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A Childs World: How We Discover It

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Title: A Childs World: How We Discover It


1
A Childs WorldHow We Discover It
  • Chapter 2

Little Miss Sunshine (2006)
2
Chapter main points
  • 1. The purpose of theory in understanding child
    development
  • 2. Basic theoretical issues on which
    developmental scientists differ
  • 3. Five theoretical perspectives on child
    development
  • 4. Research methods used to study childrens
    development
  • 5. Ethical problems that might arise in research
    on children.

3
What purposes do theories serve?
  • Theory set of logically related concepts seeking
    to describe or explain development and predict
    future behaviors
  • A valid theory
  • Is sensible and consistent.
  • Organizes, integrates, and makes sense of a body
    of research findings.
  • Must be testable.
  • Hypotheses tentative explanations or predictions
    that can be tested by research

4
Basic Theoretical Issues
  • Issue 1 How Do Heredity and Environment Affect
    Development?
  • Issue 2 Are Children Active or Passive in
    Their Development?
  • Issue 3 Is Development Continuous, or Does It
    Occur in Stages?

5
An emerging consensus of theory of child
development
  • An Emerging Consensus
  • Developmentalists are coming to a more balanced
    view of active versus passive development
  • Influence is bidirectional children change their
    world even as it changes them
  • Development as a combination of the 3 types of
    theoretical issues.
  • E.g., innate temperament will affect the
    envirornmental reaction helping to advance the
    child through psychosocial stages

6
Five Perspectives on Human Development
Table 2.1
7
Theoretical Perspectives Psychoanalytic (Freud
and Erikson)
  • Freud Psychosexual development in five stages
  • Fixation occurs when children receive too little
    or too much gratification in any of these stages
  • Three parts to personality id, ego, and superego
  • Id Pleasure Principle--demands immediate
    satisfaction
  • Ego Reality Principle--can delay gratification
  • Superego development of conscience
  • Erikson modified Freuds theory to emphasize
    social influences on development
  • Psychosocial development occurs in eight stages
    across the life span
  • Each stage requires balance of positive trait vs.
    corresponding negative one through the resolution
    of conflict

8
Theoretical Perspectives Learning
(Behaviorism, Social Learning)
  • Behaviorism
  • Classical Conditioning Pavlov and Watson
  • Association of an unconditioned stimulus, (meat)
    with a neutral stimulus (bell) to form a
    conditioned response (salivation)
  • Operant Conditioning Skinner
  • Reinforced behaviors tend to be repeated
  • Punished behaviors tend to be decreased
  • Social Learning (Social-Cognitive) Theory
  • Albert Bandura observational learning
  • People learn from imitating others modeling or
    observational learning
  • Imitation is involved in learning language,
    dealing with aggression, developing a moral
    sense, and learning gender-appropriate behaviors

9
Theoretical Perspectives Cognition (Piaget,
Info. Processing)
  • Piagets Cognitive-Stage Theory
  • Qualitative changes in the way children think
  • Individuals organize information into schemes
  • Adaptation of new information by assimilation,
    accommodation and equillibration
  • Progression of skills through 4 qualitatively
    different stages
  • Information-Processing Approach
  • Compares the brain to a computer
  • People are active thinkers about their world, not
    passive computers
  • Psychologists can use information-processing
    models to test, diagnose, and treat learning
    problems

10
Is development continuous, or does it occur in
stages? Piagets theory of cognitive development
and an information processing view of cognition
Fig. 2.1
11
Theoretical Perspectives Cognition
(Neuroscience)
  • Cognitive Neuroscience Approach
  • Cognitive functioning is linked to what happens
    in brain
  • Seeks to explain how cognitive growth results
    from the brain-environment interaction
  • Social cognitive neuroscience links brain, mind,
    and behavior

12
Theoretical Perspectives Evolutionary/Sociobiolog
ical
  • Focuses on biology and evolution
  • People unconsciously strive to perpetuate their
    genetic legacy
  • Seek to identify universal behaviors and those
    which are modified by ones culture
  • Seek to identify age-specific adaptive behaviors
  • Parent-Child Attachment John Bowlby

13
Theoretical Perspectives Contextual
  • Development is understood in social/
    environmental interactions only
  • Brofenbrenners Bioecological Theory
  • microsystem
  • mesosystem
  • exosystem
  • macrosystem
  • chronosystem
  • Lev Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • Child growth is collaborative process
  • Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
  • Scaffolding

14
Bronfenbrenners Bioecological Theory
Fig. 2.2
15
Goals of Developmental Research
  • To describe
  • To explain
  • To predict
  • To influence

16
Research Methods
  • Quantitative research
  • hard, objectively-measurable data
  • scientific method 5 general steps
  • Usually conducted in laboratories, controlled
  • Qualitative research
  • soft data, subjective experiences, feelings, or
    beliefs
  • open-ended and exploratory

17
Research Methods
  • Sampling
  • sample a representative group taken from the
    population (random selection is best)
  • Forms of Data Collection
  • Self-Reports Diaries, Interviews, Questionnaires
  • Behavioral and Performance Measures
  • Naturalistic and Laboratory Observation

18
Basic Research Designs
  • Case Studies
  • Ethnographic Studies
  • Correlational Studies (relationships not cause
    and effect)
  • Experiments
  • Groups and Variables
  • Laboratory, Field, and Natural Experiments

19
Studying Change Over Time
Longitudinal study A study following a group of
subjects over a period of time.
Cross-sectional study A study comparing groups
of people of different ages at the same time.
Accelerated longitudinal study Combination of
cross-sectional and longitudinal designs where
several age groups can be followed over time
simultaneously.
20
Common developmental designs
2006
2010
2008
2004
Fig. 2.5
21
How would you study.
  • If playing video games increased 5-8 year old
    boys interest in guns?
  • If self esteem in girls changes from 5th grade to
    8th grade to 12th grade?
  • If mothers assessment of their babies fussiness
    affects how frequently they pick them up when
    they are crying.

22
Ethics of Research
  • Informed consent/
  • Parent permission
  • Avoidance of deception
  • Protection of participants from harm and loss of
    dignity
  • Guarantees of privacy and confidentiality
  • Right to decline or withdraw from experiment
  • Responsibility of investigators to correct
    undesirable effects

23
Social Toxicity (Garbarino lecture)
  • Individual vulnerability to a poisonous
    environment
  • Vulnerable kids will be as bad as the social
    environment offers up, models, reinforces,
    instigates, and encourages them to do
  • In assessing neighborhood quality in promoting
    positive youth development, consider the strength
    of ties and collective efficacy
  • Consider poisonous pedagogy behavior that is
    culturally normative from a larger view is seen
    as harmful (e.g., bullying)

24
Social Toxins (Garbarino lecture)
  • Racism, sexism, homophobism convey hatred and
    rejection
  • Violence in the media
  • Social inequality
  • Nexus of health and lifestyle (e.g., obesity)
  • Erosion of benevolent older authority
  • Southern Culture of Honor
  • Shallow value of materialism
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