Title: 4PS014 Developmental Psychology Lecture 1: Introduction
14PS014 Developmental PsychologyLecture 1
Introduction
- Steve Croker
- Room N205a
- Ext. 3047
- s.croker_at_derby.ac.uk
- http//psychology.derby.ac.uk/steve/devpsy1/
2Outline
- Assessment
- Coursework
- Exam
- Seminars
- Reading Lists
- Why study Developmental Psychology?
- Historical foundations of the study of
Developmental Psychology - Key issues in Developmental Psychology
- Key theories in Developmental Psychology
3Learning Outcomes
- Demonstrate an understanding of the main
theories, models and research in developmental
psychology and of specific phenomena relating to
development - Engage in independent enquiry of a specific
aspect of developmental psychology and evaluate
this in relation to theories, models and research
in development.
4Assessment
- 1 coursework project (50) - 1500 words
- Info on the coursework is on the web
- Deadline for coursework Friday 11th April, 4pm
- 1 essay based exam (50)
- Answer 2 questions from 6
5The Research Project Seminars
- Childrens language acquisition
- Lecture next week
- Seminars in weeks 2-5
- Seminars
- Every week at 10am/11am
- Weeks 1-3, 6-11 in Rooms N601 N603
- Weeks 4 5 in rooms B222 T013
- Group A surnames A-D N601/B222, 10am
- Group B surnames E-K N601/B222, 11am
- Group C surnames L-R N603/T013, 10am
- Group D surnames S-Z N603/T013, 11am
6Turnitin plagiarism detection
- www.submit.ac.uk
- Select sign up (or login with your existing
email/password) - Module ID 28204
- Module password cognition
- More details in programme handbook
- http//psychology.derby.ac.uk/steve/resources/tur
nitin.html
7Reading Lists
- Core Text
- Siegler, R, DeLoache, J.S. Eisenberg, N. (2006)
How Children Develop (2nd Ed.) NY Worth - Companion website
- http//bcs.worthpublishers.com/howchildrendevelop2
e/ - Chapter outlines
- Online quizzes
- Interactive flashcards
- Web links
- Recommended reading and journals - on 'reading
resources' webpage - Additional reading - given in relevant lectures
8Why Study Developmental Psychology? Reason 1
Raising Children
- Knowledge of child development can help parents
and teachers meet the challenges of rearing and
educating children - For example, researchers have identified
effective approaches that parents and other
caregivers can successfully use in helping
children manage anger and other negative emotions
9Why Study Developmental Psychology? Reason 2
Choosing Social Policies
- Knowledge of child development permits informed
decisions about social-policy questions that
affect children - For example, psychological research on childrens
responses to leading interview questions can
help courts obtain more accurate testimonies
from preschool children
10Why Study Developmental Psychology? Reason 3
Understanding Human Nature
- Child-development research provides important
insights into some of the most intriguing
questions regarding human nature (such as the
existence of innate concepts and the relationship
between early and later experiences) - Recent investigations of development among
children adopted from inadequate orphanages in
Romania supports the principle that the timing of
experiences often influences their effects
11Historical Foundations Early Philosophers
- Provided enduring insights about critical issues
in childrearing, even though their methods were
unscientific - Both Plato and Aristotle believed that the
long-term welfare of society depended on
childrens being raised properly, but they
differed in their approaches
12Historical Foundations Plato vs. Aristotle
- Plato emphasized self-control and discipline
- Aristotle was concerned with fitting child
rearing to the needs of the individual child - Plato believed that children are born with innate
knowledge - Aristotle believed that knowledge comes from
experience
13Historical Foundations Later Philosophers
- The English philosopher John Locke, like
Aristotle, saw the child as a tabula rasa and
advocated first instilling discipline, then
gradually increasing the childs freedom - Jean-Jacques Rousseau, the French philosopher,
argued that parents and society should give the
child maximum freedom from the beginning
14Historical Foundations Research-Based Approach
- Emerged in the nineteenth century, in part as a
result of two converging forces - Social reform movements established a legacy of
research conducted for the benefit of children
and provided some of the earliest descriptions of
the adverse effects that harsh environments can
have on child development - Charles Darwins theory of evolution inspired
research in child development in order to gain
insights into the nature of the human species
15Historical Foundations Formal Field of Inquiry
- Child development emerged as a formal field of
inquiry in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries - Sigmund Freud and John Watson formulated
influential theories of development during this
period
16Historical Foundations Freud and Watson
- Freud concluded that biological drives,
especially sexual ones, exerted a crucial
influence on development - Watson argued that childrens behavior arises
largely from the rewards and punishments that
follow particular behaviors - Although the research methods on which these
theories were based were limited, the theories
were better grounded in research and inspired
more sophisticated thinking than their
predecessors
17Themes in Developmental Psychology
- Nature and Nurture
- The Active Child
- Continuity/Discontinuity
- Mechanisms of Developmental Change
- The Sociocultural Context
- Individual Differences
- Research and Childrens Welfare
18Basic Questions about Child Development
- How do nature and nurture together shape
development? - How do children shape their own development?
- In what ways is development continuous, and in
what ways is it discontinuous? - How does change occur?
- How does the sociocultural context influence
development? - How do children become so different from each
other? - How can research promote childrens well-being?
19Nature and Nurture
- The single most basic question about child
development is how nature and nurture interact to
shape the developmental process - Nature refers to our biological endowment,
especially the genes we receive from our parents - Nurture refers to the wide range of environments,
both physical and social, that influence our
development
20Nature and Nurture
- Developmentalists now recognize that every
characteristic we possess is created through the
joint workings of nature and nurture - Accordingly, they ask how nature and nurture work
together to shape development
21How do children shape their own development?
- Children contribute to their own development
from early in life, and their contributions
increase as they grow older - Three of the most important contributions during
childrens first years are their - Attentional patterns
- Use of language
- Play
- Older children and adolescents choose many
environments, friends, and activities for
themselves their choices can exert a large
impact on their future
22Continuity vs. Discontinuity
Continuous development Age-related changes
occur gradually
Discontinuous development Age-related changes
include occasional large shifts so that children
of different ages seem qualitatively different
23Continuity vs. Discontinuity
p. 16
- Depending on how it is viewed, changes in height
can be viewed as either continuous or
discontinuous - Examining a boys height at yearly intervals from
birth to 18 years makes the growth look gradual
and continuous - Examining changes in the same boys height from
one year to the next makes growth seem
discontinuous
24How does developmental change occur?
- Darwins theory of evolution provides a useful
framework for thinking about the mechanisms that
produce change in childrens development - Variation refers to differences in thought and
behavior within and among individuals - Selection describes the more frequent survival
and reproduction of organisms that are well
adapted to their environment
25How does developmental change occur?
- In an analogous way, psychological variation and
selection appear to produce changes within an
individual lifetime - As examples of these processes, variation and
selection are apparent in brain development and,
at a behavioral level, in the strategies that
young children acquire to solve single-digit
addition problems
26How does the sociocultural context influence
development?
- Sociocultural context Refers to the physical,
social, cultural, economic, and historical
circumstances that make up any childs
environment - Contexts of development differ within and
between cultures - As an example, sleeping arrangements differ
between Mayan and US families, with Mayan
children typically sharing a bed with their
parents for several years - The US culture prizes independence and
self-reliance, whereas the Mayan culture values
interdependence
27How does the sociocultural context influence
development?
- Development is affected by ethnicity, race, and
socioeconomic status, which is a measure of
social class based on income
and education - The economic
context exerts a particularly large
influence on
childrens lives
28How do children become so different from each
other?
- Individual differences among children arise
very quickly in development - Childrens genes, their treatment by other
people, their subjective reactions to other
peoples treatment of them, and their choice of
environments all contribute to differences among
children, even those within the same family
29How can research promote a childs well-being?
- Child-development research yields practical
benefits in diagnosing childrens problems and in
helping children to overcome them - A child-development research method known as
preferential looking has enabled the diagnosis of
the effects of cataracts in infants as young as
two months of age - The principle of successive approximation has
been used to develop training programs to foster
speech comprehension among young children with
specific language impairments
30Key Theories in Developmental Psychology
- Cognitive-Developmental Theories
- Piaget, Information-processing theories
- Psychodynamic Theories
- Freud, Erikson
- Behaviourist Theories
- Watson
- Social Cognitive Learning Theories
- Bandura
- Contextual Developmental Theories
- Vygotsky
- Nativist Theories
- Chomsky
31Learning outcomes for lecture 1
- Understand why we study developmental psychology
- Know and be able to discuss the key issues in
developmental psychology - Reading
- Siegler, DeLoache Eisenberg
- Chapter 1