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Heredity and Conception Truth or Fiction?

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Title: Heredity and Conception Truth or Fiction?


1
Chapter 1History, Theories, and Methods
2
History, Theories, and Methods Truth or Fiction?
  • During the Middle Ages, children were often
    treated as miniature adults.
  • Children come into the world as blank tablets
    without inborn differences in intelligence and
    talents.

3
History, Theories, and Methods Truth or Fiction?
  • Nail-biting and smoking cigarettes are signs of
    conflict experienced during early childhood.
  • Some theorists contend that children actively
    strive to understand and take charge of their
    worlds, whereas other theorists argue that
    children respond passively to environmental
    stimulation.

4
History, Theories, and Methods Truth or Fiction?
  • Research with monkeys has helped psychologists
    understand the formation of attachment in humans.
  • In order to learn how a person develops over a
    lifetime, researchers have tracked some
    individuals for more than 50 years.

5
What Is Child Development?
6
What Is Child Development?
  • Periods of Development
  • Conception and Prenatal
  • Infancy
  • Early Childhood
  • Middle Childhood
  • Adolescence
  • Dimensions of Development
  • Physiological
  • Cognitive
  • Social
  • Emotional
  • Behavioral

7
What Is Child Development?
  • Attempts to advance knowledge of the processes
    that govern the development of childrens
  • physical structures,
  • traits,
  • behaviors, and
  • cognitions.
  • Growth represents quantitative changes
  • Development represents qualitative changes

8
Why Do Researchers Study Child Development?
  • Gain insight into
  • human nature,
  • origins of adult behavior,
  • origins of differences,
  • origins, prevention and treatment of
    developmental problems
  • Optimize conditions of development

9
What Views of Children Do We Find Throughout
History?
  • Ancient Times and Middle Ages
  • Children viewed as innately evil
  • Age 7 is the age of reason
  • Children were treated as miniature adults
  • John Locke
  • Child came into world as tabula rasa, or blank
    slates
  • Focus on role of environment and experience
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • Children are inherently good and moral

10
What Views of Children Do We Find Throughout
History?
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Nuclear family
  • Childhood is recognized as a time period of life
  • 20th Century
  • Child rights in labor, education, neglect

11
Pioneers in the Study of Child Development
  • Charles Darwin (1809 1882)
  • Theory of evolution
  • Use of baby biography
  • G. Stanley Hall (1944 - 1924)
  • Child development as a academic discipline
  • Questionnaire methodology with children
  • Alfred Binet (1857 1911)
  • First standardized intelligence test

12
Theories of Child Development
13
What Are Theories?
  • Related sets of statements about events
  • Include descriptive terms and concepts
  • Based on certain assumptions
  • Allow explanations and predictions
  • Wide range of applicability
  • Influence events

14
Why Do We Have Theories?
  • Theories of development help us
  • describe,
  • explain,
  • predict, and
  • influence events being studied.

15
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
  • Freuds theory of psychosexual development
  • Eriksons theory of psychosocial development
  • View children (and adults) involved in conflict
  • internal drive and urges
  • internalize external demands and rules
  • Stage theories
  • distinct periods of development

16
Freuds Theory of Psychosexual Development
  • Sigmund Freud (1856 1939)
  • Levels of awareness
  • Conscious level
  • Preconscious level
  • Unconscious level
  • Parts of personality
  • Id
  • Ego
  • Superego
  • Quantity of gratification at each stage
  • Fixated at that stage

17
Stages of Psychosexual Theory of Development
  • Oral Stage
  • Sucking and biting
  • Early weaning or breast-fed too long
  • Fixation nail-biting, smoking, biting wit
  • Anal Stage
  • Control and elimination of waste
  • Excessive strict or permissive toilet training
  • Fixation anal-retentive (neatness)
    anal-expulsion (sloppiness)

18
Stages of Psychosexual Theory of Development
  • Phallic Stage
  • Parent-child conflict over masturbation
  • View same sex parent as rival
  • Latency Stage
  • Sexual feelings remain unconscious
  • Genital Stage
  • Begins at adolescence
  • Desire sexual gratification through intercourse
    with member of other sex
  • Interest in any other sexual gratification
    indicates fixation at an earlier stage of
    development

19
Evaluation of Psychosexual Theory of Development
  • Major contribution to 20th century thought
  • Comprehensive theory of childhood
  • Influenced parents, child-care workers and
    educators
  • Based on patients (women) who were emotionally
    troubled
  • Little empirical data
  • Placed too much emphasis on instincts and
    unconscious motives
  • Erik Erikson and Karen Horney

20
Eriksons Theory of Psychosocial Development
  • Erik Erikson (1902 1994)
  • modified and expanded Freuds theory
  • successful resolution of life crises bolsters
    sense of identity
  • Differences from psychosexual development
  • focus on development of self-identity
  • includes conscious and purposeful acts in
    development
  • extended stages to eight throughout adulthood

21
Stages of Psychosocial Development
  • Trust versus Mistrust
  • Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt
  • Initiative versus Guilt
  • Industry versus Inferiority
  • Identity versus Role Diffusion
  • Intimacy versus Isolation
  • Generativity versus Stagnation
  • Ego Integrity versus Despair

22
Evaluation of Psychosocial Development
  • Highly appealing
  • emphasize choice and minimize urges
  • portray people as prosocial and giving
  • Unified view of life span development
  • Some empirical support

23
The Learning Perspective Behavioral and Social
Cognition Theories
  • Mechanical learning by association
  • Conditioning
  • Intentional learning
  • Rote and trail-and-error learning
  • Observational learning

24
What Is the Theory of Behaviorism?
  • John Watson
  • Only address observable behavior
  • Contributions to behaviorism
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Operant Conditioning

25
Classical Conditioning
  • Learning by Association
  • Unconditioned Unlearned
  • Unconditioned Stimulus (UCS) elicits
    Unconditioned Response (UCR)
  • Introduction of a Neutral Stimulus
  • Repeated association of neutral Stimulus and UCS
  • Conditioned Learned
  • Conditioned Stimulus (CS) elicits Conditioned
    Response (CR)

26
Classical Conditioning
  • Pavlovs Salivating Dogs
  • Food (UCS) elicits Salivation (UCR)
  • Clinking of food trays (neutral stimulus)
  • Clinking of food trays prior to Food (UCS)
  • Clinking of food trays (CS) elicits Salivation
    (CR)
  • Application with Children
  • Behavior modification

27
Figure 1.1 Schematic Representation of Classical
Conditioning
28
Operant Conditioning
  • Learn to operate on environment because of the
    effects of behavior
  • Behavior occurs and then a stimulus is introduced
    that will encourage the repetition of the
    behavior
  • B. F. Skinner Reinforcement
  • Any stimulus that increases the frequency of the
    behavior they follow

29
Principles of Operant Conditioning
  • Positive reinforcers
  • Something applied that increases the frequency of
    the behavior
  • Negative reinforcers
  • Something removed that increases the frequency of
    the behavior
  • Extinction
  • Operant behavior is no longer shown after
    repeated performance of the behavior without
    reinforcement

30
Figure 1.2 Positive versus Negative Reinforcers
31
Punishment
  • Aversive events that decrease the behavior they
    follow
  • Usually undesirable for learning
  • Does not suggest an alternative, acceptable form
    of behavior
  • Tends to suppress undesirable behavior only under
    certain conditions
  • Punished children may withdraw from the situation
  • Can create anger and hostility
  • May generalize too far
  • May be imitated as a way of problem solving or
    coping with stress

32
A Closer Look
  • Operant Conditioning of Vocalizations in Infants

33
Figure 1.3 Negative Reinforcers versus
Punishments
34
Application of Operant Conditioning
  • Shaping
  • Teaching complex behaviors
  • Socialization of children
  • Parent and child
  • Child and child
  • Teacher and child

35
Social Cognitive Theory
  • Acquire basic know-how through observational
    learning
  • Learning alters childs mental representation of
    environment and influences belief in ability to
    change the environment
  • Child is an active learner
  • Intentional observation of models for imitation

36
Evaluation of Learning Theories
  • Meets the goals of describe, explain and predict
    aspects of childrens behavior
  • Principles abundant in education and clinical
    application
  • Unclear if learning is only mechanical
  • Underestimates role of biological-maturation
    factors

37
The Cognitive Perspective
  • Focus on childrens mental processes
  • How children perceive and mentally represent the
    world
  • Jean Piaget (1896 1980)
  • Cognitive-developmental theory
  • Information-processing theory

38
Piagets Cognitive-Developmental Theory
  • Working with Binet on IQ tests for children,
    Piaget became interested in childrens incorrect
    answers
  • Piagets work was not widely read until mid
    1950s
  • difficult to understand
  • introduced when behaviorism and psychoanalysis
    were popular
  • Piagets view of children as little scientists

39
Piagets Basic Concepts
  • Scheme
  • pattern of action involved in acquiring or
    organizing knowledge
  • Adaptation
  • interaction between child and the environment
  • Assimilation
  • Respond to new object or event according to
    existing schemes
  • Accommodation
  • Adjust scheme to a new object or event
  • Equilibration
  • Process of restoring equilibrium after a period
    of accommodation

40
Piagets Stages of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Four major stages
  • Sensorimotor
  • Preoperational
  • Concrete Operational
  • Formal Operational
  • Stages are universal
  • Development is based on childrens interactions
    with their environments
  • Influential in many educational settings

41
Evaluation of Cognitive-Development Theory
  • Piaget may have underestimated childrens
    abilities by age
  • Cognitive growth may be more gradual than
    Piagets distinct stages

42
Information-Processing Theory
  • Influenced by the concepts of computer science
  • Process of encoding information (input)
  • Storage of information (long-term memory)
  • Retrieval of information (short-term memory)
  • Manipulation of information to solve problems
    (output)
  • Software (mental processes)
  • Hardware (brain)
  • Consider limitations of child
  • Short-term memory
  • Ability to multi-task
  • Applications in education

43
The Biological Perspective
  • Physical development
  • Gains in height and weight
  • Development of nervous system
  • Developments connected with hormones, heredity
  • Ethology

44
What Is Ethology?
  • Evolution of humans within the animal kingdom
  • Influence by Charles Darwin, Konrad Lorenz and
    Niko Tinbergen
  • Involves instinctive behavior patterns
  • Inborn fixed action patterns (FAPs)
  • Evaluation
  • Assume instinctive behaviors can be modified
    through learning

45
The Ecological Systems Theory
  • Explains development through interactions between
    children and the settings in which they live
  • Urie Bronfenbrenner
  • Reciprocal interactions
  • focus on interactions between parent and child
    (bidirectional)
  • Five Embedded Systems
  • Microsystem
  • Mesosystem
  • Exosystem
  • Macrosystem
  • Chronosystem

46
Figure 1.4 The Contexts of Human Development
47
Developing in a World of Diversity
  • Influence of the Macrosystem on the Development
    of Independence

48
The Sociocultural Perspective
  • View children as social beings who are influenced
    by the cultures in which they live
  • Lev Vygotskys (1896 1934) sociocultural theory
  • Impact on children of human diversity

49
Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
  • Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
  • range of tasks child can perform with help of
    someone more skilled
  • use of conversations, external and internal, to
    guide the learning
  • Scaffolding
  • Adult provides problem-solving methods until
    child can perform independently
  • May also be used by child with peers

50
Sociocultural Perspective and Human Diversity
  • Awareness of diversity among children
  • Ethnicity
  • Understanding of childrens family values and
    cultural expectations
  • Gender
  • Understanding of gender-role expectations
  • Sexual Orientation
  • Disabilities

51
Controversies in Child Development
52
The Nature Nurture Controversy
  • To what extent is human behavior the results of
  • Nature heredity
  • Nurture environment
  • Orientation toward nature
  • Cognitive-development theory
  • Biological theorists
  • Orientation toward nurture
  • Learning theories
  • Contemporary view of both nature and nurture

53
The Continuity Discontinuity Controversy
  • Do developmental changes occur
  • continuously (gradually)
  • discontinuously (major qualitative leaps)
  • Orientation toward continuity
  • Maturational theories
  • Orientation toward discontinuity
  • Stage theories (Freud, Piaget)

54
The Active Passive Controversy
  • For learning to occur do educators need to
  • motivate passive learners, or
  • encourage active learners to explore
  • Bronfenbrenner (1977) views children as both
    active and passive
  • Banduras reciprocal determinism
  • mutual influences of people and the environment

55
How Do We Study Child Development?
56
What Is the Scientific Method?
  • Step 1 Formulating a Research Question
  • Step 2 Developing a Hypothesis
  • Step 3 Testing the Hypothesis
  • Step 4 Drawing Conclusions about the Hypothesis
  • Step 5 Publish Findings

57
What Is Naturalistic Observation?
  • Field studies
  • Observations done in natural (real-life) settings
  • Control for interference
  • Often used initially to gather descriptive data
    or to explore relationships among variables
  • Examples of naturalistic-observation studies
  • Motor behavior of Native American children
    strapped to cradleboards
  • Language development in diverse cultures
  • Socialization patterns in diverse cultures

58
What Is Case Study?
  • Account of behavior of an individual
  • Includes many different types of information
  • Child diaries
  • Questionnaires
  • Standardized tests
  • Interviews
  • Other sources of records
  • Example of case study
  • Piagets cognitive-development model based on his
    own children
  • Freuds psychosexual theory based on his patients

59
What Does It Mean to Correlate Information?
  • Mathematical calculation to determine
    relationships between behaviors and/or traits
  • Correlation coefficient
  • Mathematical number between 1.00 and -1.00
  • Positive correlation
  • Negative correlation
  • Limitation Shows relationships, not cause and
    effect

60
Figure 1.7 Examples of Positive and Negative
Correlations
61
What Is an Experiment?
  • Research method in which one group receives
    treatment and another does not
  • Used to determine cause and effect
  • Variables
  • Independent variable - manipulated by
    experimenter
  • Dependent variable measured results
  • Participant Groups
  • Experimental group receive the treatment
  • Control group do not receive the treatment
  • Random Assignment
  • Ethical and Practical Considerations

62
How Do Researchers Study Development Over Time?
  • Longitudinal research
  • Same children are observed repeatedly over time
  • May lose participants over time
  • Cross-sectional research
  • Children of different ages are observed and
    compared
  • Cohort effect
  • Cross-sequential research
  • Combines longitudinal (time period) and
    cross-sectional (cohorts)
  • Breaks time span into convenient segments

63
Figure 1.8 Examples of Cross-Sequential Research
64
What Ethical Guidelines Are Involved in Research
in Child Development?
  • Standards to promote the dignity of the
    individual, foster human welfare, and maintain
    scientific integrity
  • Treatment may not do physical or psychological
    harm
  • Subjects must participate voluntarily
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