AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN AND
ADOLESCENTS – OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT
2026–2027 | COMPLETE STUDY GUIDE |
VERIFIED PRACTICE QUESTIONS, ANSWERS
& DETAILED SOLUTIONS | LATEST UPDATED
OA EXAM PREP
WGU D094 EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN
AND ADOLESCENTS
OBJECTIVE ASSESSMENT 2026–2027 | COMPLETE STUDY GUIDE
VERIFIED PRACTICE QUESTIONS, ANSWERS & DETAILED SOLUTIONS
• This comprehensive study guide contains verified practice questions aligned
with WGU D094 exam standards, designed to test your mastery across all
major topic domains of educational psychology and child/adolescent
development.
• Study strategically by working through questions section by section,
reviewing EXPERT RATIONALE carefully to deepen understanding, and using
this material to identify knowledge gaps before your official assessment.
QUESTIONS
1. According to Jean Piaget's theory, a child who can understand that objects
continue to exist even when they are out of sight has developed which of the
following cognitive abilities?
A) Conservation
B) Object permanence
C) Egocentrism
,D) Centration
E) Reversibility
CORRECT ANSWER: B) Object permanence
EXPERT RATIONALE: Object permanence is the cognitive ability that develops
during the sensorimotor stage (0-2 years) of Piaget's theory. It refers to the
understanding that objects exist independently and continue to exist even when
they are no longer visible or out of the child's immediate perception. This is a
fundamental cognitive achievement that marks the transition from purely reflexive
behavior to symbolic thinking. Conservation, centration, and reversibility are other
Piagetian concepts but develop later. Egocentrism refers to viewing the world only
from one's own perspective, which also develops later.
2. Which of the following theorists emphasized the importance of the "Zone of
Proximal Development" in learning?
A) B.F. Skinner
B) Albert Bandura
C) Lev Vygotsky
D) Lawrence Kohlberg
E) Carol Dweck
CORRECT ANSWER: C) Lev Vygotsky
EXPERT RATIONALE: Lev Vygotsky, a Soviet psychologist, introduced the concept of
the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD), which refers to the gap between what a
child can do independently and what they can do with adult guidance or in
collaboration with more capable peers. This concept is foundational in
understanding scaffolding and social constructivism. Vygotsky believed that
learning is fundamentally a social process. While other theorists made important
contributions to educational psychology, Vygotsky is specifically credited with the
ZPD concept.
,3. A teenager who is developing a sense of personal identity while questioning
authority represents which stage of Erik Erikson's psychosocial development
theory?
A) Identity vs. Role Confusion
B) Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
C) Industry vs. Inferiority
D) Intimacy vs. Isolation
E) Ego Integrity vs. Despair
CORRECT ANSWER: A) Identity vs. Role Confusion
EXPERT RATIONALE: According to Erikson's theory, the Identity vs. Role Confusion
stage occurs during adolescence (approximately ages 12-18). During this stage,
adolescents explore who they are, develop their own value system, and establish a
personal identity. Questioning authority and experimenting with different roles and
ideas are typical behaviors during this stage. Successfully navigating this stage leads
to a coherent sense of self, while failure results in role confusion and uncertainty
about one's place in society.
4. Which cognitive ability allows a child to understand that the same amount
of liquid appears different in containers of different shapes?
A) Reversibility
B) Seriation
C) Conservation
D) Classification
E) Centration
CORRECT ANSWER: C) Conservation
, EXPERT RATIONALE: Conservation is the cognitive ability that develops during
Piaget's concrete operational stage (7-11 years). It refers to understanding that the
quantity, volume, or amount of something remains the same even when its
appearance or shape changes. A classic example is pouring liquid from one
container to another—a child who understands conservation knows the amount of
liquid hasn't changed, even though it looks different in the new container.
Reversibility and centration are related concepts, but conservation specifically
refers to understanding invariance despite perceptual changes.
5. A teacher uses praise and positive reinforcement to increase a student's
on-task behavior. Which learning theory best explains this approach?
A) Social Cognitive Theory
B) Operant Conditioning
C) Classical Conditioning
D) Observational Learning
E) Constructivism
CORRECT ANSWER: B) Operant Conditioning
EXPERT RATIONALE: Operant conditioning, developed by B.F. Skinner, is based on
the principle that behavior followed by positive consequences is more likely to be
repeated. Positive reinforcement (adding something desirable after a behavior)
strengthens the behavior. In this scenario, the teacher's use of praise as a positive
reinforcer following on-task behavior is a direct application of operant conditioning
principles. While social cognitive theory also involves reinforcement, it incorporates
observational learning and self-efficacy as well. Classical conditioning involves
reflexive responses to stimuli, not voluntary behavior like on-task performance.
6. Which of the following best describes attachment in infancy?
A) The infant's ability to recognize their primary caregiver