Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byNoah Holmes Modified over 8 years ago
1
Infancy and childhood Adolescence Adulthood and old age
2
Each of us born into a world in which we must adapt. From childhood to adolescence to adulthood to old age.
3
In this unit you will learn about; Developmental Psychology: ◦ The specialized study of how an individual’s physical, social, emotional, moral, and intellectual development occurs in a sequential interrelated stages throughout the life cycle. ◦ Developmental Psychology = study of changes that occur as an individual matures.
4
Physical Perceptual Language Cognitive Emotional Social Moral Sexual Identity
5
Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development Cognitive and Emotional Development Parenting Styles and Social Development
6
Main Idea: ◦ Infants are born equipped to experience the world. As infants grow physically they also develop cognitive skills, perceptions, and language. Vocabulary: ◦ Developmental Psychology ◦ Grasping Reflex ◦ Rooting Reflex ◦ Maturation ◦ Telegraphic Speech Objectives: ◦ Describe the physical and perceptual development of newborns and children. ◦ Discuss the development of language. Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development.
7
The newborn is capable of certain inherited, automatic, coordinated movement patters, called reflexes, that can be triggered by the right stimulus. Grasping Reflex: an infant’s clinging response to a touch on the palm of his or her hand.
8
Rooting Reflex: an infant’s response in turning toward the source of touching that occurs anywhere around his or her mouth. ◦ Ex. Mothers breast on infants cheek guides mouth towards nipple ◦ The sucking that follows contact with the nipple is one of the infant’s most complex reflexes. Infant is able to suck, breath air, and swallow milk twice a second without getting confused.
9
Diving reflex
10
Babinski Reflex
12
Some infants can weigh up to 20 or 25 pounds by the end of the first year. At birth, 95% 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 feel himself. This transformation is the result of both maturation and learning.
13
Maturation: The internally programmed growth of a child. - Maturation is as important as learning or experience, especially in the first years. Learning: is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience. Handout: Figure 3.2/ Maturation
14
How do we know what infants perceive?
15
Besides grasping and sucking, newborns look at their bodies and at their surroundings. Newborns have mature perception skills.
16
Robert Fantz studied visual preferences
17
Visual cliff illustrates development of depth perception around 6 months.
18
Language and thought are closely intertwined. Both abilities involve using symbols. A child begins to think, to represent things to himself, before he is able to speak. The acquisition of language, however, propels the child into further intellectual development. We have learned a lot about the acquisition of language from animals.
19
Vocabulary vs grammar (chimps can learn signs: Washoe learned 160 by age 5, but no grammar) Chimps use words as symbols but do not apply grammatical rules. The ability to arrange symbols in new combinations to produce new meanings is especially well developed in the human brain. The rules for such organization of symbols are called grammar. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3V_rAY0g9DM
20
Handout: Figure 3.6 The flowering of Language
21
Telegraphic Speech: The kind of verbal utterances in which words are left out, but the meaning is usually clear. Example: “Where my apple?”, “Daddy fall down”.
22
Babies who learn sign language communicate earlier Is there a Critical Period for language acquisition? Consider the case of “Genie”. (view “Wild Child”)
23
Section Quiz 3-1 Journal Entry
24
Main Idea: ◦ As the thought processes of children develop, they begin to think, communicate and relate with others, and solve problems. Vocabulary: ◦ Schema ◦ Assimilation ◦ Accommodation ◦ Object Permanence ◦ Representational Thought ◦ Conservation ◦ Egocentric ◦ Imprinting ◦ Critical Period Objectives: ◦ - Summarize the cognitive –development theory. ◦ - Discuss how children develop. Cognitive and Emotional Development
25
According to Jean Piaget: ◦ Intelligence, or the ability to understand, develops gradually as children grows. ◦ Intellectual development involves; Quantitative changes (growth in the amount of information as well as Qualitative changes (differences in the manner of thinking. ◦ Cognitive development has distinct stages:
26
How Knowing Changes Schema: a conceptual framework a person uses to make sense of the world. Assimilation: the processes of fitting objects and experiences into one’s schema. Accommodation: the adjustment of one’s schema to include newly observed events and experiences. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v =xl46c6S6pI0
27
Object Permanence: a child’s realization that an object exists even when he or she cannot see or touch it. (Fig. 3.7) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ue8y- JVhjS0&index=1&list=PLZuo2yGmEwq- AudV0yEJDY2F6NhFJ3Tvs Representational Thought: the intellectual ability of a child to picture something in his or her mind. Conservation: the principle that a given quantity does not change when its appearance is changed. Egocentric: a young child’s inability to understand another person’s perspective. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OinqFgsIbh0&index=5&list=PLZuo2yGmEwq- AudV0yEJDY2F6NhFJ3Tvs
28
Complete Graphic Organizer 3 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YtLEWVu815o&list=PLZ uo2yGmEwq-AudV0yEJDY2F6NhFJ3Tvs
30
Imprinting: immediate bond between mother and offspring. Konrad Lorenz https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2 UIU9XH-mUI&safe=active
31
Critical Period: a specific time in development when certain skills or abilities are most easily learned. Ex. The 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. If a gosling has imprinted on a human being instead of a goose, it will correct its imprinted response when later exposed to its actual mother. Thus, imprinting is important for survival purposes.
32
Contact Comfort is critical to survival Harry Harlow View video clip http://www.youtube.com/watch?v= _O60TYAIgC4
33
Strange Situation technique to assess attachment From her research; ◦ Secure attachment ◦ Avoidant attachment ◦ Resistant attachment ◦ 4 th attachment – Disorganized attachment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QTsewNrHUHU
35
Section Quiz 3-2
36
Main Idea: ◦ Children face various social decisions as they grow and progress through the stages of life. Vocabulary: ◦ Authoritarian family ◦ Democratic/Authoritative family ◦ Permissive/Laissez-faire family ◦ Socialization ◦ Identification ◦ Sublimation ◦ Role taking Objectives: ◦ Describe theories of social development ◦ Outline Kohlberg’s stages of moral reasoning Parenting Styles and Social Development
37
The way in which children seek independence and the ease with which they resolve conflicts about becoming adults depends in large part on the parent child relationship. Diane Baumrind observed and interviewed nursery school children and their parents. Follow up observations when the children were 8 or 9 led to several conclusions about the impact of 3 distinct parenting styles on children Psychologists (Maccoby & Martin) 4 th parenting style
38
1.Authoritarian Families: Parents are the bosses. They do not believe that they have to explain their actions or demands. Such parents may believe the child as no right to question parental decisions. 1.Democratic/ Authoritative Families: Children participate in decisions affecting their lives. Great deal of discussion and negotiation in such families. Parents listen to their children’s reasons for wanting to go somewhere or do something and make an effort to explain their rules and expectations. Children make many decisions for themselves, the parents retain the right to veto plans of which they disapprove.
39
3. Permissive/ Laissez-faire Families: Children have the final say. Parents may attempt to guide the children but give in when the children insist on having their own way. Parents may give up their child-rearing responsibilities –setting no rules about behavior, making no demands, voicing no expectations, virtually ignoring the young people in their house. 4. Uninvolved Parenting: These parents were typically egocentric in their child rearing and seemed uncommitted to their roles. Quite distant from their child.
40
Application activity 3 “Parenting styles”
42
Numerous studies suggest that adolescents who have grown up in democratic or authoritative families are more confident of their own values and goals than other young people.
43
Socialization = learning the rules of behaviour of your culture. To live with other people, a child has to learn what is considered acceptable and unacceptable behaviour. Every society has ideas about what is meaningful, valuable, worth striving for, and beautiful. Every society classifies people according to their family, sex, age, skills, personality characteristics, and other criteria.
44
1. Sigmund Freud’s theory of psychosexual development 2. Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development 3. Lawrence Kohlberg’s theory of moral development
45
Suggests that all children are born with powerful sexual and aggressive urges, and in learning to control these impulses, children acquire a sense of right and wrong. Identification: the process by which a child adopts the values and principles of the same- sex parent. Sublimation: the process of redirecting sexual impulses into learning tasks.
46
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cvOoYX45G_0
47
Suggests that the need for social approval is important. Psychosocial development – life periods in which an individual’s goal is to satisfy desires associated with social needs. Although Erikson believes that childhood experiences have a lasting impact on the individual, he sees development as a lifelong interactive process between people.
49
Suggested that humans progress through six stages of moral reasoning. Mental process/ Brain
51
Section Quiz 3-3
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.