A. parents’ age of death and will to live
B. Generativity and secure attachments
C. Optimism and openness to experience
D. Perceptions of ageing and will to live
Author: Lubaba Zarshal
A. Having grandchildren
B. Retirement
C. Social support
D. (a) and (b)
A. 60-year olds perform roughly the same as 20-year olds
B. 60-year olds perform better than 20-year olds
C. 60-year olds perform worse than 20-year olds
D. Research has not compared 60-years olds to 20-year olds
A. Period of turbulence and self-doubt are experienced by adults of most ages.
B. In large samples of middle-aged people, a minority of people report the experience of a mid-life crisis
C. Many middle-aged people report better mental health and self-esteem during this period of life than event before
D. None of the above
A. Unlike adolescence, it is clear where middle adulthood starts and ends.
B. During mid-life, people experience a range of external and internal physical changes.
C. One of the most noticeable changes for most middle-aged people is the conset of myopia.
D. All of the above
A. Manopause
B. Stagnation
C. Generativity
D. Presbyopia
A. Secure
B. Insecure
C. Avoidant
D. Anxious
A. Postformal reasoning
B. Absolutist reasoning
C. Relativist reasoning
D. Dialectical reasoning
A. Manual dexterity begins to reduce in the mid-thirties
B. Physical strength declines substantially compared to the late teens.
C. A decline in the perception of high-pitched tones is found by the late twenties.
D. The health status and perceptions of young adults are influenced by their own behavioural choices.
A. Adolescents tend to choose friends who have markedly different interests to their own.
B. Adolescents tend to choose friends who have similar interests to their own.
C. Adolescents invariably report that peer pressures have a major influence on their behaviour
D. Causation exists between friends behaviour and adolescents choices and actions.