Title: Human Growth and Development
1Human Growth andDevelopment
- Chapter Ten
- The Play Years
- Psychosocial Development
PowerPoints prepared by Cathie Robertson,
Grossmont College Revised by Jenni Fauchier,
Metropolitan Community College
2Emotional Development
3Initiative vs. Guilt
- Eriksons 3rd Stage
- self-esteem emerges
- self-conceptunderstanding of the selfdevelops
- spontaneous play becomes goal directed
- attention span gets longer
- pride leads to concentration and persistence
- guilt is a negative consequence of this stage
4Emotional Regulation
- Ability to direct or change ones feelings
- externalizing problemsdifficulties arising from
childs tendency to externalize emotions outside
the self, lashing out in impulsive anger and
attacking other people or things - internalizing problemsdifficulties arising from
childs tendency to internalize emotions or
inhibit their expression, being fearful and
withdrawn
5Neurons and Nurture
- Emotional regulation part of brain function
- also learned through social awareness
- Genetic variations
- some people naturally more emotionally expressive
- Early stress
- result of damage during brain development either
prenatally or postnatally - via maternal drug use, illness, stress, or if
infant malnourished, injured, or frightened
6Neurons and Nurture, cont.
- Care History
- secure attachment easier emotional regulation
- parenting practices
- securely attached regulate emotions, show
empathy - insecurely attached respond abnormally to other
childrens distress - ability to modulate and direct emotion essential
to emotional intelligence
7Cognition and Emotions
- First step to emotional regulation awareness of
own emotions and the emotional response of others
8 - Emotional intelligenceGolemans term for the
understanding of how to interpret and express
emotions - develops throughout life, but crucial in early
childhood - amygdalaemotional hotspot in prefrontal cortex
of brain that children need to govern if they are
to become balanced and empathic adults - parents can use childrens natural attachment to
teach them how and when to express feelings
9Empathy and Antipathy
- Empathyunderstanding another persons emotions
- leads often to prosocial actions
- helping another without obvious benefit to
oneself - Antipathydisliking or hating someone else
- may lead to antisocial behavior
- injuring another person or destroying something
that belongs to another
10Empathy and Antipathy, cont.
- Sharing
- freely done or directed by others
- Aggression
- instrumentalused to obtain an object such as a
toy - reactiveinvolves retaliation for an act whether
or not it was intentional - relationdesigned to inflect psychic (mental)
pain - bullying aggressionunprovoked attack
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12Learning Social Skills Through Play
- Peersothers of the same age and status
- peers make the best playmates
- play is most adaptive and productive activity of
children
13Active Play
- Rough-and-tumble play
- helps child develop muscle strength and control
- caregivers should look for a play face when
attempting to figure out if child is playing or
fighting
14Imaginative Play
- Sociodramatic play
- helps child explore and rehearse social roles
he/she has seen - helps child test ability to convince others
- helps child regulate emotions through imagination
- helps child examine personal concerns in
nonthreatening way
15Baumrinds Three Styles of Parenting
- Baumrinds 4 important dimensions that influence
parenting - expression of warmth or nurturance
- strategies for discipline
- quality of communication
- expectations for maturity
16 - 3 Styles
- authoritarianhigh standards and expectations
with low nurturance - children likely to become conscientious,
obedient, and quietbut not happy - permissivelittle control, but nurturing
- children likely to lack self-control and are not
happy
17- authoritativelimits and guidance provided but
willing to compromise - children are more likely to be successful,
articulate, intelligent, and happy
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19 - Recent studies have found link between parenting
styles and child behavior less direct than
Baumrinds original research indicated - impact of childs temperament
- influence of community and cultural differences
on childs perception of parenting - in poor or minority families, authoritarian
parenting tends to be used to produce
high-achieving, emotionally regulated children
strict and warm can be successful
20Punishment
- Discipline an integral part of parenting
21Techniques of Discipline
- Culture is a strong influence
- expectations
- offenses
- punishments
- In United States
- time-out is used
- child stops all activity and sits in corner or
stays inside for a few minutes
22 Techniques of Discipline, cont.
- In deciding which technique to apply, parents
should ask How does technique relate to child? - childs temperament, age, and perceptions crucial
considerations
23What About Spanking?
- Reasons for parenting variations
- culture, religion, ethnicity, national origin
- parents own upbringing
- Developmentalists fear children who are
physically punished will learn to be more
aggressive - domestic violence of any kind can increase
aggression between peers and within families
24The Challenge of Video
- Dilemma for parents about letting children watch
television and play video games - parents find video a good babysitter
- parents believe video can sometimes be
educational tool - Experts suggest parents turn off the TV to avoid
exposing children to video violence
25The Evidence on Content
- Exposure to violence greatgood guys and bad guys
show violent behavior - All good guys male no non-white heroes
- Women/females portrayed as victims or adoring
friendsnot as leaders - Content of video games even worse than than that
of television - more violent, sexist, racist
26The Evidence on Content, cont.
- Children, especially males, who watched
educational television became teens who earned
higher grades, read more - Children, especially females, who watched violent
television had lower grades
27The Evidence on Content, cont.
- Content of video games crucial reason behind
great concern of developmental researchers - research shows that violent TV and video games
push children to be more violent than they
normally would be - computer games probably worse, as children are
doing the virtual killing
28The Evidence on Content, cont.
- Developmentalists look at the following to
evaluate poor content - perpetuation of sexist, ageist, and racist
stereotypes - depiction of violent solutions for every problem
and no expression of empathy - encouragement of quick, reactive, emotions rather
than thoughtful regulation of emotions
29Boy or Girl So What?
- Male or femaleimportant feature of self-concept
- Sex differencesbiological differences between
males and females - far less apparent than in adulthood
- Gender differencesculturally imposed differences
in roles and behaviors - more significant to children than to adults
30Development of Gender Awareness
- By age 2, awareness of gender-related
preferences and play patterns - By age 3, cognitive awareness of own gender
- By age 4, awareness of gender appropriate toys
or roles - By age 6, well-formed ideas and prejudices about
own sex and the other sex
31Theories of Gender Differences
- Psychoanalytic
- Freuds view sexual attraction to opposite-sex
parent - phallic stageaccording to Freud, 3rd stage of
psychosexual development occurring in early
childhood when penis becomes the focus of
psychological concern and physiological pleasure
32Theories of Gender Differences, cont.
- Oedipus complexaccording to Freud, occurring in
the phallic stage, in which boys have sexual
desire for their mothers and hostility towards
their fathers guilt and fear resolved by gender
appropriate behavior - Identification
- Superegopersonality part that is self-critical
and judgmental - Electra complexgirls understanding they cant
replace mother, so want to be like her
33Behaviorism
- Gender-appropriate behavior learned through
observation and imitation - Children learn gender-appropriate behavior by
modeling it after that of people they want to
imitate - Especially for young boys, conformity to gender
expectations rewarded, punished, modeled
34Cognitive Theory
- Gender typing occurs after concept of gender has
developed - Once gender consistently conceived, child
organizes world based on that understanding - Gender schema organizes the world in terms of
male and female - internal motivation to conform to gender-based
cultural standards and stereotypes guides
attention and behavior
35Sociocultural Theory
- Gender values strenuously kept
- Many traditional cultures emphasize gender
distinctions - To break through restrictiveness of cultural
expectations, some embrace the idea of
androgynya balance of male and female
psychological characteristics - true androgyny possible if supported by whole
culture
36Epigenetic Theory
- Every aspect of human behavior a mix of genetics
and environment - environment shapes, enhances, or halts genetic
impulses - Differences between male and female brains
- Environmental influences
37Conclusion Gender and Destiny
- 5 theories lead to 2 conclusions and 1 question
- Gender differences are not simply cultural or
learnedbiological foundation much greater than
originally suspected - Biology is not destinyenvironment and
experiences shape children