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Life-span development

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Life-span development liudexiang Developmental psychology The study of the changes that occur in people from birth through old age. Enduring issues and methods ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Life-span development


1
Life-span development
  • liudexiang

2
Developmental psychology
  • The study of the changes that occur in people
    from birth through old age.

3
Enduring issues and methods
  • Individual characteristics versus shared human
    traits
  • Stability versus change
  • Heredity versus environment

4
Enduring issues and methods
  • Cross-sectional study A method of studying
    development changes by comparing people of
    different ages at about the same time.
  • Cohort A group of people born during the same
    period in historical time.

5
Enduring issues and methods
  • Longitudinal study A method of studying
    developmental changes by evaluating the same
    people at different points in their lives.
  • Biographical ( or retrospective ) study A
    method of studying developmental changes by
    reconstructing peoples past through interviews
    and inferring the effects of past events on
    current behaviors.

6
Prenatal development
  • Prenatal development Development from
    conception to birth.
  • Embryo A developing human between 2 weeks and 3
    months after conception.
  • Fetus A developing human between 3 months after
    conception and birth.

7
Prenatal development
  • Critical period A time when certain internal
    and external influences have a major effect on
    development at other periods, the same
    influences will have little or no effect.
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome A disorder that occurs
    in children of women who drink alcohol during
    pregnancy this disorder is characterized by
    facial deformities, heart defects, stunted
    growth, and cognitive impairments.

8
Critical period
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9
The newborn---reflexes
  • Rooting reflex the babys tendency to turn his
    or her head toward anything that touches the
    cheek.
  • Sucking reflex The tendency to suck on anything
    that enters the mouth.
  • Grasping reflex the tendency to cling
    vigorously to an adults finger or to any other
    object placed in the babys hands.

10
Temperament
  • Temperament Characteristic patterns of
    emotional reactions and emotional
    self-regulation.

11
Infancy and childhood
  • Physical development

12
Motor development
  • Motor development It refers to the acquisition
    of skills involving movement, such as grasping,
    crawling, and walking.
  • Motor development proceeds in a proximodistal
    fashion---from nearest the center of the body to
    farthest from the center.

13
Motor development milestones
14
The normal sequence of motor development
  • At birth, babies have grasping and stepping
    reflexes. At about 2 months, they can lift their
    head and shoulders. They can sit up by themselves
    at about 6.5 months and can stand ( while holding
    on to something ) at about 9 months. Crawling
    begins, on average, at 10 months, and walking at
    1 year.

15
Maturation
  • Maturation refers to biological processes that
    unfold as a person grows older and that
    contribute to orderly sequences of developmental
    changes, such as the progression from crawling to
    toddling to walking.

16
Cognitive development
17
Sensory-motor stages
  • In Piagets theory, the stage of cognitive
    development between birth and 2 years of age in
    which the individual develops object performance
    and acquires the ability to form mental
    representation.

18
Preoperational stage
  • In Piagets theory, the stage of cognitive
    development between 2 and 7 years of age in which
    the individual becomes able to use mental
    representations and language to describe,
    remember, and reason about the world, though only
    in an egocentric fashion.

19
Concrete-operational stage
  • In Piagets theory, the stage of cognitive
    development between 7 and 11 years of age in
    which the individual can attend to more than one
    thing at a time and understand someone elses
    point of view, though thinking is limited to
    concrete matters.

20
Formal-operational stage
  • In Piagets theory, the stage of cognitive
    development between 11 and 15 years of age in
    which the individual becomes capable of abstract
    thought.

21
Social development
  • Learning to interact with others is an important
    aspect of development in childhood.

22
Imprinting
  • The tendency in certain species to follow the
    first moving thing (usually its mother) it sees
    after it is born or hatched.

23
attachment
  • Emotional bond that develops in the first year of
    life that makes human babies cling to their
    caregivers for safety and comfort.

24
Autonomy
  • Sense of independence a desire not to be
    controlled by others.

25
Socialization
  • Process by which children learn the behaviors and
    attitudes appropriate to their family and
    culture.

26
The end
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