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Developing Through the Life Span (obj 1-8) notes 4-1

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Presentation on theme: "Developing Through the Life Span (obj 1-8) notes 4-1"— Presentation transcript:

1 Developing Through the Life Span (obj 1-8) notes 4-1

2 1.) Developmental Psychology’s three issues
Details A.) Nature/Nurture How do genetic inheritance (our nature) and experience (the nurture we receive) influence our behavior? B.) Continuity/Stages Is developmental a gradual, continuous process or a sequence of separate stages? C.) Stability/Change Do our early personality traits persist through life, or do we become different persons as we age. OBJECTIVE 1| State the three areas of change that developmental psychologists study, and identify the three major issues in developmental psychology.

3 2.) Prenatal Development and the Newborn
A.) How, over time, did we come to be who we are? From zygote to birth, development progresses in an orderly, though fragile, sequence.

4 3.) Conception A.) single sperm cell (male) penetrates the outer coating of the egg (female) and fuses to form one fertilized cell (zygote). OBJECTIVE 2| Describe the union of sperm and egg at conception.

5 4.) zygote: fertilized cell with 100 cells that become increasingly diverse. At about 14 days the zygote turns into an embryo (a and b). OBJECTIVE 3| Define zygote, embryo and fetus, and explain how teratogens can affect development.

6 5. ) At 9 weeks, an embryo turns into a fetus (c and d)
5.) At 9 weeks, an embryo turns into a fetus (c and d). Teratogens are chemicals or viruses that can enter the placenta and harm the developing fetus.

7 6.) Infants (newborns) are born with reflexes that aid in survival, including rooting reflex which helps them locate food. OBJECTIVE 4| Describe some of the abilities of the newborn, and explain how researchers use habituation to assess infant sensory and cognitive abilities.

8 a.) Infants pay more attention to new objects than habituated ones, which shows they are learning.

9 7.) Developing Brain a.) The developing brain overproduces neurons. Peaking around 28 billion at 7 months, these neurons are pruned to 23 billion at birth. b.) The greatest neuronal spurt is in the frontal lobe enabling the individual to think rationally. OBJECTIVE 5| Describe some developmental changes in the child’s brain, and explain why maturation accounts for many of our similarities.

10 a.) various bodily and mental functions to occur in sequence (genetic)
8.) Maturation a.) various bodily and mental functions to occur in sequence (genetic) ***Maturation sets the basic course of development, while experience adjusts it.

11 9.) Motor Development OBJECTIVE 6| Outline four events in the motor development sequence from birth to toddlerhood, and evaluate the effects of maturation and experience on that sequence.

12 10.) Maturation and Infant Memory
a.) The earliest age of conscious memory is around 3½ years (Bauer, 2002). A 5-year-old has a sense of self and an increased long-term memory, thus organization of memory is different from 3-4 years. OBJECTIVE 7| Explain why we have few memories of experiences during our first three years of life.

13 11.) Cognitive Development
a.) Piaget believed that the driving force behind intellectual development is our biological development amidst experiences with the environment. Our cognitive development is shaped by the errors we make. OBJECTIVE 8| State Piaget’s understanding of how the mind develops, and discuss the importance of assimilation and accommodation in this process.

14 a.) mental molds into which we pour our experiences.
12.) Schemas a.) mental molds into which we pour our experiences.

15 13.) Assimilation and Accommodation
a.) The process of assimilation involves incorporating new experiences into our current understanding (schema). The process of adjusting a schema and modifying it is called accommodation. Jean Piaget with a subject


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