1 Section 1-2 Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Section.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 3 Infancy and Childhood.
Advertisements

Chapter 3: Infancy & Childhood
Human Development Dancing Baby 1.
Chapter 3: Infancy and Childhood Mr. McCormick Psychology.
CHAPTER 3- INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD
 Infancy And Childhood Standards IIIA-1.2 Examine the nature of change over the lifespan. IIIA-1.3 Identify the complex cognitive structures found in.
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD: PIAGET’S COGNITIVE STAGES.
Developmental Milestones in Infancy and Childhood
Unit 9: Developmental Psychology
Developmental Psychology Infancy and Childhood. How do brain and motor skills develop? Good News While in the womb, you produce almost ¼ million brain.
Language Development Language and thought are intertwined. Both abilities involve using symbols. We are able to think and talk about objects that are not.
Theories of Development. Cognitive Development Early psychologists believed that children were not capable of meaningful thought and that there actions.
 Define the 2 reflexes of babies  Looking at Nature VS. Nurture debate..  A childs home life would fall under which side?  A childs genetic makeup?
? Choose one picture and tell me what do you think the lesson is about.
Chapter 4.  Cognition – all mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating  Jean Piaget ◦ Theory of Cognitive Development.
 Chapter 3 Section 2 and 3 Notes.  Jean Piaget o Focused on the development of thought o As the child grows, intelligence and the ability to understand.
Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth.
Instructor name Class Title, Term/Semester, Year Institution © 2011 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Introductory Psychology Concepts Infancy.
Developing Psychology- the specialized study of how an individuals physical, social, emotional, moral, and intellectual development occur in sequential.
Prenatal Development and the Newborn  Developmental Psychology.
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 What Are the Developmental Tasks of Infancy and Childhood? Infants and children face especially important developmental.
Infancy and Childhood Chapter 3.
JEAN PIAGET HALIMA SHARIAT & TENI KURIAN.
Chapter 3 Infancy and Childhood.
Cognitive and Emotional Development Chapter 3, Section 2.
Unit 2 Infancy and Childhood. Nature vs. Nurture Developmental psychology –Study of how an individuals physical, social, emotional, moral and intellectual.
Human Development Emotional Stage & Intellectual Stage March 2014.
His Mission… Piaget wanted to find out how intelligence, or the ability to understand, developed during childhood. How did he do it? –Observing, questioning,
Child Development. Developmental Psychology Studies how people grow and change –Covers the entire life span (conception – death) Why is each stage important.
Intellectual Development of the Infant
Bell Ringer 1. Draw a horizontal line on your paper.
Unit 2 Chapter 3, Section 1 Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development.
 Please get out your textbook and turn to page 7.
Chapter 3 Infancy and Childhood. Developmental Psychology- the study of changes that occur as as individual matures. Developmental Psychology- the study.
Infancy and Childhood Chapter 3.
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
Class Starter for 2/1/2010 Read p. 71 – How do children benefit from imaginary playmates? Did you ever have one?
Introduction to Psychology Enterprise High School Coach Welch Infancy and Childhood Section 2: Cognitive and Emotional Development.
Intellectual Development
Life Span Development Modules 4-6. Physical Changes.
JEAN PIAGET: Stages of Cognitive Development
I CAN: Explain each Piagetian stage and apply them to given descriptions I can identify developmental markers within each stage of development.
Intellectual Development of the Infant
CHAPTER 3 Infancy and Childhood. PHYSICAL, PERCEPTUAL, AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT  Developmental Psychologists study main issues:  1. Continuity versus.
Infancy and childhood Adolescence Adulthood and old age.
Prenatal, Infancy and Childhood Development. The Beginnings of Life: Prenatal Development.
Developmental Psychology Infancy and Childhood. So what will a healthy newborn do? Reflexes Rooting Reflex- a babies tendency, when touched on the cheek,
Chapter 3! Physical Development.  You have changed a lot since you were a baby. You learned more in early childhood than you ever will again. People.
Chapter 11 Human Development. physical cognitivesocial.
Developmental Psychology-Infancy and Childhood. Developmental Psychology The study of YOU from womb to tomb! A branch of psychology that studies physical,
CH 3 Section 2. Introduction (page 70) Children think differently from adults in many ways. Children form their own ideas about how the world works. Describe.
Infancy & Childhood. Infancy and Childhood When you are finished with the test, read the case study on page 69 and answer the questions at the end of.
CHAPTER 10 & 11 Trivia Game. QUESTION 1 Harry Harlow in his experiment concluded that young animals cling to their mothers because of the instinctual.
Developmental Psychology
3.1 Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development Developmental Psychology: the study of changes that occur as an individual matures.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 3: Infancy & Childhood
Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology.
Allyson Bortoletto 4/8/14 Psychology Tara Holloway
What is your earliest memory? How old were you?
Chapter 3 Infancy and Childhood.
Healthy Newborns Turn head towards voices.
Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology.
Cognitive and Emotional Development
Notes 4-2 (Obj 9-16).
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
Bellringer: Is there a specific window when children need to learn language skills? Read the case study about a little girl named Genie to find out.
Developmental Psychology
Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development
Developmental Psychology
Presentation transcript:

1 Section 1-2 Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Section 1 begins on page 61 of your textbook. Vocabulary –grasping reflex  –rooting reflex  –maturation  –telegraphic speech –developmental psychology  Reader’s Guide (cont.)

2 Section 1-4 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The study of changes that occur as an individual matures is called developmental psychology.  developmental psychology the study of changes that occur as an individual matures Introduction (cont.) Developmental psychology looks at how an individual’s physical, social, emotional, moral, and intellectual growth and development occur in sequential interrelated stages throughout the life cycle.

3 Section 1-5 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Nature and Nurture Developmental psychologists study the following main issues:  –continuity versus stages of development  –stability versus change  –nature versus nurture  On the question of nature versus nurture, psychologists ask: How much of development is the result of inheritance (heredity), and how much is the result of what we have learned?

4 Section 1-6 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Development begins long before an infant is born.  Expectant mothers can feel strong movement and kicking–even hiccuping– inside them during the later stages of pregnancy.  It is common for a fetus (an unborn child) to suck its thumb, even though it has never suckled at its mother’s breast or had a bottle. Newborns

5 Section 1-7 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Newborns have the ability at birth to see, hear, smell, and respond to the environment, allowing them to adapt to the new world around them.  grasping reflex an infant’s clinging response to a touch on the palm of his or her hand Infants are born with many reflexes.  Capacities The grasping reflex is a response to a touch on the palm of the hand.

6 Section 1-8 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Also vital is the rooting reflex.  rooting reflex an infant’s response in turning toward the source of touching that occurs anywhere around his or her mouth If an alert newborn is touched anywhere around the mouth, he will move his head and mouth toward the source of the touch.  In this way the touch of his mother’s breast on his cheek guides the infant’s mouth toward her nipple. Capacities (cont.)

7 Section 1-9 Infants on average weigh 7.5 pounds at birth.  At birth, 95 percent of infants are between 5.5 and 10 pounds and are 18 to 22 inches in length.  In the space of two years, the grasping, rooting, searching infant will develop into a child who can walk, talk, and feed herself or himself.  This transformation is the result of both maturation and learning. Physical Development

8 Section 1-10 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. To some extent an infant is like a plant that shoots up and unfolds according to a built-in plan.  maturation the internally programmed growth of a child Psychologists call internally programmed growth maturation. Maturation

9 Section 1-11 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. By recording the ages at which thousands of infants first began to smile, to sit upright, to crawl, and to try a few steps, psychologists have been able to develop an approximate timetable for maturation.  One of the facts to emerge from this effort, however, is that the maturational plan inside each child is unique.  Maturation (cont.)

10 Chart 1-1 Physical and Motor Development

11 Section 1-12 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Two experimenters (Gibson & Walk, 1960) devised the visual cliff to determine whether infants had depth perception.  Whereas very young infants seemed unafraid, older infants (6 months and older) who were experienced at crawling refused to cross over the cliff. Perceptual Development

12 Chart 1-2 The Visual Preferences of Infants

13 Section 1-13 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Language and thought are closely intertwined; both abilities involve using symbols.  We are able to think and talk about objects that are present and about ideas that are not necessarily true.  A child begins to think, to represent things to himself, before he is able to speak. The Development of Language

14 Section 1-14 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Psychologists believe that chimpanzees must develop at least as far as 2-year- old humans because, like 2-year-olds, they will look for a toy or a bit of food that has disappeared.  Chimps have learned sign language and how to use special typewriters connected to computers.  The chimps use only aspects of the human language. Can Animals Use Language?

15 Section 1-15 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Some psychologists argue that language is reinforced behavior, while others claim it is inborn.  Some people claim there is a “critical period,” or a window of opportunity, for learning a language.  How Children Acquire Language There are several steps in learning language:  –learning to make the signs  –giving the signs meaning  –learning grammar

16 Section 1-16 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. During the first year of life, the average child makes many sounds.  Late in the first year, the strings of babbles begin to sound more like the language that the child hears.  The leap to using sounds as symbols occurs sometime in the second year.  By the time children are 2 years old, they have a vocabulary of at least 50 words. How Children Acquire Language (cont.)

17 Section 1-17 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. At age 2, though, a child’s grammar is still unlike that of an adult.  telegraphic speech the kind of verbal utterances in which words are left out, but the meaning is usually clear Children use what psychologists call telegraphic speech–for example, “Where my apple?” “Daddy fall down.”  How Children Acquire Language (cont.) They leave out words but still get the message across.

18 Section 1-18 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. As psychologists have discovered, 2- year-olds already understand certain rules (Brown, 1973).  They keep their words in the same order adults do.  Indeed, at one point they overdo this, applying grammatical rules too consistently.  When the correct form appears, the child has shifted from imitation through overgeneralization to rule- governed language. How Children Acquire Language (cont.)

19 Chart 1-3 The Flowering of Language

20 Section 2-2 Reader’s Guide (cont.) Click the Speaker button to listen to Exploring Psychology. Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Section 2 begins on page 70 of your textbook. Vocabulary –assimilation  –accommodation  –object permanence  –representational thought  –conservation  –egocentric  –imprinting  –critical period –schema 

21 Section 2-5 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Jean Piaget wanted to study how children and adults thought differently.  According to him, intelligence, or the ability to understand, develops gradually as the child grows.  He concluded that young children think in a different way than older children and adults; they use a different kind of logic.  Intellectual development involves quantitative changes as well as qualitative changes. Cognitive Development

22 Section 2-6 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Understanding the world involves the construction of schemas, or mental representations of the world.  schema a specific plan for knowing the world Each of us constructs intellectual schemas, applying them and changing them as necessary; we try to understand a new or different object or concept by using one of our preexisting schemas. How Knowing Changes

23 Section 2-7 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. In the process of assimilation, we try to fit the new object into this schema.  assimilation the process of fitting objects and experiences into one’s schemas accommodation the adjustment of one’s schemas to include newly observed events and experiences In the process of accommodation, we change our schema to fit the characteristics of the new object.  How Knowing Changes (cont.) Assimilation and accommodation work together to produce intellectual growth.

24 Section 2-8 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. An infant’s understanding of things lies totally in the here and now.  The sight of a toy, the way it feels in her hands, and the sensation it produces in her mouth are all she knows.  She does not imagine it, picture it, think of it, remember it, or even forget it.  When an infant’s toy is hidden from her, she acts as if it has ceased to exist.  She does not look for it. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Object Permanence

25 Section 2-9 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. At 7 to 12 months, however, this pattern begins to change.  When you take the infant’s toy and hide it under a blanket–while she is watching– she will search for it under the blanket.  However, if you change tactics and put her toy behind your back, she will continue to look for it under the blanket– even if she was watching you the whole time. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Object Permanence

26 Section 2-10 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. You cannot fool a 12- to 18-month-old quite so easily.  A 12-month-old will act surprised when she does not find the toy under the blanket–and keep searching there.  An 18- or 24-month-old will guess what you have done and walk behind you to look.  She knows the toy must be somewhere (Ginsburg & Opper, 1969). How Knowing Changes (cont.) Object Permanence

27 Section 2-11 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. This is a giant step in intellectual development.  The child has progressed from a stage where she apparently believed that her own actions created the world, to a stage where she realizes that people and objects are independent of her actions. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Object Permanence

28 Section 2-12 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. object permanence child’s realization that an object exists even when he or she cannot see or touch it Piaget called this concept object permanence.  This concept might be expressed in this way: “Things continue to exist even though they cannot be seen or touched.”  It signifies a big step in the second year of life. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Object Permanence

29 Section 2-13 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. representational thought the intellectual ability of a child to picture something in his or her mind The achievement of object permanence suggests that a child has begun to engage in what Piaget calls representational thought.  The child’s intelligence is no longer one of action only; now, children can picture (or represent) things in their minds. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Representational Thought

30 Section 2-14 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. conservation the principle that a given quantity does not change when its appearance is changed More complex intellectual abilities emerge as the infant grows into childhood.  Between the ages of 5 and 7, most children begin to understand what Piaget calls conservation, the principle that a given quantity does not change when its appearance is changed. How Knowing Changes (cont.) The Principle of Conservation

31 Section 2-15 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. egocentric a young child’s inability to understand another person’s perspective A child under 5 has difficulty understanding others’ points of view; they are egocentric.  Egocentric thinking refers to seeing and thinking of the world from your own standpoint and having difficulty understanding someone else’s viewpoint and other perspectives. How Knowing Changes (cont.) The Principle of Conservation

32 Chart 2-1 Tasks to Measure Conservation

33 Section 2-16 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Piaget described the changes that occur in children’s understanding in four stages of cognitive development.  The four stages are the sensorimotor stage, preoperational stage, concrete operations stage, and the formal operations stage. How Knowing Changes (cont.) Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development

34 Chart 2-1 Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development

35 Section 2-18 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Experiments with baby birds and monkeys have shown that there is a maturationally determined time of readiness for attachment early in life.  If the infant is too young or too old, the attachment cannot be formed, but the attachment itself is a kind of learning.  If the attachment is not made, or if a different attachment is made, the infant will develop in a different way as a result. Experiments With Animals

36 Section 2-19 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. imprinting inherited tendencies or responses that are displayed by newborn animals when they encounter new stimuli in their environment Konrad Lorenz became a pioneer in the field of animal learning.  Lorenz discovered that baby geese become attached to their mothers in a sudden, virtually permanent learning process called imprinting. Experiments With Animals (cont.) Imprinting

37 Section 2-20 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. critical period a specific time in development when certain skills or abilities are most easily learned Goslings are especially sensitive just after birth, and whatever they learn during this critical period, about 13 to 16 hours after birth, makes a deep impression that resists change.  A critical period is a time in development when an animal (or human) is best able to learn a skill or behavior. Experiments With Animals (cont.) Imprinting

38 Section 2-21 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. An American psychologist, Harry Harlow, studied the relationship between mother and child in a species closer to humans, the rhesus monkey.  He tried to answer the question of what makes the mother so important by taking baby monkeys away from their natural mothers as soon as they were born. Experiments With Animals (cont.) Surrogate Mothers

39 Section 2-22 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. The results were dramatic.  The young monkeys for the most part ignored the wire mother, even if she had food.  They became strongly attached to the cloth mother, whether she gave food or not.  The touching mattered, not the feeding. Harlow called this contact comfort or tactile touch. Experiments With Animals (cont.) Surrogate Mothers

40 Section 2-23 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Some psychologists say there is a critical period when infants need to become attached to a caregiver, as Lorenz’s experiments suggests.  When an attachment bond to one person has been formed, disruption can be disturbing to the infant.  If a 1-year-old child encounters a stranger, that child may display anxiety even when the mother is present.  If the mother remains nearby, this stranger anxiety will pass. Human Infants

41 Section 2-24 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. Separation anxiety occurs whenever the child is suddenly separated from the mother.  Mary Ainsworth devised a technique called the Strange Situation to measure attachment.  In this technique, mothers and children undergo a series of episodes that sometimes involved the mother leaving and coming back into the room when a stranger was present and when a stranger was not present. Human Infants (cont.)

42 Section 2-25 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. From her research, she found there were three patterns of attachment in children: secure attachment, avoidant attachment, and resistant attachment.  Psychologists have since identified a fourth attachment, called disorganized attachment.  Infants who demonstrate secure attachment balance the need to explore with the need to be close. Human Infants (cont.)

43 Section 2-26 Click the mouse button or press the Space Bar to display the information. In avoidance attachment infants avoid or ignore the mother when she leaves and returns.  Infants with resistant attachment are not upset when the mother leaves but reject her or act angrily when she returns.  Infants with disorganized attachment behave inconsistently. Human Infants (cont.)

Chapter Concepts 2