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Prologue to Chapter 9

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Prologue to Chapter 9 Developmental psychology Questions addressed include: How do we change over time? Are children different from adults in how they think? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prologue to Chapter 9


1
Prologue to Chapter 9
  • Developmental psychology
  • Questions addressed include
  • How do we change over time?
  • Are children different from adults in how they
    think?
  • How do children become thinking, reasoning
    adults?
  • Do we change or stay the same as we age?

2
Basic Processes of Development
3
Basic Processes of Development
  • Nature or nurture?
  • which is more important concerning our
    development
  • current thinking is that both are important and
    that both influence our actions, thoughts, and
    feelings as we develop over time

4
Basic Processes of Development
  • Maturation
  • in the study of development, maturation is the
    most important factor to consider
  • maturation is a progressive unfolding by
    schedule
  • you will begin to walk at a certain age range,
    begin to talk at another age range, etc.

5
Early experience and critical periods
6
Early Experience/Critical Periods
  • Imprinting (Konrad Lorenz) a form of early
    learning that occurs in some animals during a
    critical period in their development
  • Early social deprivation
  • has long lasting detrimental effects on animal
    (Harry Harlows research)
  • psychologists disagree on some of the effects of
    early social dep. in humans

7
Early Experience/Critical Periods
  • The Battered-Child Syndrome
  • identified in the early 1960s
  • child abuse can pass from one generation to the
    next
  • approximately 15 of child abusers do not change
    their ways even with social service and court
    intervention
  • approximately 2,000 children killed annually as a
    result of child abuse

8
Variations in Development
  • Different children develop at different rates
  • The same child will vary in rate of their own
    development at different times in their life
  • Understanding the variance and range of
    developmental rates is important to developmental
    psychologists

9
Stage theories of development
  • Do we develop in stages or not? Are we like oak
    trees or butterflies in our development?
  • is our development continuuous or discontinuuous?
  • There are a number of various stage theorists
    in study of developmental psychology

10
Stage Theories
11
Piagets stage theory of cognitive development
  • Piagets interest was in identifying particular
    eras (stages) of cognitive style (development)
    in humans
  • He distinguished 4 stages they are
  • sensiomotor stage 0-2 years
  • preoperational stage 3-6 years
  • concrete operations stage 7-11 years
  • formal operations stage 12 years

12
Stage theories of moral development
  • There are 2 theorists concerned with
    identification of stages of moral development in
    humans
  • Kohlbergs theory of moral development
  • Gilligans theory of moral development
  • Theories of moral development concern how does
    one learn to do the right thing in society

13
Kohlbergs theory
  • Kohlbergs theory of moral development includes 3
    general phases (stages) of morality that persons
    can develop. They are
  • the premoral level of morality
  • the conventional level of morality
  • the principled level of morality
  • Why do you do the right thing?

14
Gilligans theory
  • Gilligans theory of moral development includes 3
    general phases (stages) which humans can develop.
    They are
  • morality as individual sacrifice
  • morality as self-sacrifice
  • morality as equality
  • Gilligans theory is often considered to be a
    feminist view of moral development.

15
Personality Development
16
Erik Eriksons Theory
  • Eriksons stage theory of personality development
  • there are eight (8) stages of development
  • each stage has a crisis to be resolved that has
    a profound effect on how a persons personality
    will develop in the long term
  • these stages start at birth and go to old age

17
Erik Eriksons Theory
  • The 8 stages are
  • basic trust vs mistrust 0-1 years
  • autonomy vs shame/doubt 1-3 years
  • initiative vs guilt 3-5 years
  • industry vs inferiority 5-11 years
  • identity vs role confusion 11-18 years
  • intimacy vs isolation 18-40 years
  • generativity vs stagnation 40-65 years
  • integrity vs despair 65 years

18
  • Development in Infancy and Childhood

19
Development in infancy and childhood
  • The neonatal period the newborns first two (2)
    weeks
  • Physical development
  • the neonate is weak and dependent
  • the neonate has a repetoire of adaptive reflexive
    behaviors, e.g., rooting reflex, TNR, sucking
    reflex, palmer grasp, etc.
  • there are about 20 different reflexive behaviors
    that the neonate has to assist the child in its
    entry into the world these often disappear by
    the time the child is 6 months old

20
The Neonate
  • Cognitive development
  • neonates can imitate facial expressions fairly
    soon
  • neonates have some memory for visual forms
  • they prefer to look at contrasts
  • they prefer order to disorder
  • they prefer to look at patterns
  • they prefer to look at human faces

21
The Neonate
  • Emotional and social development of the neonate
  • five (5) emotional states can be distinguished in
    the neonate. These states are
  • surprise
  • happiness
  • discomfort
  • distress
  • interest

22
Infancy 2 weeks to 2 years
  • Physical development in infants is more rapid in
    the first year of life than at any other time in
    a persons life
  • Cognitive development
  • according to Piaget, the child is in the
    sensiomotor period of cognitive development
  • the child moves from pure reflexive actions to
    coordination of sensations and motor movements

23
Infancy 2 weeks to 2 years
  • Cognitive development
  • at the end of the sensiomotor stage (about age
    2), the child develops, according to Piaget, full
    object permanence which signals their move into
    the next stage of cognitive development
  • at the beginning of infancy there is little if
    any object permanence but within 2 years full
    object permanence exists

24
Infancy 2 weeks to 2 years
  • Emotional and social development in infancy
  • infant develops a social smile at about 2
    months of age
  • develops separation anxiety at about 6-9 months
    of age
  • develops stranger anxiety at about 6-10 months
    of age
  • these anxieties peak around 14 months and
    gradually decline by about age 2

25
Early Childhood 2 to 7 years
26
Cognitive development
  • Cognitive development 2-7 years
  • According to Piaget, the child is now in the
    preoperational period of cognitive development
  • preoperational thinking is evident, e.g.,
    egocentricism, animism, and transductive
    reasoning are apparent

27
Emotional and social development
  • Emotional and social development 2-7 years
  • child progresses from solitary play to parallel
    play and finally to cooperative play
  • child incorporates others into his/her pretending
    and games become more rule-governed

28
Middle Childhood 7-11 years
29
Cognitive Development
  • Cognitive development 7-11 years
  • the child enters into the concrete operations
    period of thinking (according to Piagets stages)
  • the child develops reversibility and conservation

30
Emotional and social development
  • Emotional and social development 7-11 years
  • peers become increasingly more important during
    this time
  • school becomes increasingly important
  • childs early dependence on parents begins to
    lessen parents may have some difficulty
    accepting this change

31
Adulthood Young adulthood
through older adulthood
32
Cognitive development
  • Cognitive abilities improve, change, or decline
    during adulthood
  • Crystallized intelligence improves over time
    while fluid intelligence slowly wanes
  • Wisdom improves wisdom is the appropriate use of
    knowledge

33
Emotional and social development
  • Early adulthood Intimacy vs Isolation the
    challenge is to enter into committed, loving
    relationships that partially replace the bonds
    with parents
  • Middle adulthood Generativity vs stagnation the
    challenge is to find meaning in our work and
    family lives and to continue to be productive

34
Emotional and social development
  • Climacteric period beginning about age 45 when a
    loss of the capacity to sexually reproduce in
    women and a decline in the reproductivity
    capacity in men occurs
  • Later adulthood Integrity vs despair the
    challenge is to see a life with meaning and
    continued satisfaction

35
Causes of aging
  • Aging is partly a biological process but is a
    psychological process as well
  • Staying engaged in lifes activities and refusing
    to accept myths about aging are two keys to happy
    aging
  • Aging as a biological process may be genetically
    solved toward the end of your lifetime

36
Evaluation of stage theories of adulthood
  • Psychologists disagree as to whether the changes
    in adulthood can be thought of as a series or
    stages or just a continuation of a single process
  • This is a continuity vs discontinuity debate
    that often occurs in developmental psychology
  • What do you think?

37
Death and dying The final stage
38
Death and dying
  • According to Elizabeth Kubler-Ross, the stages in
    the acceptance of impending death are
  • denial
  • anger
  • bargaining
  • depression
  • acceptance

39
Death and dying
  • One step beyond?
  • what happens at the point of death?
  • what happens after death?
  • the near death experience and the commonalities
    in these reports
  • rushing down a tunnel which, at the end, has an
    intensely brilliant light
  • reports of seeing dead loved ones and experiences
    with angelic beings and/or God

40
Application of psychology Parenting
  • Parent and infant attachment
  • the securely-attached infant will
  • enjoy physical contact with parents and others
  • be comfortable in exploring different
    environments
  • be likely to be more intelligent than
    not-securely attached infants
  • be more psychologically healthy as a child
  • be more responsive to its environment

41
Application of psychology Parenting
  • The insecurely-attached infant will
  • cling excessively to the parent
  • become extremely upset when the parent leaves the
    child or a stranger appears in the childs
    environment
  • be less likely to freely explore its environment
    and, hence, be somewhat less intelligent than its
    securely-attached counterpart

42
Application of psychology Parenting
  • Parenting and discipline styles
  • authoritarian parenting
  • permissive parenting
  • authoritative parenting
  • Bi-directional effects in childrearing
  • parents behavior affects childrens behavior
  • childrens behavior affects parents behavior

43
Application of psychology Parenting
  • The myth of the perfect parent
  • there are no perfect parents
  • the most difficult job you will ever have and the
    job for which you are least prepared
  • children are resilient
  • honest, heart-felt committment expressed in
    loving behavior is a good start to being a good
    parent

44
Application of psychology Parenting
  • Day care, divorce, and parenting
  • Emotional attachments, bonding, trust, and
    resiliency
  • Dont divorce if at all possible
  • Watch your day care providers
  • adequate staff-to-child ratio?
  • adequate supervision?
  • can you drop in unannounced at any time for an
    inspection?

45
Questions?
  • Any questions over chapter 9?
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