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Child Development: An Overview for MDTs

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Title: Child Development: An Overview for MDTs


1
Child Development An Overview for MDTs
  • Alicia Benedetto, Ph.D.
  • Licensed Clinical Psychologist
  • Assessment Resource Center (ARC)
  • Columbia, SC

2
There are two infancies
  • Infancy of childhood
  • Infancy of adulthood
  • We will review benchmarks of development from 2 ½
    - 18 years
  • Physical
  • Linguistic
  • Cognitive
  • Social / Emotional
  • Sexual

3
TODDLERS
4
Toddler 18 months3 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Gross Motor
  • clumsy runner at 18 months
  • runs fairly well at two years (wide stance)
  • jumps with both feet by 30 months
  • can stand on one foot by 3 years
  • rides a tricycle at 3

5
Toddler 18 months3 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Fine Motor
  • progressive skills such as page-turning
  • stacking and lining
  • feeding self
  • dressing self

6
Toddler 18 months3 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Receptive language superior to expressive
    language
  • Knows 300 words at 2 1,000 at 3
  • Egocentric assumes you know what (s)he knows
  • Concrete

7
Toddler 18 months3 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Focuses on one central aspect of a situation
  • Cant classify / order (stronger, taller, first)
  • Symbolic representation complex play
  • Lacks symbolic representation of self
  • Concept of gender identity, but not fixed

8
Toddler 18 months3 yearsSocial Emotional
Development
  • Seeks adult approval
  • Separation from caregiver is difficult,
    especially in novel settings
  • Asserts more independence concept of I
  • Displays affection

9
Toddler 18 months3 yearsGenital/Sexual Behavior
  • Interested in potty behavior
  • Touches / rubs own genitals (exploratory)
  • Imitative play (doctor, parent)
  • Watches / pokes
  • Touches breasts
  • Uninhibited

10
Toddler 18 months3 yearsAssessment
Considerations
  • Able to separate from caregiver?
  • Verbal? How verbal?
  • Intelligible?
  • Attention span?
  • What activities will be rapport-building?
  • What media will / wont be useful?

11
Toddler 18 months3 yearsInterview Issues
  • Hewitts Stage 1 interview
  • Actions and words give clues to possible abuse,
    but emphasis on the assessor to anchor and
    structure this information within the childs
    status and history

12
PRE-SCHOOLERS
13
Preschool 3-4 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Gross Motor
  • as balance improves, skills improve
  • tricycle riding
  • jumping with both feet from elevations
  • alternate footing up, then down stairs
  • dancing
  • skipping
  • throwing overhand and catching

14
Preschool 3-4 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Fine Motor
  • drawing improves circle, cross, face at 3
  • to square, tracing, and stick figure at 4
  • begins to use scissors
  • may lace shoes, but cant tie them

15
Preschool 34 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Gets prepositions, works on colors and counting
  • Superficial, erroneous causal links
  • Cant shift perspective
  • Fantasy/reality blurred
  • Egocentric
  • Basic concept of right/wrong, works on truth/lie

16
Preschool 34 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Poor source monitoring / source attribution
  • Begins to classify, still faulty
  • Time poorly understood
  • Symbolic representation of self emerges between
    3 and 4
  • Can remember events for years

17
Preschool 34 years Social Emotional
Development
  • Responds well to praise encouragement
  • Sees family as central
  • All or nothing feelings / opinions
  • Identifies with parents and likes to imitate
    them
  • Tends to be protective of parents

18
Preschool 34 years Social Emotional
Development
  • Growing social network, more relationships
  • Displays independence
  • World view is applied modified
  • Gender identity grows in importance
  • More suggestible than other people

19
Preschool 34 years Genital/Sexual Behavior
  • Touches/rubs own genitals (specific)
  • Watches/asks about body functions
  • Still touches breasts
  • Disinhibited/inhibited
  • Mimics / plays house
  • Kissing / holding hands
  • Private parts are serious . . . and funny

20
Preschool 3-4 yearsAssessment Considerations
  • Will separation from caregiver be an issue?
  • Narrative ability?
  • Attention span?
  • How assertive / compliant?
  • Competency?
  • Representational Shift?
  • What techniques can I employ?

21
Preschool 34 years Interview Issues
  • Hewitts Stage 2 interview for 3 - 4 year
    olds
  • Period of transitioning skills. Carefully
    evaluate the current status of these childrens
    capabilities to ensure that the best match
    between interview style and the skills of the
    child is offered.

22
EARLY SCHOOL
23
Early School 5 - 6 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Motor
  • more coordinated (skips, hops, throws, catches,
    skates)
  • balances on alternate feet with eyes closed
  • more dexterous
  • drawing, painting
  • tying shoe laces
  • vision reaches maturity

24
Early School 56 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Gender identity is made permanent (4-5)
  • Gets colors, counting
  • Better with classifying/hierarchies
  • Still egocentric

25
Early School 56 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Superficial, erroneous causal links
  • Symbolic representation of self
  • Complex symbolic play
  • Gets truth/lie wants to play by the rules

26
Early School 56 yearsLanguage Cognitive
Development
  • Improved source monitoring / source attribution
  • Fantasy/reality less blurred
  • Time still poorly understood

27
Early School 56 years Social Emotional
Development
  • Responds well to praise encouragement
  • Sees family as central
  • Identifies with parents and likes to imitate
    them
  • Tends to be protective of parents

28
Early School 56 years Social Emotional
Development
  • Wider social network, more relationships
  • Displays independence
  • World view is applied modified
  • All or nothing feelings

29
Early School 56 years Genital/Sexual Behavior
  • Touches / rubs own genitals (specific)
  • Watches / asks
  • Uninhibited / inhibited
  • Mimics / plays house
  • Kissing / holding hands
  • Private parts are still serious and funny

30
Early School 56 years Assessment Considerations
  • Source monitoring?
  • Narrative ability?
  • Sequencing ability?
  • What techniques / media can I employ?

31
Early School 56 yearsInterview Issues
  • Hewitts Stage 3" interview for 5-6 year olds
  • Most of these children are able to respond to
    standardized interview formats however, there
    are still important interview abilities they do
    not possess (e.g., time)

32
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
33
Elementary School 7 - 11 yearsPhysical Skills
  • Working on mastery through practice
  • Lots of energy
  • Movements become more fluid
  • Limber (bones grow faster than ligaments)

34
Elementary School 711 yearsLanguage
Cognitive Development
  • Understands expresses more abstract concepts
  • Able to separate fantasy from reality
  • Strong likes / dislikes opinionated
  • Self-view more important

35
Elementary School 7 - 11 years Language
Cognitive Development
  • Much moral development
  • Comprehends complex relationships
  • Improved sequencing of events
  • Sense of time improves, but still is problematic

36
Elementary School 7 - 11years Social
Emotional Development
  • Independence / dependence
  • Teachers / peers gain importance
  • Strong sense of fairness
  • Family important, but conflicts emerge between
    family peer values
  • Can express mixed emotions

37
Elementary School 7 - 11 years Genital/Sexual
Behavior
  • Masturbates with hand
  • Looks at nude pictures
  • Repulsed by/interested in opposite sex
  • Exhibition/inhibition
  • Tries to look at people undressing
  • May still undress in front of care givers
  • Kissing/dating

38
Elementary School 7-11 yearsAssessment
Considerations
  • External barriers to disclosure?
  • Internal barriers to disclosure?
  • What techniques can I employ?

39
ADOLESCENCE
40
Physical Development The new equipments here!
  • Rapid body changes
  • Secondary sex characteristics
  • Girls
  • growth spurt peaks 13 15 years
  • breasts / hips grow for several more years
  • Boys
  • growth spurt peaks 16 19

41
Cognitive Development
  • Thinking becomes more self-conscious, idealistic,
    and critical
  • Able to reason, generalize, form hypotheses and
    test them
  • Events can be viewed from many perspectives
  • By 14, decision-making process is same as for
    adults
  • So why do they make so many bad decisions?

42
Cognitive Development
  • Dont consider all the consequences of words or
    acts
  • Limited life experience
  • Brain still under construction
  • Frontal / Prefrontal lobes responsible for
    reasoning goal and priority setting impulse
    inhibition emotional control determining
    right from wrong determining cause and effect
    relationships

43
Cognitive Development
  • Frontal / Prefrontal lobes still under
    construction until 20 - something
  • Pruning
  • Myelination
  • Adolescents rely on emotional decision-making
    driven by another part of the brain (amygdala)
  • Reactive (juvenile) vs. Reflective (adult)

44
Cognitive Development
  • Later Adolescence (16 19)
  • Symbolic reasoning and use of formal logic
    improves
  • Fluid intelligence is reached by the end of
    this period ability to cope with new problems
    and situations

45
Language Development
  • Can often communicate like an adult
  • May not ask for clarification or disclose when
    (s)he doesnt understand language
  • Slang may have more meaning than formal language
  • Trouble with double negatives
  • Lose track of long, complex questions

46
Social / Emotional Development These are heady
times
  • Identity issues
  • Idealistic about relationships, values
  • Concerned with meaningful interpersonal
    relationships
  • Feels misunderstood
  • Rapid mood changes

47
Social / Emotional Development
  • Often doesnt trust adults strong sense of peer
    identity
  • Concerned with personal morality code over social
    morality code
  • Friendships have greater emphasis on intimacy and
    loyalty
  • Concerned with the present

48
Social / Emotional Development
  • Early Adolescence (13 15)
  • Conformity to peer pressure
  • Independence v. dependence
  • Challenging authority
  • Increase in parent-child conflicts
  • Later Adolescence (16 -19)
  • Cliques / peer pressure decline in importance
  • Increased assertiveness / launching
  • Continued conflict with parents
  • Internalization of external rules

49
Risk-Taking
  • Natural part of identity development,
    individuation
  • Early adolescence is a time of particular
    vulnerability

50
Sexual Behavior
  • Masturbation becomes goal-directed
  • Full range of sexual behavior / experimentation
    possible
  • Ambivalence / discomfort with body
  • Preoccupied with sexual issues
  • Sexual orientation issues come to forefront

51
Sexual Behavior 12-14 year olds
  • 19 are sexually active
  • 13-15 of the girls become pregnant
  • 13 of the girls describe the sex as involuntary
  • 24 of the relationships involve a partner two or
    more years older
  • 12 involve a partner three or more years older

52
Sexual Behavior 12-14 year olds
  • Sexual activity highly correlated with AD,
    engaging in other delinquent acts
  • Parents say they are talking to their kids about
    sex a lot more than the kids say that they are
  • 34 of boys think its okay to pressure girls for
    sex
  • 14 of girls think its okay to be pressured

53
Teens and Sex
  • Nearly 1 in 10 kids lose virginity by 13.
  • 1 in 4 sexually active teens will contract an
    STD.
  • 20 of sexually active girls 15 to 19 get
    pregnant each year.
  • 1/2 of teens 13-19 have had oral sex.
  • U.S. News World Report, May 27, 2002

54
Teens and Sex
  • 16 of high school sophomores have had 4 or more
    sexual partners.
  • 2/3 of teens are sexually active by the end of
    high school.
  • U.S. News World Report, May 27, 2002

55
We didnt have sex.
  • Adolescents may maintaining technical virginity
  • But they still may engage in
  • oral sex
  • anal sex
  • U.S. News World Report, May 27, 2002

56
Quotable
  • We do not interview children we interview one
    child at a time.
  • Anne Graffam Walker
  • When I was a boy of fourteen, my father was so
    ignorant I could hardly stand to have him
    around. But when I got to be twenty-one, I was
    astonished at how much he had learned in seven
    years.
  • Mark Twain

57
  • This presentation was originally prepared and
    presented by Allison DeFelice, Ph.D. of the
    Assessment Resource Center (ARC) in Columbia,
    S.C.
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