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Early Childhood: Physical Development

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Involve small muscles used in manipulation and coordination ... How will Olivia's hopping and jumping skills change over time? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Early Childhood: Physical Development


1
Chapter 8Early ChildhoodPhysical Development
2
Early Childhood Physical Development Truth or
Fiction?
  • Some children are left-brained, and others are
    right-brained.
  • Childrens levels of motor activity increase
    during the preschool years.

3
Early Childhood Physical Development Truth or
Fiction?
  • Sedentary parents are more likely to have couch
    potatoes for children.
  • Julius Caesar, Michelangelo, Tom Cruise, and
    Oprah have something in common? (Hint They
    dont all have book clubs.)

4
Early Childhood Physical Development Truth or
Fiction?
  • A disproportionately high percentage of math
    whizzes are left-handed.
  • Infections are the most common cause of death
    among children in the United States.

5
Early Childhood Physical Development Truth or
Fiction?
  • It is dangerous to awaken a sleepwalker.
  • More competent parents toilet-train their
    children by their second birthday.

6
Growth Patterns
  • Height and Weight

7
What Changes Occur in Height and Weight During
Early Childhood?
  • Growth rate slows
  • 2 to 3 inches per year
  • 4 to 6 pounds per year
  • Individual variation
  • As a group, boys are slightly taller and heavier

8
Figure 8.1 Growth Curves for Height and Weight,
Ages 2 to 6 Years
9
Growth Patterns
  • Development of the Brain

10
How Does the Brain Develop During Early Childhood?
  • Rapid growth in weight due to myelination
  • By age 5 brain is 90 of adult weight
  • Visual Skills
  • Improved attention and visual processing skills
  • Specialization of hemispheres

11
What Does It Mean to Be Left-brained or
Right-brained?
  • Left-brained
  • Logical, problem solving, language and
    mathematical computations
  • Right-brained
  • Visual-spatial functions, recognition of faces,
    discrimination of color, aesthetic and emotional
    responses, understanding metaphors, creative
    mathematical reasoning
  • Functions overlap
  • Myelination of corpus callosum

12
What Is Meant by Plasticity of the Brain?
  • Ability to compensate for injury
  • Greatest plasticity at 1 to 2 years
  • Other areas may assume functions lost to injury
  • Sprouting
  • Growth of new dendrites
  • Redundancy of neural connections

13
Motor Development
14
How Do Motor Skills Develop in Early Childhood?
  • Gross motor skills
  • Involve large muscles used in locomotion
  • Differences in gross motor development
  • Little sex differentiation
  • More individual differences
  • Physical Activity
  • Rough and tumble play
  • Activity levels

15
Developing in a World of Diversity
  • Sex Differences in Motor Activity

16
How Do Motor Skills Develop in Early Childhood?
  • Fine motor skills
  • Involve small muscles used in manipulation and
    coordination
  • Proximodistal trend accounts for lag in fine
    motor skills
  • Childrens Drawing

17
Figure 8.2 The Twenty Basic Scribbles (Really)
18
Figure 8.3 Four Stages in Childrens Drawings
19
Lessons in Observation Gross and Fine Motor
Skills
  • Describe the way the 2- and 3-year old children
    maneuver the stairs in the video.
  • How will stair-climbing skills change over time?

20
Lessons in Observation Gross and Fine Motor
Skills
21
Lessons in Observation Gross and Fine Motor
Skills
22
Lessons in Observation Gross and Fine Motor
Skills
  • Describe Olivias hopping and jumping skills and
    her performance with the ball.
  • How will Olivias hopping and jumping skills
    change over time?
  • How will her throwing and catching skills
    change?
  • How does Olivias attempt to catch a ball
    illustrate the proximodistal trend in
    development?

23
Lessons in Observation Gross and Fine Motor
Skills
  • Outline the developmental changes in the drawing
    and writing skills of children between the ages
    of 2 and 5.
  • How do the children in the video illustrate these
    changes?What activities are the children in the
    video participating in that facilitate fine motor
    development?
  • What are the relative roles of maturation and
    learning in the development of fine motor skills,
    and how do these interact?

24
When Does Handedness Emerge?
  • Emerges and shows preference during infancy
  • Becomes strongly established during early
    childhood
  • Majority of people are right-handed

25
Are There Problems Connected With Being
Left-handed?
  • Connections have been made with
  • Language problems
  • Dyslexia and stuttering
  • Health problems
  • Migraine headaches and allergies
  • Psychological problems
  • Schizophrenia and depression
  • Higher frequencies of left-handers have been made
    with
  • Mathematical abilities
  • Athletic abilities
  • Artistic, musical and architectural

26
What Are the Origins of Handedness?
  • Genetic component
  • Seems to run in families
  • Identical twins
  • Frequently differ in handedness
  • Mirror opposites

27
Nutrition
28
What Are Childrens Nutritional Needs and Their
Eating Habits Like in Early Childhood?
  • Nutritional Needs
  • Need more overall calories than toddlers
  • Slower growth rate - less calories per pound
  • Patterns of Eating
  • Appetite decreases and becomes erratic
  • Preference for sugar and salt with exposure

29
Health and Illness
30
What Are Some of the Illnesses and Environmental
Hazards Encountered During Early Childhood?
  • Minor illnesses
  • Respiratory infections
  • Colds, sore throat
  • Gastrointestinal upsets
  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
  • In developing countries, diarrheal illness is
    leading killer of children
  • Major illnesses
  • Immunizations, antibiotics reduced major illness
    in US
  • One-third of children in US under 18 years suffer
    from some type of chronic illness
  • Globally 13 million children die each year
  • Two-thirds die of pneumonia, diarrhea, measles,
    tetanus, whooping cough and tb

31
A Closer Look
  • Ten Things You Need To Know About Immunizations

32
Figure 8.4 Recommended Childhood Immunization
Schedule, United States, July-December, 2004
33
A Closer Look
  • Lead Poisoning
  • Assessing the Risk

34
Developing in a World of Diversity
  • Ethnicity, Level of Income, and Immunization ? USA

35
Accidents and Prevention of Accidental Injury
  • Most common cause of death in young children in
    US
  • Motor vehicle accidents
  • Low-income children most likely to die from
    accidents
  • Legislation to prevent accidents
  • Child safety seats in cars
  • Window guards in apartment buildings
  • Toy and clothing safety standards

36
Sleep
37
How Much Sleep is Needed During Early Childhood?
  • Preschoolers average 10 to 11 hours per 24 hour
    period
  • 9 to 10 hours at night
  • 1 to 2 hour nap

38
Developing in a World of Diversity
  • Cross-Cultural Differences in Sleeping
    Arrangements

39
Sleep Disorders
40
What Kinds of Problems or Disorders Disrupt Sleep
During Early Childhood?
  • Sleep terrors
  • Occur early in night during deep sleep
  • May be associated with stress
  • Nightmares
  • Occur later in night during REM sleep
  • Insomnia
  • Somnambulism (sleepwalking)
  • Onset between ages 3 and 8
  • Occurs early in night during deep sleep

41
Elimination Disorders
42
When Are Children Considered To Be Gaining
Control Over Elimination Too Slowly?
  • Maturation plays a critical role in toilet
    training
  • Most US children are trained between 3 and 4
  • Enuresis
  • Based on age of child and frequency of accident
  • Bed-wetting
  • More frequent in boys than girls
  • Numerous causes
  • Organic, psychological, stress, sleep disorder

43
A Closer Look
  • What To Do About Bed-Wetting

44
When Are Children Considered To Be Gaining
Control Over Elimination Too Slowly?
  • Encopresis
  • More common in boys than girls
  • Less common than enuresis, more common in daytime
  • Causes may be physical or psychological
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