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Introduction to Developmental Psychology

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Title: Introduction to Developmental Psychology


1
Introduction to Developmental Psychology
2
O
  • Module Objectives
    (Development)
  • To examine the core stages of development in the
    period from conception through to adolescence
  • Module Content (Development)
  • - Theories of psychological development
  • - Heredity and prenatal development
  • - Motor, perceptual development and sensory
    deprivation
  • - Cognitive development and the relative
    contributions of Piaget and
  • Vygotsky
  • - Social and emotional development throughout
    childhood

3
Child Development
  • This is a first year course designed to
    establish foundations in psychology, with a
    particular focus on the basic definitions and
    central questions that frame the study of human
    development This course is primarily concerned
    with- approaches to describing human
    development- the processes by which this occurs
    - the factors that contribute to development in
  • various domains

4
Course Outline
  • Theories of Human Development
  • Biological Development
  • Social Development
  • Emotional Development
  • Cognitive Development

5
Developmental Questions
  • Should prospective parents seek genetic
    counselling?
  • Is it better for intellectual growth for children
    to be in preschool or at home?
  • Do we get more intelligent as we get older?
  • Where does bad behaviour come from?

6
Definitions
  • As psychologists, we focus on an understanding
    of human development from a psychological
    perspective
  • But this is an arbitrary and somewhat artificial
    simplification because all behaviour (overt and
    covert) is mediated by
  • - biological
  • - psychological
  • - environmental influences

7
Good Developmental Theory
  • Historically, developmental psychologists were
    interested in both description and explanation
  • Description
  • - the depiction or representation of change or
    continuity
  • Explanation
  • - the specification of causes or antecedents of
    development
  • To describe and explain what stays the same/what
    changes across life and to specify the conditions
    under which constancy (continuity) or change
    (discontinuity) arise

8
Good Developmental Theory
  • Describe changes within areas of behaviour (e.g.
    language or socialisation)
  • Describe changes in the relationships between
    areas of behaviour (e.g. language and
    socialisation)
  • Explain the course of development according to
    these descriptions
  • That is, a theory must account for the
    transitions from one point in development to
    another and must identify causal variables
    affecting transition
  • Put simply, what we are looking for are a set of
    principles or rules which can explain change

9
Good Developmental Theory
  • Two levels of analysis
  • The differences in how individuals change across
    life in many specific processes are immense
  • The differences in how some processes change
    across the life-span of specific individuals are
    impressive
  • But, precisely how or why people or processes
    change is a very complex set of issues

10
Good Developmental Theory
  • Clearly most developmental theorists are not
    equally concerned with all three of the above and
    perhaps not concerned with all three at all
  • This depends primarily on philosophical
    alliances

11
Philosophical Differences
  • Philosophical differences account for much of
    the discrepancy between various perspectives and
    methodologies
  • Theories and views of development (and on all
    aspects of psychology) as proposed by a
    particular psychologist reflect her opinion of
    how the world works globally (i.e. world view)
  • Both observation and theory tell us perhaps as
    much about the psychologist as about the subject

12
Philosophical Differences
  • The system to which I am aligned may well not
    stand up to any final canons of scientific
    procedure. But I do not much care. I have liked
    to think about psychology in ways that are
    congenial to me. Since all the sciences
    especially psychology, are still immersed in such
    tremendous realms of the uncertain and the
    unknown, the best that any individual scientist,
    especially any psychologist, can do seems to be
    to follow his own gleam and his own bent, however
    inadequate they may be. In fact I suppose this is
    actually what we all do. In the end, the only
    sure criterion is to have fun.
  • (Tolman, 1959, p. 152)

13
Philosophical Differences
  • There are several families of developmental
    theory that emerged from the fertile soil of
    the 19th century
  • But two major philosophical models provide the
    basis of many extant assumptions about human
    development
  • Organicism
  • Emphasises the qualitative features of
    developmental change and the active contribution
    of the organisms processes in this change
  • Mechanism
  • Emphasises quantitative change and the active
    contribution of processes outside the control of
    the organism

14
Philosophical Differences
  • There are five generic theoretical
    systems/models in Development Psychology
  • - organismic
  • - psychodynamic
  • - mechanistic
  • - dialectical
  • - contextual

15
World Views
  • Organismic
  • Derived from biological growth change is
    qualitative, unidirectional and irreversible
    active organism in a passive environment (Hall
    and Piaget)
  • Psychodynamic Theory
  • Organismic (end-state in development) and
    dynamic (regression possible) change is
    qualitative stage-like tension resolution
    focus on emotional and personality development
    (Jung, Feud and Erikson)
  • Mechanism
  • Organism analogous to a machine composed of
    discrete parts child passive in an active
    environment change is quantitative and additive
    (Galton and Watson)
  • Dialecticism
  • Child in dynamic active interaction with
    environment focus on social development
    (Vygotsky and Riegel)
  • Contextualism
  • Child and environment in dynamic interaction
    focus on individual-context relations (Sarbin and
    Reese)

16
Fundamental Questions
  • What is it that develops, and how?
  • What is the proper unit of analysis? (e.g.,
    schemas, cognitive structures, strategies for
    information-processing or action patterns)
  • The majority of developmental psychologists
    examine what changes occur in particular patterns
    of behaviour (usually in children), how, why and
    when

17
Fundamental Questions
  • This translates into questions about what can be
    expected of a normal child at a particular age
    (i.e. What is age-appropriate) within and across
    various domains
  • Developmental psychologists look for levels of
    competence in physical (fine and gross motor),
    communicative (verbal and nonverbal), social
    (play and interactions with others), cognitive
    (intellectual), and even sexual and moral domains

18
Biological Development
19
Genetic Foundations of Human Development
  • The human body is made up of trillions of tiny
    units called cells
  • At the centre of each is a cell nucleus, where
    the functions of the cell are controlled
  • Inside each cell nucleus, there are tiny
    structures that look like rods, called
    chromosomes
  • Chromosomes contain the genetic information that
    makes each human being unique
  • Human beings have a total of 46 chromosomes
    (other species have a different number, e.g,
    chimps have 4, and horses have 64)
  • Chromosomes predominantly come in pairs (i.e. 23
    pairs of chromosomes in each human cell)

20
Chromosomes
  • One chromosome from each pair comes from the
    biological mother, the other from the father
  • Each chromosome in a pair corresponds to the
    other in terms of size, shape and the genetic
    code that the chromosome regulates
  • Chromosomes are made up of a chemical substance
    called deoxyribonucleic acid, also referred to as
    DNA (a twisted ladder-like substance)

21
DNA
  • A gene is a segment (of differing lengths) of
    DNA along the length of a chromosome, which sends
    instructions for the composition of proteins to
    the cytoplasm (i.e. the area of the cell
    surrounding the nucleus) and these proteins
    trigger chemical reactions
  • A unique feature of DNA is that it can reproduce
    itself, enabling a single cell at conception to
    develop into a complex human being with a complex
    body made up of trillions of cells
  • In the process of cell duplication (called
    mitosis), the DNA splits down the middle (like a
    zip) and each open side of the ladder then is
    free to attach to a new mate from the cytoplasm
    of the cell
  • This process then creates two identical DNA
    ladders, each containing one new side and one old
    side of the previous ladder

22
Sex Cells
  • At the level of the chromosomes, during mitosis,
    each chromosome replicates itself, such that each
    new cell contains an exact replica of the old
    cell, with identical genetic information
  • The sex cells, sperm and ovum, ( gametes) are
    special in that they contain only a half set of
    chromosomes (n23, instead of 46)
  • Gametes are produced in a form of genetic
    shuffling called meiosis, in which chromosomes
    exchange segments, so that the genes from one
    chromosome are replaced with the genes from
    another chromosome, resulting in new hereditary
    combinations
  • This is why each individual is unique

23
Sex Cells
  • For males, each time meiosis occurs, 4 sperm are
    produced and the cells from which sperm arise are
    constantly produced throughout the life span
  • Female gamete production is much more limited --
    a female only produces one ovum after each
    meiosis
  • In addition, the female is born with all her ova
    already present in her ovaries and she can
    reproduce for only 3-4 decades

24
Human Fertilisation
  • When sperm and ovum unite at fertilisation, the
    cell that results is called a zygote and has the
    usual 46 chromosomes
  • Sometimes a zygote that has started to duplicate
    separates into two clusters of cells, that
    develop into two individuals
  • Identical or monozygotic twins occur at approx.
    3 in every 1,000 births
  • This process is prompted by a variety of
    environmental influences including changes in
    temperature and oxygen levels and late
    fertilisation of the ovum
  • Fraternal or dizygotic twins (the most common
    type of multiple birth) result when two ova are
    released from a woman's ovaries and both get
    fertilised
  • The resulting twins are genetically no more
    alike than ordinary siblings

25
Sex Cells
  • Each of the 23 pairs of chromosomes in each cell
    can be distinguished from one another
  • Twenty-two of these pairs contain chromosomes
    that match (autosomes)
  • The 23rd pair consists of sex chromosomes
  • In females, this pair is referred to as XX, in
    males it is referred to as XY
  • When gametes form in males, the X and Y
    chromosomes separate into different sperm cells,
    so that the sex of a new organism depends on
    whether an X-carrying or a Y-carrying sperm
    fertilises the ovum
  • In females, all gametes carry an X chromosome

26
Alleles
  • Two or more forms of each gene occur at the same
    place on the chromosomes, one inherited from each
    parent
  • Each different form of a gene is called an
    allele
  • If the alleles from both parents are alike, the
    child is said to be homozygous and will display
    the inherited shared characteristic
  • If the alleles are different, the child is
    referred to as heterozygous and relationships
    between the alleles will determine which
    characteristic will appear
  • In many heterozygous pairings, only one allele
    (dominant as opposed to recessive) accounts for
    the child's characteristics (e.g. hair colour is
    a dominant-recessive inheritance)
  • The allele for dark hair is dominant, the allele
    for blonde is recessive
  • Blond hair, therefore, can only result from 2
    recessive alleles
  • However, heterozygous individuals with just one
    recessive allele can pass that characteristic to
    their children (carriers)

27
Recessive Disorders
  • Many disabilities and diseases are the product
    of recessive alleles
  • Phenylketonuria (PKU) affects the way the body
    breaks down proteins that are contained in many
    foods (e.g. cow's milk)
  • Infants born with two of these recessive alleles
    lack an enzyme that coverts one of the basic
    amino acids (phenylalanine) that makes up
    proteins into a by-product (tyrosine) essential
    for body functioning
  • Without this enzyme, phenylalanine builds to
    toxic levels damaging the CNS
  • Around the age of 3-5 months, infants with
    untreated PKU start to lose interest in their
    surroundings, by 1 year, they are permanently
    retarded
  • New-born babies are given a blood test for PKU
    and if necessary placed on a low-phenylalanine
    diet
  • Although babies treated early may still display
    delayed cognitive development (even small amounts
    of phenylalanine interfere with brain
    functioning) they usually attain an average as
    long as the dietary treatment continues

28
Recessive Disorders
  • Males and females have an equal chance of
    inheriting recessive disorders carried on the
    autosomes
  • But when a harmful allele is carried on the X
    chromosome (i.e. X-linked inheritance) males are
    more likely to be affected because their sex
    chromosomes do not match
  • In females, any recessive allele on one X
    chromosome has a good chance of being suppressed
    by a dominant allele on the other X, but the Y
    chromosome is only about 1/3 as long and lacks
    many corresponding alleles to override those on
    the X
  • Haemophilia (blood fails to clot normally) is an
    X-linked inheritance, affecting twice as many
    males as females
  • Males are also believed to have higher rates of
    miscarriage, infant and childhood death, learning
    disabilities, behaviour disorders, and mental
    retardation
  • Nature however, seems to have adjusted for this
    male disadvantage with a greater number of male
    than female births

29
Chromosomal Abnormalities
  • Disease/disability can also result from
    chromosomal abnormalities, mostly from errors
    during meiosis when the ovum and sperm are formed
    (e.g. a chromosome pair may not separate properly
    or part of a chromosome may break off)
  • Since these errors involve much more DNA than
    problems due to single genes, they usually
    produce disorders with many physical and mental
    symptoms
  • The most common example of is Down Syndrome
    (approx. 1 in every 800 live births)
  • In 95 of cases, this results from a failure of
    the 21st pair of chromosomes to separate during
    meiosis, so that the new organism inherits three
    of these chromosomes rather than the normal two

30
Prenatal Development
  • Prenatal development begins with conception
  • The 38-40 weeks of pregnancy are divided into 3
    phases
  • - Trimester 1 Weeks 1-9
  • - Trimester 2 Weeks 13-24
  • - Trimester 3 Weeks 25-38
  • The age of viability is the point at which a
    fetus is likely to survive and usually falls
    between 22 and 26 weeks

31
Prenatal Stages of Development
  • A division is also made on the basis of the
    organisms development
  • - Zygotic Period (Weeks 1-2)
  • Lasts from fertilisation until the mass of cells
    leaves the fallopian tube and attaches itself to
    the wall of the uterus
  • Events at this time are delicate and uncertain
  • As many as 30 of zygotes do not make it through
    this first phase
  • By preventing implantation in these cases,
    nature eliminates most prenatal abnormalities in
    the very earliest stages of development

32
Prenatal Stages of Development
  • Embryonic Period (Weeks 2-8)
  • This is when the most rapid prenatal changes
    occur
  • The groundwork for all body structures and
    internal organs is laid down at this times the
    embryo is particularly vulnerable
  • However, because this rapid development occurs
    in such a short space of time, the risk of
    interference is generally minimised

33
Prenatal Stages of Development
  • Fetal Period (Weeks 9-3/40)
  • Growth rates here are extraordinary, especially
    up to Week 20
  • The brain continues to grow rapidly in the last
    3 months

34
Prenatal Development
  • With improved neurological development, the
    fetus is believed to spend longer periods of time
    awake
  • No periods of alertness (measured by heart-rate
    variability) have been detected before 20 weeks,
    whereas at 28 weeks the fetus is believed to
    spend 11 of the time alert, and just before
    birth this increases to 16.
  • The third trimester also brings greater
    responsiveness to external stimulation
  • At about 24 weeks, a fetus can feel pain (all
    surgical procedures require pain-killers)
  • By 25 weeks, a fetus can react to nearby sounds
    with body movements
  • In the final weeks, a fetus can show preference
    for the tone and rhythm of its mother's voice

35
Prenatal Defects
  • Although the prenatal environment is relatively
    constant, there are many features of the external
    environment that are influential to development
  • Teratogen is the term given to any agent that
    can damage the fetus, including
  • - cigarettes
  • - drugs
  • - alcohol
  • - radiation
  • - environmental pollutants
  • - diseases
  • The embryonic period from weeks 2-9 is when
    serious defects are most likely to occur,
    although the brain, eye and genitals are still
    very much at risk during the fetal period

36
Prenatal Defects
  • Teratogens can cause physical and/or
    psychological damage, which may not be observed
    until long after birth (e.g. thalidomide)
  • For example, high caffeine intake is associated
    with low birth weight, miscarriage and newborn
    withdrawal (i.e. irritability and vomiting)
  • In USA 100,000-375,000 'cocaine babies' are born
    each year
  • Unlike heroin and methadone (which increase the
    risk of death at birth and result in slow early
    motor development) prenatally exposed cocaine
    babies have lasting difficulties that persist in
    infancy and childhood
  • These include inattention and behavioural
    problems, defects of the eyes, bones, kidneys,
    genitals, heart, and brain (including hemorrhages
    and seizures)
  • Cocaine is particularly problematic because it
    can attach itself to sperm, enter the zygote, and
    thereby cause birth defects

37
Prenatal Defects
  • Similarly, smoking during pregnancy results in
    low birth weight and increased risk of other
    serious consequences such as prematurity,
    impaired breathing during sleep, miscarriage,
    infant death and childhood cancer
  • Long-term studies have demonstrate that
    prenatally-exposed children have shorter
    attention spans and lower mental ability scores
    in early childhood
  • Passive smoking during pregnancy is correlated
    with similar risks
  • Besides teratogens, other maternal factors
    contribute to healthy or unhealthy prenatal
    development, including exercise, nutrition,
    emotional stress, maternal age and previous births

38
Birth the Newborn Child
39
Birth the Newborn Child
  • Although birth is a difficult time for the baby,
    healthy babies are surprisingly well-adapted for
    this event
  • For example, although strong contractions expose
    the head to pressure, the infant can produce
    stress hormones to alleviate this and can send a
    rich blood supply to the heart and brain to
    withstand oxygen deprivation

40
Birth Complications
  • Anoxia (inadequate oxygen supply)
  • Risk of brain damage results from delayed
    breathing in excess of 3 minutes.
  • Children deprived of oxygen during labour appear
    delayed in intellectual and motor progress in
    early childhood, but catch up in school years.
  • When serious problems emerge (learning
    disabilities, epilepsy or cerebral palsy) the
    anoxia was probably extreme and could have
    occurred from brain damage before, during or just
    after birth

41
Birth Complications
  • Preterm and low-birth-weight
  • Infants born 3 weeks before 38 weeks and/or
    weighing less than 5.5 pounds
  • Birth weight is the best available predictor of
    infant survival and future healthy development
  • Pre-term birth and low-birth-weight can result
    in serious physical problems and lasting
    behavioural or psychological problems for the
    child, including frequent illness, over-activity,
    language delay and deficits in motor co-ordination

42
Infant Development (18-24 mos)
  • Development during infancy constitutes only 2
    of the life-span but is one of the most
    rapidly-changing developmental periods
  • Factors affecting physical growth at this time
  • - heredity
  • - nutrition
  • - disease
  • - emotional health

43
Infant Development (18-24 mos)
  • Neonates were previously believed to be largely
    passive, incompetent, and even defenseless, but
    are presently believed to be capable of many
    complex abilities
  • Even newborns display a wide variety of
    typically-human capacities that are critical for
    survival and serve to evoke attention and
    care-giving from adults

44
Motor Development
  • Infants come into the world with dozens of
    reflexes, including eye blink, withdrawal,
    sucking, swimming, grasping etc.
  • The palmar grasp, for example, is so strong that
    during the first week of life, a newborn can use
    it to support his/her entire body weight
  • Most newborn reflexes disappear during the first
    5 months, due to a gradual increase in the
    voluntary control of behaviour

45
Motor Development
  • Motor skills are divided into
  • - Gross motor development
  • Control over actions that help infants navigate
    their environment (e.g. crawling and walking)
  • -Fine motor development
  • Refers to smaller movements, such as reaching
    and grasping

46
Motor Development
  • Motor development occurs along two plains
  • - in a head-to-tail sequence (cephalocaudal
    trend) with motor control of the head first, then
    arms, trunk and then legs
  • - from the centre of the body outward
    (proximodistal trend) with head, trunk, and arm
    control before coordination of arms and fingers

47
Motor Development
  • Motor skills do not develop in isolation and
    each stage of development results from the
    successful achievement of the previous stage
  • According to 'dynamic systems theory of motor
    development' mastering motor skills involves the
    development of increasingly complex systems of
    actions, in which separate abilities are blended
    together, producing more effective ways of
    controlling and exploring the child's environment
  • Children also display the development of motor
    skills idiosyncratically

48
Perceptual Development
  • Touch, taste, smell and hearing are well
    developed at birth
  • An innate sense of balance and self-orientation
    becomes increasingly refined with maturation and
    experience of motor control
  • Sight is the least mature at birth
  • Visual acuity, scanning, tracking and colour
    perception improve in the early months, followed
    by depth perception
  • Of all perceptual developments, visual skills
    are perhaps the most intricately bound with
    social development
  • For example, babies of a very young age prefer
    human faces over more inanimate forms, and such
    discriminations are often interpreted by
    care-givers as the beginnings of social
    interactions are heavily reinforced

49
Cross-modal Sensory Integration
  • Young babies have a remarkable ability to
    combine information across sensory modalities
  • According to Gibsons' differentiation theory,
    children adapt to constantly changing
    environments by searching for constants
  • This effect is demonstrated both with the
    internal features of a stimulus, as with a range
    of features among stimuli
  • Acting on the environment plays a major role in
    perceptual differentiation and according to the
    Gibsons is guided by affordances (i.e. the action
    possibilities a situation offers a particular
    individual with particular motor skills)

50
Sensory Deprivation
  • Stimulating physical environments coupled with
    warm care-giving provide a critical backdrop to
    development on all levels
  • In motor development, for example, children
    reared in severely deprived environments show
    delays in achieving early motor milestones,
    typically displaying stereotypical movements and
    immature play
  • Whilst motor development frequently reaches
    normal levels for these children, mental
    development frequently remains significantly
    behind even in adolescence
  • Dennis (1973) studied Lebanese children who were
    orphaned shortly after birth and spent their
    first year of life lying in a cot with no
    individual attention from caregivers
  • Extreme retardation in both motor and language
    development emerged - many of these children did
    not sit up until age 1 and did not walk until
    preschool
  • Their IQ's were also extremely retarded

51
Sensory Deprivation
  • As a result of legal changes, many of these
    children were then adopted by normal parents and
    lived in normal family environments
  • Dennis compared those adopted at different ages
  • Those adopted before age 2 achieved the average
    IQ within 2 years, but those adopted after age 2
    had persistently low IQs (70's), even with 6 or
    more years with the adopted family
  • This study suggests that there is a sensitive'
    period of development (at least intellectually)
    around the age 2
  • A similar study by Rutter (1998) suggested that
    cognitive attainment was greatest for children
    adopted before 6 months of age

52
Cognitive Development
53
Cognitive Development
  • Cognitive/intellectual development has been
    addressed from a number of different conceptual
    and psychological perspectives
  • There are 3 key approaches to this area of
    development
  • Qualitative Changes
  • - Piaget's cognitive-developmental stage theory
    and Vygotsky's sociocultural perspective
  • Quantitative Changes
  • - psychometric or 'intelligence' approach.
  • Process Changes
  • - information-processing approach

54
Qualitative Approaches to Cognitive Development
  • Both Piaget and Vygotsky began by asking the
    same fundamental question
  • Do children learn to think and then speak, or
    does language facilitate or establish complex
    cognitive abilities?
  • Piaget believed that language was relatively
    unimportant for cognitive development
  • Conversely, Vygotsky suggested that language was
    critical for cognitive development, since
    according to his sociocultural perspective, it is
    through language-based social interactions that
    cognitive abilities become refined

55
Piagets Cognitive Developmental Theory
  • Piaget primarily believed that the child was a
    motivated, active learner
  • In line with an organicist worldview, he
    suggested that the mind adapted to the
    psychological environment with structures that
    enabled it to become increasingly complex, in the
    same way that the body adapted to the biological
    environment with similar structures
  • Piaget outlined 4 specific stages of cognitive
    development
  • - Sensorimotor
  • - Preoperational
  • - Concrete operational
  • - Formal operational
  • According to Piaget, all stages are invariant
    and universal

56
Piagets Schemes
  • According to Piaget, the psychological
    structures that enable adaptation are called
    schemes
  • First schemes take the form of simple motor
    action patterns such as the "dropping scheme
  • For example, for a very young baby, this scheme
    will take the form of simply grasping an object
    and then releasing it
  • This scheme then becomes increasingly complex,
    such that by 18 months, an infant will not only
    drop objects, but will throw, bounce and
    manipulate
  • Schemes shift from being action-based to being
    mentally-based, so, for example, a child can
    think about objects in complex ways before
    manipulating them
  • Two processes were said to account for changes
    in schemes
  • - adaptation and organisation

57
Piagets Adaptation
  • Adaptation involves constructing schemes from
    direct contact with the environment
  • It consists of 2 complementary activities
  • - Assimilation
  • During assimilation, current schemes are used to
    interpret the external world (e.g. preschooler
    sees her first camel and calls it a horse,
    thereby using her already-existing 'horse' scheme
    to name a novel stimulus)
  • - Accommodation
  • In accommodation, we adjust old schemes or
    create new ones when our current schemes do not
    adequately inform us of what the environment is
    presenting, (e.g. the preschooler who calls a
    camel 'a horse with humps', has thereby revised
    her horse scheme, in recognition of the fact that
    not all horses have humps)

58
Piagets Adaptation
  • According to Piaget, these processes work
    closely together in every organism-environment
    interaction
  • When children are not embarking upon significant
    cognitive change (cognitive equilibrium), Piaget
    suggested that they are assimilating more than
    accommodating.
  • During times of rapid change (disequilibrium or
    cognitive discomfort) they do more accommodating
    than assimilating, but once the schemes have been
    modified, individuals then revert to more
    assimilation
  • Piaget employed the term equilibration to
    describe the back-and-forth movement between
    equilibrium and disequilibrium that defines
    development
  • Each time equilibration occurs, more effective
    schemes are produced

59
Piagets Organisation
  • During organisation, schemes change internally
    (i.e. not as a result of direct contact with the
    external environment)
  • Once children form new structures, they start to
    rearrange them, linking them with other schemes
    to create a strongly interconnected cognitive
    system
  • For example, eventually the baby will relate
    dropping (i.e. the dropping scheme) to 'throwing'
    and to the developing understanding of 'here'
    and 'there' and 'near' and 'far' etc.

60
Sensorimotor Stage (0-2)
  • Infants "think" by acting upon the world with
    their eyes, ears, hands and legs
  • The sensorimotor stage consists of 6 sub-stages
    that enable a child to progress from simple
    reflexive schemes to mental representation
    schemes
  • Here basic play and imitation first appear and
    both exert an important influence on this stage
    of cognitive development
  • By Sub-stage 4 infants begin to organise schemes
    and perform complex action sequences

61
Sensorimotor Stage (0-2)
Goal-directed/intentional behaviour By 8 months,
infants can coordinate schemes to solve
sensorimotor problems (e.g. pulling a level to
hear the sound of a music box) Piaget described
this as an appreciation of physical causality
(i.e. the causal action one object exerts over
another through contact) which he believed was
the foundation of all later problem-solving.
Object permanence At the sensorimotor stage,
infants begin to understand that objects continue
to exist even when they cannot be seen Object
permanence is not complete because they do not
have a clear image of the object persisting when
hidden from view This is demonstrated when
infants make the A-B error - if an object is
moved from one hiding place to another (A to B),
babies will search for it only in the first
hiding place (A)

62
Preoperational Stage (2-7)
The greatest changes here occur in the
development of symbolic or representational
activity Language and imaginary play first
appear Whilst generally unconcerned with
language, Piaget acknowledged that it is the most
flexible means of engaging in mental
representation Imaginary play enables children
to acquire and strengthen representational
schemes Other modes of symbolic representation
that begin to develop at this stage are drawing,
and the use of spatial symbols (e.g. photographs,
models and maps) Preschool children can now use
symbols to depict what they learned during
sensorimotor development, but thinking, still
lacks more complex logical qualities

63
Concrete Operational Stage (7-11)
  • Conservation
  • Piaget studied conservation in terms of number,
    length, quantity, mass, weight, and volume.
    Children here pass the conservation task (i.e.
    changing liquid from a container of one size to a
    container of another size conserves the amount of
    liquid, although the appearance is altered)
  • Hierarchical classification
  • Children here organise objects and events into
    classes and subclasses (i.e. they pass the class
    inclusion problem)
  • Seriation
  • Children here can order items along a
    quantitative dimension (e.g. ordering a series of
    sticks from shortest to longest)
  • Spatial operations
  • They can deal with distance, directions and the
    spatial relationships between objects
  • Although reasoning becomes logical at this
    point, it is not yet abstract

64
Formal Operational Stage (11)
  • Abstract thought permits adolescents to reason
    with symbols that do not relate directly to
    objects or events in the real world
  • Hypothetico-deductive reasoning
  • When faced with a problem, they can start with a
    general theory of all possible factors that might
    affect the outcome and deduce from it specific
    hypotheses about what might happen)
  • Propositional thought
  • They can evaluate the logic of propositions
    without referring to the real world)

65
Formal Operational Stage (11)
  • Proposition 1
  • If elephants are bigger than dogs
  • And dogs are bigger than mice
  • Then, elephants are bigger than mice
  • Proposition 2
  • If mice are bigger than dogs
  • And dogs are bigger than elephants
  • Then, mice are bigger than elephants

66
Evaluating Piagets Contribution
  • Piaget made an overwhelming contribution to
    child development, not only in terms of the
    implications of his findings, but also in terms
    of later research these stimulated in cognitive
    development and how children conceptualise
    themselves, others, and social relationships in
    genera
  • Piaget's theory also had a major impact on
    education, particularly in enhancing
    child-centered learning styles, discovery
    learning and direct contact with the environment
  • But Piagets theory as not gone without its
    opponents

67
Evaluating Piagets Contribution
  • - Clarity (his model of the process of
    equilibration is ill-defined)
  • - Accuracy (overall, infants appear more
    competent and adults less competent than Piaget
    suggested)
  • - Training (training has been found to enhance
    performance on Piagetian tasks)
  • Variables such as task familiarity and the kind
    of knowledge being tested also influence task
    performance
  • This finding challenges Piagets belief that
    discovery learning rather than adult teaching is
    the most effective way to facilitate cognitive
    development

68
Evaluating Piagets Contribution
  • The most controversial question is whether
    development takes place in these or any other
    precise stages
  • For example
  • - Few abilities are absent during one stage
    and are then present in another
  • - Few periods of cognitive equilibrium, instead
    children appear to be constantly changing.
  • There is general consensus that cognitive
    development is not as broadly stage-like as
    Piaget believed, and they reject the concept of
    the stage of cognitive development to a lesser or
    greater extent

69
Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • Another qualitative perspective on cognitive
    development was proposed by Vygotsky
  • He agreed with Piaget that children are active
    in the learning process but he viewed cognitive
    development as socially-mediated
  • His sociocultural theory of cognitive
    development was inherently both social and
    language based, and was generally more
    contextualistic, especially at the cultural level
  • According to Vygotsky, social interaction is
    necessary for children to develop the ways of
    thinking and behaving that define a culture
  • He believed that such developments are not
    stage-like and that as soon as children acquire
    language, their improved ability to communicate
    with others leads to continuous changes in
    thought and behaviour that are culturally-specific

70
Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • A good example of the distinction between
    Piaget and Vygotsky is in self-talk

71
Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • Piaget referred to this as 'egocentric speech'
    and suggested that it served little personal or
    social functions other than as "talk for self
  • Vygotsky believed that self-talk had important
    functions of self-guidance and self-direction for
    the child
  • There is more evidence in favour of Vygotsky in
    this regard -- Berk, (1992a) found that children
    engage more readily in this form of self-talk
    when tasks are more difficult
  • There is also evidence to show that with age,
    self-talk goes underground, becoming more like
    silent lip movements (Bivens Berk, 1990)

72
Process Changes in Cognitive Development
  • Shortcomings in the explanation of process,
    inherent in qualitative theories such as
    Piaget's, were partly responsible for the birth
    of the more recent information-processing (I-P)
    account of cognitive development
  • This particular approach was not developed
    specifically to address developmental concerns
    but reflects more of a new way of looking at the
    processes of cognition in general
  • Information-processing psychologists construct
    detailed and testable theoretical models of what
    the cognitive system actually does (step by step
    in real time) when dealing with a specific
    cognitive task
  • The language of computer science is borrowed by
    all models to describe the physiology of the
    brain and the range of strategies (cognitions)
    the brain requires to run particular tasks

73
Information-Processing Development
  • The mind is a complex symbol-manipulating
    cognitive system through which units of
    information pass, from input to output
  • Units of information of differing magnitudes and
    complexity are encoded and retained in symbolic
    form
  • Internal processes then operate to recode or
    revise the symbolic structure

74
Information-Processing Development
  • Development from this perspective is not
    stage-based, but occurs as a pattern of
    continuous growth in terms of specific mental
    processes, or in terms of a cognitive system
    based upon these processes
  • These processes are assumed to be similar at
    all ages, but present to a lesser extent in
    children
  • Like Piaget's account, this perspective views
    the child as an active sense-making agent

75
Information-Processing Development
  • From a developmental perspective, we can ask,
    for example, whether the changes in cognitive
    performances observed over time reflect increases
    in capacity or efficiency of the
    information-processing system.
  • I-P Capacity
  • There is some memory-span evidence demonstrating
    that children can remember increasingly long
    lists of numbers, letters, words etc.
  • I-P Efficiency
  • Kail (1990) demonstrated that speed of
    processing exponentially increases with age
    across a variety of tasks (there is also some
    biological evidence in support of this)

76
Information-Processing Development
  • Siegler's 'rule-assessment approach' is a
    contemporary example of how cognitive development
    can be investigated from an I-P perspective
  • Siegler argued that cognitive development
    consists largely of the sequential acquisition of
    increasingly powerful rules for solving problems
    and that children of various ages devise rules to
    solve particular tasks
  • Siegler has been quite successful in identifying
    orderly developmental sequences of
    rule-acquisitions in several problem areas

77
Information-Processing Development
  • Flavell proposed seven general features of
    cognitive development
  • - Information-processing Capacity
  • - Domain-specific Knowledge
  • - Concrete and Formal Operations
  • - Quantitative Thinking
  • - A Sense of the Game
  • - Metacognition
  • -Improving Existing Competencies

78
Information-Processing Development
  • A major strength of the I-P approach to
    cognitive development is the wealth of research
    it has generated
  • For example, one important applied contribution
    is that the human cognitive system has severe
    limitations on its ability to process information
    and the quality of an individual's cognitive
    performance will suffer greatly when these
    limitations are exceeded (i.e. under conditions
    of information overload)
  • However, it remains the case that many of the
    findings from this tradition have yet to be
    integrated, and they do not readily suggest links
    with other areas of development

79
Quantitative Changes in Cognitive Development
  • The psychometric approach to cognitive
    development is more product than process oriented
  • A variety of intelligence and cognitive tests
    have been used to assess mental abilities since
    the early 1900'swhen Alfred Binet developed the
    first intelligence test
  • The 'Stanford-Binet' devised by Terman computed
    the IQ score as mental age /chronological age x
    100 (MA/CAx100) which provided a general score of
    100 for children with a mental age above the
    chronological age and below 100 if the reverse is
    the case.
  • The majority of children score around 100
    (WISC-III -- Weschler Intelligence Scales for
    Children)

80
Quantitative Changes in Cognitive Development
  • The WISC, for example, cannot be used to assess
    children below age 3, although a number of infant
    tests have been devised (e.g. the Bayley Scales
    of Infant Development examines sensory, motor and
    cognitive skills)
  • IQ scores are stable and it is generally
    accepted that they become increasingly stable
    with age, especially after age 12
  • Furthermore, these scores are largely predictive
    across a range of social groupings, with high
    scores correlated with positive (academic)
    outcomes such as going to college and low scores
    correlated with a number of negative long-term
    outcomes, including illiteracy and delinquency
  • There are no gender differences in general
    scores, though a number of differences have been
    identified in sub-scores
  • For example, males produce generally higher
    scores on spatial tasks with females producing
    higher scores on verbal tasks

81
Quantitative Changes in Cognitive Development
  • There are no gender differences in general
    scores, though a number of differences have been
    identified in sub-scores
  • For example, males produce generally higher
    scores on spatial tasks with females producing
    higher scores on verbal tasks

82
Social Development
83
Developing A Sense of Self
  • A fundamental feature of our social
    relationships and the social roles that we adopt
    is a unique understanding of who we are as
    individuals (i.e. are we male or female, good or
    bad, popular or unpopular?)
  • One of the first and certainly most significant
    individuals with whom one interacts is oneself
  • Who am I? -- permeates all aspects of all of our
    lives and takes up much of our time, past present
    and future

84
Developing A Sense of Self
  • Freud believed that the initial bond between
    caregiver/mother and child was a
  • very close symbiotic relationship, in which the
    infant has no real sense of
  • being a separate self
  • In fact, some psychoanalysts in the same
    tradition as Freud suggested that
  • several months after birth, infants have a
    psychological birth in which a
  • sense of self emerges
  • Many other developmentalists disagree with this
    and believe that infants
  • are born with the foundations of a sense of self
    or separateness and this
  • sense simply becomes more complex as the infant
    develops
  • increasingly complex control over the world of
    objects, events and people

85
Developing A Sense of Self
  • Subjective self
  • A sense of an inner self, characterised by
    self-efficacy
  • Objective self
  • A sense of the self that can be observed by
    others, characterised by self-awarenes
  • Self-awareness in particular has attracted a
    great deal of research interest

86
Developing Self-Awareness
  • Self-awareness first appears around 15-18 months
    of age
  • A common test involves allowing a baby free
    exploration of her/his own mirror image
  • While apparently wiping the child's face, the
    experimenter places a red spot on the child's
    nose
  • To pass the self-awareness test, the child is
    required to touch her own nose before touching
    the nose in the mirror
  • Lewis and Brooks (1978) demonstrated that no
    9-12 month-olds passed, compared to 3/4 of
    21-month-olds
  • An emerging sense of self also correlates with
    increases in self-naming and requests to conduct
    tasks independently

87
Developing A Social Self
  • By 24 months of age children also begin to
    demonstrate a social self
  • Play, for example, incorporates distinct roles
    (e.g. being the 'mummy)
  • But this pattern reflects a self with distinct
    concrete features that relate to specific
    physical settings and specific tasks
  • What is yet to emerge is a more abstract,
    internally-aware global sense of self (a
    developmental trend from concrete to abstract
    that also signifies cognitive development in
    general)

88
Developing An Internal Self
  • In the early school years, this concrete sense
    becomes more formal and abstract and more focused
    on internal traits and characteristics than on
    physical features
  • This emerging complex sense of self will
    incorporate self-worth and related
    self-evaluations, social comparisons and will be
    related more directly with internal states such
    as feelings
  • This developing identity becomes increasingly
    complex until teenage years, at which point it
    appears to go through something of a crisis, from
    which a more stable identity usually emerges

89
Developing Self-Esteem
  • The most distinctive feature of this
    increasingly complex sense of self is the extent
    to which it incorporates self-evaluations,
    collectively referred to as self-esteem
  • Three sources of self-esteem
  • Direct experience with success or failure across
    areas (academically, socially and artistically)
  • Values dictated by parents, peers, teachers etc.
    - the extent to which each area is valued will
    render one area more important than another
  • Judgements and labels provided by others
    (especially parents)

90
Developing Self-Esteem
  • Self-esteem is believed to be characterised by
    the relationship between what a person would like
    to be (ideal self) and what the person perceives
    her/him-self to be (real self) -- this may amount
    to achieving what is valued
  • Low self-esteem (where the real self des not
    achieve what is valued to the point of
    equivalence with the ideal self) is often
    correlated with feelings of depression and a
    number of studies have reported a significant
    negative correlation between low self-esteem and
    depression in early childhood and in adolescence
  • That is, the lower the score of self-esteem, the
    more depressed the child describes him/herself to
    be
  • Depression is believed to be highly likely when
    an individual sets standards that are very high
    and even unrealistic

91
Developing Self-Esteem
  • Support systems can be important for affirming
    self-evaluations
  • Self-esteem is particularly unstable, as any
    exposure to adolescence will indicate
  • One point in life at which it is particularly
    unstable is in the transition from primary to
    post-primary school, as a coherent sense of self
    is unfolding

92
Gender Identity
  • An understanding of gender is a fundamental
    feature of
  • one's identity and involves
  • - a gender concept (understanding what an
    individual's biological gender is and how this
    feature is permanent)
  • - a sex-role
  • (what is appropriate behaviour for each gender)

93
Gender Identity
  • Three stages in the development of gender
    concept
  • Gender Identity
  • (correctly labeling the gender of the self and
    others, usually well established by age three)
  • Gender Stability
  • (understanding that people stay the same gender
    throughout life (e.g. when you grow up will you
    be a mummy or a daddy?), usually established by
    age four
  • - Gender Constancy
  • (understanding that gender is more than what is
    simply observed (e.g. if a boy wears a dress,
    does that make him a girl?), usually established
    by age five

94
Gender Identity
  • A well-established gender identity also requires
    the consistent display of gender-appropriate
    behaviours -- by 18-24 months, children show
    preferences for gender-appropriate toys (even
    though it may be months before they can identify
    their own gender)
  • Sex-role stereotypes have been observed
    universally
  • Williams and Best (1990) found that across 28
    countries, the most
  • strongly held stereotypes for women were
    weakness,
  • gentleness, appreciativeness and
    soft-heartedness, whereas for men,
  • these were aggression, strength, coarseness and
    cruelty
  • We also know that these stereotypes develop early

95
Gender Identity
  • Two-year-olds already associate hoovers and food
    with women and cars and tools with men
  • Three-year-olds assign occupations, tasks and
    toys according to gender stereotypes
  • Five-year-olds associate personality traits
    according to traditional stereotypes
  • In the early formation of these stereotypes,
    children have been found to be extremely rigid
    and biased (these patterns which decline as
    societal rules are discovered to be flexible)
  • For example, a six-year-old is likely to say
    that a boy who plays with dolls is "wrong",
    whereas a nine-year-old will say that he is not
    wrong, but that most boys simply don't do it

96
Early Friendships-Parents
  • The parent-child relationship is the first
    intimate social relationship -- Bowlby suggested
    that children's internal working models of how
    relationships operate are based on this even by
    age five
  • Particular parent-child relationships appear to
    dictate later social practices
  • For example, children securely attached to
    their mothers in infancy, (compared to those
    insecurely attached) were later observed to be
    more sociable, more positive in their
    relationships with friends and siblings, less
    clinging and dependent on teachers, less
    aggressive and disruptive, more empathetic and
    more emotionally mature in their approach to
    school and other contexts outside of the home
  • Even in adolescence these individuals have more
    intimate friendships, are more likely to be rated
    as leaders and have higher self-esteem
  • Those with insecure attachments (particularly
    avoidant attachments) not only have less positive
    and supportive friendships in adolescence, but
    also appear more likely to become sexually active
    at an earlier age and even to conduct riskier
    sexual encounters

97
Early Friendships-Siblings
  • Sibling relationships in the early school years
    are generally believed to be less central to the
    lives of school-age children than peer
    relationships and children of this age group are
    more likely to turn to a parent or a peer for
    intimacy or companionship than to a sibling
  • Characteristic sibling relationships at this age
    include
  • - caregiver
  • - buddy
  • - critical
  • - rivalrous (likely with the close in age and
    boy-boy)
  • - casual

98
Early Friendships-Peers
  • By six months of age, two babies placed together
    will touch, pull hair
  • and reach for each others clothing
  • By 14-18 months, infants engage in parallel
    play, in which they
  • simply play side by side with different toys and
    occasionally
  • co-operate
  • It is only around 18 months that we see the
    beginnings of co-operative
  • play, such as chasing
  • By age three or four, children prefer to play
    with others than to play
  • alone and this takes the form of co-operative
    and co-ordinated
  • exchanges, including instances of group pretend
    play

99
Early Friendships-Peers
  • At age three to four, we also see the first
    signs of exclusive
  • peer preferences -- more than half of the
    children of this age
  • will have at least one mutual friendship likely
    to last at least six
  • months
  • These relationships show many features
    associated with friendship
  • that are not observed with strangers, including
    interactions that are
  • longer, more positive and less negative, and
    disputes that are more
  • likely to be resolved
  • Early friendships are an important forum in
    which children can practise essential social
    skills
  • By age 7, peers take up the largest portion of a
    child's social life

100
Gender in Friendships
  • Gender segregation is perhaps the most
    distinctive feature of
  • school-age socialisation and appears to exist in
    every culture
  • Gottman (1986) reported that as much as 65 of
    preschool
  • friendships are with same-sex peers
  • Between 6 and 12 years, favouritism for the same
    gender and
  • antagonism and negative stereotyping towards the
    opposite gender
  • are common practice, if not the norm
  • Gender segregation is even more pronounced as
    friendships become
  • more intense and lasting (e.g. less than 3 of
    3rd and 4th graders
  • have a close opposite-sex friend)

101
Gender in Friendships
102
Gender in Friendships
  • As children proceed through early school, the
    number of
  • acquaintances and friends increases and these
    relationships
  • generally become more intense and exclusive
  • There are also sex differences with regard to
    friendships
  • Waldrop and Halverson (1975) used the terms
    extensive and intensive
  • to describe the different patterns observed in
    boys' and girls'
  • friendships, respectively
  • Boys groups are larger, more accepting of
    newcomers, play more
  • outdoors and roam a larger area
  • Girls commonly play more indoors and nearer to
    the home

103
Adolescent Friendships
  • Many new features characterise adolescent
    friendships
  • Gender segregation is reduced, group conformity
    increases
  • and adolescents strive to become even more
    independent
  • from parents
  • Teenagers spend over half their waking lives
    with peers
  • and less than 5 with parents
  • Adolescent friendships are more intimate
    loyalty within
  • the friendship becomes highly valued they last
    longer
  • and peers become the primary confidant as
    self-disclosure
  • with parents drops abruptly

104
Common Peer Patterns
  • - Altruism (behaviour that explicitly benefits
    another)
  • First observed around age two to three with
    children sharing a
  • toy or offering to help another child who is
    hurt
  • - Aggression (behaviour that reflects intent to
    injure another)
  • Observed in two to three year-olds when they
    throw things at, or hit
  • With increasing age, these patterns of physical
    injury are replaced
  • with more psychological and subtle hurt (e.g.
    taunting)
  • At all ages, boys show more physical aggression
    than girls,
  • who display what is referred to as relational
    aggression
  • This female aggressive behaviour appears to be
    more aimed at
  • damaging the self-esteem or peer relationships
    and commonly
  • includes threats of social exclusion

105
Bullying
  • Repeated torments of another with words,
    gestures, intentional exclusion from a group, or
    physical injury)
  • Is a characteristic of school-age aggression
  • Olweus reported that as many as 9 of elementary
    school children are victims
  • Victim characteristics include anxiety,
    passivity, sensitivity, low self-esteem, lack of
    a sense of humour and comparative lack of friends
  • Victims are often unpopular with peers because
    they appear unable to assert themselves (e.g.
    they do not initiate play)
  • Common consequences (especially of more
    serious/protracted episodes) include loneliness,
    school avoidance, low self-esteem and even
    depression in later years

106
Popularity
  • Features that children prefer in forming
    friendships include
  • physical characteristics such as attractiveness
    and height
  • But even at a young age, behaviour is deemed
    more important
  • than appearance
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