachers' approaches to assessment of children's creativity and artistic expression frequently match theory, research, and expert opinion.
False
Teachers' reflections upon their experiences are unessential to using cases or scripts as tools for learning.
False
The connection between early experiences and later experiences in life are strong.
False
The first and foremost social group that exerts an influence on children's creative growth and artistic expression is the school.
False
The majority of today's preschools have well-designed, developmentally appropriate, safe playgrounds.
False
The most effective method to measure creative expression is with a paper-and-pencil test.
False
The teacher's role in dramatic play is not important.
False
Transitions and routines throughout the school day are unnecessary for older elementary children.
False
Using prop boxes and theme corners hinders the spontaneity of dramatic play.
False
When taking the role of "interactor," teachers should not intervene to help children's growth.
False
Diversity in planning is essential to the development of centers.
True
Early dramatic play experiences help children to appreciate drama as they mature.
True
Every portfolio should include a table of contents so that teachers, administrators, parents, and children can make use of it.
True
Experiencing drama early helps children appreciate drama as an art form.
True
Gifted individuals need systems of social support.
True
Good observations describe the context—the time, setting, circumstances, and behaviors of other children or adults related to the episode.
True
Ideally, teacher observations should help teachers to plan and evaluate a developmentally appropriate program.
True
Most of the advice children receive is from other children.
True
Motivation in teachers is diminished when they have no intrinsic or extrinsic rewards.
True
Opportunities for children's creative expression should permeate the entire curriculum.
True
Opportunities for drama belong everywhere in the early childhood curriculum.
True
Pantomime is valuable for children who are shy, have speech or hearing problems, or are non-English speaking.
True
Play scales provide numerical information on cognitive and social dimensions of play.
True
Portfolios reveal and document children's learning in many different modes, on real world tasks, over an extended period of time.
True
Reflective practice is necessary for novice teachers and experienced teachers.
True
Room arrangement is a powerful tool in fostering a quality classroom environment.
True
Safety, storage, and equipment should be the primary considerations when planning a high quality outdoor play environment.
True
School curriculum should encourage autonomy.
True
Story drama, informal drama, and dramatic play help develop children's self- confidence.
True
The aesthetic appeal of the classroom is important to the teaching climate.
True
The human brain is exceptionally effective at perceiving and processing patterns.
True
The most appropriate drama activities for early childhood are unrehearsed, informal, and process-oriented.
True
Time affects the complexity of children's creative processes and play.
True
Transitions refer to the move from one experience or activity into the next.
True
When inviting materials are readily available, teachers are more likely to put them to use in their classrooms.
True
Children learn best in structured, institutional-type climates where the teacher maintains control through verbal commands.
False
Children should not be asked for input when a teacher is creating a new learning center.
False
Children should not make decisions regarding their portfolio; such decisions should be left up to the teacher.
False
Children with special needs should be encouraged to engage in separate activities.
False
"Whole child" practices of education are not in-line with neuroscience research.
False
A child who performs a task earlier before most of her peers should be considered "advanced" even if she produces a stereotype.
False
A good observer relies on high inference methods to understand a child's behavior.
False
Adventure or "junk" playgrounds are very popular in the United States.
False
All states in the United States have plans for systematic gifted education.
False
All structure, challenge, and assessment hinders a child's creativity.
False
Assessment should not focus on progress and effort because products are the only legitimate aspects of assessment.
False
At its best, creativity is a form of elitism, a way of making a few select individuals more refined, cultured, or better than the rest.
False
Bodily/kinesthetic intelligence uses the "minds eye" to see relationships.
False
Centers are not appropriate for all ages or for children with special needs.
False
Creativity is eroded, rather than strengthened, as children mature and gain additional experience in schools.
True
A creative environment emphasizes learning rather than teaching.
True
A creative product consists of recombining elements of what already exists in unique ways.
True
A rubric is a particular type of rating scale that specifies the level of performance and links it to a grade.
True
According to researchers, approximately one-half of the child's critical brain development occurs before kindergarten.
True
An intermediate student's creativity journal may be used to assess his/her creative growth.
True
Assessment is an ongoing process rather than a single paper and pencil test.
True
Assessment of processes as well as content skills are important.
True
Assessment should be directly linked to the objectives of the instruction.
True
Carefully planned and supervised environments encourage self-expression and natural curiosity.
True
Children can and should help plan and create theme corners.
True
Children need an un-disturbed space to do their creative work.
True
Children should not be punished when ideas fail.
True
Children's portfolios should not include every item ever produced by the child during the course of the year. Rather, they should be focused and organized by learning goals.
True
Creative drama is a learning tool for all children.
True
Creative processes and products are multidimensional and complex.
True
Creative thinking and artwork require real-life contexts to be valid.
True
Creative thinking and children's art are poorly understood by teachers.
True
Creative thinking for teachers is more than dreaming up interesting lesson plans.
True
Creative thought and artwork are not adequately assessed by standardized tests.
True