Title: CHAPTER 1 UNDERSTANDING LIFE-SPAN HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
1CHAPTER 1 UNDERSTANDING LIFE-SPAN HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT
2What is Development?
- Systematic changes and continuities
- In the individual
- Between conception and death
- Womb to Tomb
- Three broad domains
- Physical, Cognitive, Psychosocial
3Other Developmental Definitions
- Growth Physical changes that occur from birth to
maturity - Aging Positive and negative changes in the
mature organism - Maturation The biological unfolding of the
individual genetic plan - Learning Relatively permanent changes due to
environmental experiences
4Age Grades, Age Norms, and the Social Clock
- Age Grade Socially defined age groups
- Statuses, roles, privileges, responsibilities
- Adults can vote, children cant
- Age Norms Behavioral expectations by age
- Children attend school
- Social Clock When things should be done
- Early adulthood time for 1st marriages
- Off time experiences are more difficult
5Phases of the Life Span
- Before 1600 Children viewed as miniature adults
- Modern View Children innocent, need protection
- Average life expectancy in 1900 was 47 years
- In 2000 it was 77.5 years
- Females White80, Black76
- Males White75, Black69
- Increasing population - age 65 and older
6Framing the Nature/Nurture Issue
- Nature heredity
- Maturational processes guided by genes
- Biologically based predispositions
- Biological unfolding of genes
- Nurture environment
- Learning experiences cause changes in thoughts,
feelings, and behaviors - Interactionist view nature nurture interact
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8The Bioecological Model
- Microsystem Immediate environment
- Mesosystem Relationships
- Exosystem Social Systems
- Macrosystem Culture
- Chronosystem Changes occur in a time frame
- This is an interactionist model
9- Urie Bronfenbrenners bioecological model of
development pictures environment as a series of
nested structures. The microsystem refers to
relations between the developing person and her
immediate environment, the mesosystem to
connections among microsystems, the exosystem to
settings that affect but do not contain the
individual, the macrosystem to the broader
cultural context of development, and the
chronosystem to the patterning over time of
historical and life events. Researchers face
many challenges in studying the developing person
in context.
10Goals of Studying Life-Span Development
- Description
- Normal development, individual differences
- Explanation
- Typical and individually different development
- Optimization
- Positive development, enhancing human capacities
- Prevention and overcoming difficulties
11Methods of Studying Life-Span Development
- Historical
- Baby Biographies Charles Darwin
- Questionnaires G. Stanley Hall
- Key Assumptions of Modern Life-Span Perspectives
- Lifelong, multidirectional process
- Gain and loss and lifelong plasticity
- Historical/cultural contexts, multiple influences
- Multi-disciplinary studies
12Unique Challenges in Developmental Research
- Infants and young children
- Attention, instruction, answering questions may
be difficult - Elderly Adults
- Possible sensory impairments
- Discomfort being studied, tested
13Conducting Developmental Research
- Self-reports interview, questionnaires, tests
- Behavioral Observations (Experiments)
- Naturalistic
- Advantage natural setting
- Disadvantage conditions not controlled
- Structured (Lab)
- Disadvantage cannot generalize to natural
settings - Advantage conditions controlled
14The Scientific (Experimental) Method
- Three Critical Features
- 1. Manipulation of independent variable
- 2. Random assignment of individuals to treatment
conditions - 3. Experimental control
- Quasi-Experiment No random assignment
-
15- The scientific method in action
16The Correlational Method
- Determine if 2 or more variables are related
- Correlation A measure of the relationship
- Can range from 1.0 to 1.0
- Positive variables move in same direction
- Negative variables move in opposite dir.
- No relationship if correlation is 0
- Cannot establish a causal relationship
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18Developmental Research Designs
- Cross-Sectional Designs
- gt1 cohorts or age-groups studied
- 1 time of testing
- Studying age differences at any one time
- Longitudinal Designs
- lt1 cohort
- 1 time of testing
- Study changes across time in one cohort
19- Cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of
development from age 30 to age 70.
20Age, Cohort, and Time of Measurement Effects
- Age effects Changes which occur due to age
- Cohort Effects Born in one historical context
- Changes due to differences in society
- Disadvantage of cross-sectional design
- Time of measurement effects Historical
- Take place at time of data collection
- Disadvantage of longitudinal design
21- Conflicting findings of hypothetical
cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of
gender-role attitudes. How could the two studies
produce different age trends?
22Sequential Designs
- A combination of cross-sectional and longitudinal
designs - Advantages of both designs
- Gives information about
- Which age-related trends are age effects
- Which age-related trends are truly cohort effects
- Which age-related trends are a result of
historical events
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25Issues in Developmental Studies
- Random sampling
- Increases likelihood that sample is
representative of population - Protecting rights of research participants
- Must assess the benefit to risk balance
- Researcher responsibilities
- Informed consent, debriefing, protection from
harm, confidentiality
26Cultural and Subcultural Sensitivity in Research
- Variety of contexts considered
- Culturally sensitive methods measurements
- SES particularly important
- Ethnocentrism
27Historical Changes in Periods of Lifespan
- Childhood
- Pressure to grow up
- Early exposure to adult issues
- Adolescence A transition delayed adulthood
- Emerging Adulthood
- Identity exploration in preparation for adulthood
- Adulthood
- By 2030, gt20 will be over age 65