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Chapter 3, pp 50-68: Child Development Lectures 17

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Title: Chapter 3, pp 50-68: Child Development Lectures 17


1
Chapter 3, pp 50-68 Child DevelopmentLectures
17 18
2
Learning Outcomes
  • Explain prenatal development and the role that
    sex hormones play.
  • Explain the physical, cognitive, moral, social,
    and emotional development of children.

3
Learning Outcomes
  • Explain the physical, cognitive, moral, social
    and emotional development of adolescents.

4
Truth or Fiction?
  • Your heart started beating when you were only
    one-fifth of an inch long and weighed a fraction
    of an ounce.
  • Prior to 6 months or so of age, out of sight is
    literally out of mind.

5
Prenatal Development
6
1. Developmental Psychology Basic Issues and
Methodology
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Some study particular age group
  • Others - physical development, cognitive or
    language development, emotional or moral
    development.
  • Nurture or nature controversy
  • The best nurturing environment cannot produce
    Albert Einstein
  • Resilience, Vulnerability and protective factors
  • Longitudinal and cross-sectional studies

7
2. Prenatal Development
  • Three Stages Germinal stage, Embryonic stage,
    and Fetal
  • Germinal Stage (1 to 2 weeks)
  • Conception through implantation
  • Zygote divides rapidly and becomes implanted in
    the uterine wall
  • At the end of 2 weeks, zygote is the size of the
    period at the end of this sentence.

8
3. Prenatal Development
  • Embryonic Stage (3 to 8 weeks)
  • Major organ systems are formed
  • 4th week- a primitive heart begins to beat
  • Facial futures distinct, (embryo 1 inch long and
    1/30th to 1/7th of an ounce)
  • Genetic code (XX or XY) causes sex organs to
    differentiate
  • Y sex chromosome testes form and produce
    androgens

9
4. Prenatal Development
  • Embryonic Stage
  • Embryo is suspended in amniotic sac w/fluid
  • Nutrients and wastes are exchanged with mother
    through placenta
  • Embryo is connected to placenta by umbilical cord

10
12 weeks/ the end of first trimester
  • Fetal Stage (9 weeks to birth 38 weeks)
  • Characterized by maturation and gains in size
  • Rapid growth and further development of the body
    structures, organs, and systems.
  • By the end of 3rd month fingers and toes are
    formed
  • In the middle of 4th month, the mother detects
    the first fetal movements
  • The fetus opens and shuts its eyes, sucks its
    thumb, alternates between periods of being awake
    and sleeping, and responds to light and sound
    (25th week)

11
5. Prenatal Development
  • Fetal Stage (9 weeks to birth 38 weeks)
  • Characterized by maturation and gains in size
  • Rapid growth and further development of the body
    structures, organs, and systems.
  • By the end of 3rd month fingers and toes are
    formed
  • In the middle of 4th month, the mother detects
    the first fetal movements
  • The fetus opens and shuts its eyes, sucks its
    thumb, alternates between periods of being awake
    and sleeping, and responds to light and sound
    (25th week)

12
6. Negative Influences on Prenatal Development
  • Maternal Diseases/Conditions
  • Diabetes-growth abnormalities
  • Rubella-heart defects, blindness, deafness
  • Herpes-nerve damage transmitted to fetus
  • HIV-transmitted to fetus
  • Chicken pox- scars, eye damage
  • Drugs
  • Alcohol- Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
  • Cocaine- prematurity, physical defects, sleep
    diff.
  • Marijuana-tremors

13
Childhood
14
7. Physical Development
  • Reflexes
  • Inborn, unlearned, automatic responses elicited
    by specific stimuli
  • Rooting and sucking, withdrawal, blinking,
    grasping
  • Video CD1 14
  • Motor Development
  • Brain maturation and environmental factors

15
M.D.
16
8. Physical Development
  • Perceptual Development
  • Within days, infant can track moving light
  • 2-month prefer human face as visual stimuli
  • Fixation time measure of visual preference
  • Perceive depth about time begin crawling
  • Visual cliff experiments (Gibson and Walk (1960))

17
Two-Month-Olds Preferences for Visual Stimuli
18
9. Physical Development
  • Perceptual Development
  • Newborns hear normally prefer mothers voice
  • Show no preference for fathers voice

19
Newborns and Infants Sensation and Perception
PLAY VIDEO
20
10. Attachment
  • Emotional tie formed between infant and caregiver
  • Failure to develop attachment seriously
    compromises later development
  • Why? Harry Harlow experiments (videos 12 A,B,C,)
  • Mary Salter Ainsworth
  • Behavior that defines attachment
  • Attempts to maintain contact
  • Anxiety when separated
  • Stranger anxiety

21
11. Attachment
  • Strange Situation
  • Method to assess infants response to separations
    and reunions with caregivers and a stranger
  • Three Types of Attachment
  • Secure attachment
  • Avoidant attachment
  • Ambivalent/resistant attachment

22
12. Stages of Attachment
  • Initially infants show indiscriminate attachment
  • Beginning about 4 months of age
  • Initial-preattachment phase, indiscriminate
  • Attachment-in-the-making phase
  • Clear-cut-attachment phase
  • Fear of strangers 8 to 10 months

23
13. Theoretical Views of Attachment
  • Behaviorists viewed attachment as learned
    behavior based on caregivers attention
  • Harry F. Harlow
  • Inborn need for contact comfort

24
14. Theoretical Views of Attachment
  • Konrad Lorenz (1981)
  • Ethologist attachment is an instinct
  • Critical period
  • Imprinting
  • Ainsworth and Bowlby
  • Attachment is instinctive in humans

25
15. Cognitive Development
  • The way in which children mentally represent and
    think about the world
  • Jean Piaget Cognitive-development theory
  • Lev Vygotsky Sociocultural theory
  • Lawrence Kohlberg Theory of moral development

26
16. Piagets Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Schema
  • Mental structure in organizing knowledge
  • Assimilation
  • Respond to new stimuli through existing habit
  • Accommodation
  • Create new ways of responding to objects

27
17. Stages of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Sensorimotor, Preoperational, Concrete
    Operational, Formal Operational Stages
  • Sensorimotor Stage
  • Object Permanence
  • Before 6 months of age does not mentally
    represent objects

28
Object Permanence
PLAY VIDEO
29
18. Stages of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Preoperational Stage (approx. from 2 to 7 y.o.)
  • Use words and symbols to represent objects and
    relationships among them
  • Think one dimensionally, reversibility is not
    understood
  • Egocentrism
  • Animism
  • Artificialism
  • Conservation is absent (play video)
  • Objective Responsibility

30
13. Stages of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Preoperational Stage (approx. from 2 to 7 y.o.)
  • Use words and symbols to represent objects and
    relationships among them
  • Think one dimensionally
  • Egocentrism
  • Animism
  • Artificialism
  • Conservation
  • Objective Responsibility

31
Piagets Conservation Experiment
PLAY VIDEO
32
19. Stages of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Concrete Operational Stage (7 to 12 )
  • Beginning of capacity for adult logic around
    tangible objects, but not abstract ideas.
  • Decentration (Video)
  • Reversibility
  • Subjective Moral Judgment

33
Piagets Concrete Operational Stage
PLAY VIDEO
34
20. Evaluation of Piagets Theory
  • Piaget tended to underestimate childrens
    abilities
  • Egocentrism and conservation appear to be more
    continuous than Piaget thought
  • Developmental sequences do not vary

35
21. Lev Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • Continuous theory focused on influence of culture
    and childrens interactions with elders
  • Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
  • Scaffolding
  • Children internalize explanations that encourage
    skill development

36
22. Lawrence Kohlbergs Theory of Moral
Development
  • Use of moral dilemma story to explore reasoning
    of right and wrong
  • Stage theory with a specific sequence

37
23. Lawrence Kohlbergs Theory of Moral
Development
  • Preconventional Level
  • Base judgment on consequences of behavior
  • Stage 1 Obedience and avoid punishment
  • Stage 2 Good behavior allows people to satisfy
    their needs

38
24. Lawrence Kohlbergs Theory of Moral
Development
  • Conventional Level
  • Base judgment on conformity to conventional
    standards of right and wrong
  • Stage 3 Good-boy orientation
  • Stage 4 Judgments are based on rules that
    maintain social order

39
25. Lawrence Kohlbergs Theory of Moral
Development
  • Postconventional Level-moral conduct id under
    internal control
  • Stage 5 respect for individual rights and laws
    that are democratically agreed on. Rational
    valuing of the wishes of the majority and general
    welfare. Society is best served if the citizen
    obey the law.
  • Stage 6 The morality of universal ethical
    principles. The person acts according to internal
    standards, independent of legal restrictions or
    options of others.

40
26. Evaluation of Kohlbergs Theory of Moral
Development
  • Research suggests moral reasoning does follow a
    sequence
  • Most people do not reach postconventional level
    (consistent with formal operational thought)
  • Kohlberg underestimated the influence of social
    institutions and parents

41
27. Erik Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial
Development (Lifespan)
  • Eight stages that represent life crises
  • Trust versus Mistrust (birth to 1 year)
  • Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt (1-3)
  • Industry versus Inferiority (6 to puberty)
  • Identity versus Role Confusion (adolescence)
  • Intimacy vs. Isolation (young adulthood 20s-30s)
  • Generativity vs. Stagnation (middle adulthood)
  • Ego Integrity vs. Despair (late adulthood)

42
28. Parenting Styles
  • Diana Baumrinds styles of parenting
  • Connection between parental behavior and
    development of instrumental competence
  • Four aspects of parental behavior
  • Strictness
  • Demands for child to achieve intellectual,
    emotional and social maturity
  • Communication ability
  • Warmth and involvement

43
29. Parenting Styles
  • Diana Baumrinds styles of parenting
  • Authoritative
  • Authoritarian
  • Permissive
  • Uninvolved

44
Adolescence
45
30. Physical Development
  • Growth spurt
  • Puberty is the period when the body becomes
    sexually mature
  • Begins with appearance of secondary sex
    characteristics (body hair, change voice in male,
    testosterone, estrogen - rounding of the breasts
    and hips in female,)
  • Menarche
  • Usually occurs between 11 and 14
  • Timing of puberty influence self-esteem, body
    image, confidence, but sometimes negative
    consequences

46
31. Cognitive Development
  • Piagets Formal Operations Stage
  • Classification, logical thought, ability to
    hypothesis
  • Abstract thinking
  • Able to deal with hypothetical situations
  • Metamemory
  • Effective learners
  • Adolescent Egocentrism
  • Imaginary Audience
  • Personal Fable

47
Abstraction and Hypothetical Propositions
PLAY VIDEO
48
32. Moral Reasoning
  • Kohlbergs Postconventional Level
  • Many people do not reach this level
  • Judgment is based on persons own moral standards
  • Stage 5 Laws are made to preserve order but
    exceptions can occur
  • Stage 6 Adherence to universal ethical
    principles

49
33. Sex Differences and Moral Reasoning
  • Kohlbergs theory shows higher levels of moral
    reasoning in boys
  • Carol Gilligan argues difference is result of
    socialization
  • Girls make judgments based on needs of others
  • Boys make judgments based on logic

50
34. Social and Emotional Development
  • Independence is the challenge of adolescence
  • Eriksons Psychosocial Development
  • Ego Identity versus Role Diffusion
  • Adolescent Sexuality
  • Before1960s-societal influence- no sex before
    marriage
  • Now about 50 of American teens engage in sexual
    intercourse
  • 25 had 4 or more partners before they are
    seniors

51
Beyond the Book
Slides to help expand your lectures
52
Is Development Continuous or Discontinuous?
  • Continuous gradual changes
  • Behaviorists and learning theorists
  • Discontinuous changes in stages
  • Freud and Piaget

53
Child Abuse
  • Factors that contribute to child abuse
  • Stress
  • History of child abuse in at least one of
    parents families of origin
  • Acceptance of violence as coping mechanism
  • Failure to attach with children
  • Substance abuse
  • Rigid attitudes toward child raising
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