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Children Physical Development in Early Childhood 8
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Height and Weight Average child grows 2½ inches and gains between 5 and 7 pounds a year during early childhood –Growth patterns vary individually Heredity has an influence –Boys gain muscle; girls gain fatty tissue How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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Height and Weight Environmental influences on growth –Ethnic origin –Nutrition –Birth order –Social class –Urban vs. rural –Maternal smoking –Prenatal development How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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The Brain Grows slower in childhood than in infancy –75% of adult size by age 3 –95% of adult volume by age 6 –Brain and head: fastest growing parts of body Body weight of 5-year-old is 1/3 of adult size How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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The Brain Neural changes –Neurotransmitters and dopamine –Myelination Layer of fatty cells Increases neural connection functioning Important in development of abilities: eye-hand coordination, attention focus How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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The Brain Structural Changes –Brain undergoes dramatic anatomical changes between ages of 3 and 15 Some areas almost double in size, purge of unneeded cells follows (up to age 4) Rapid frontal lobe growth (3–6 years of age) Temporal and parietal lobes (6–puberty) How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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The Brain The Brain and Cognitive Development –Density of synapses peaks at 4 years of age True episodic memory may begin Self-awareness may develop here –Brain maturation and experiential opportunities contribute to cognitive abilities –Organized into neural circuits How Does a Young Child’s Body and Brain Grow and Change?
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Gross and Fine Motor Skills Gross motor skills –Preschoolers struggle for balance –Age 3: Enjoys simple movements such as hopping, jumping, and running –Age 4: Becomes more adventurous and climbs –Age 5: Runs hard, is adventurous, tries hair- raising stunts in climbing How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Gross and Fine Motor Skills Gross motor skills –3-year-old: most active age in human life span –Daily exercise needed for muscle growth –Activity level influenced by family, opportunities (child care centers, preschool programs) –Failure to develop can have long-term negative consequences –Exercise is healthy in many ways How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Fine Motor Skills Age 3: Still emerging from infant ability to place and handle things Age 4: Coordination improved and more precise –Inability for prefection is frustrating Age 5: Hand, arm, and body move together under better eye command –Seeks more complex actitivites How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Fine Motor Skills Denver Developmental Screening Test –Used to diagnose developmental delay in children from birth to 6 years of age –Simple, inexpensive, fast –Includes gross and fine motor skills, language, and personal-social ability How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Development of Fine Motor Skills in Early Childhood 37 to 48 mos49 to 60 mos61 to 72 mos Approximates a circle in drawing Cuts paper Pastes using pointer finger Builds 3-block bridge Builds 8-block tower Draws 0 and + Dresses and undresses doll Pours from pitcher without spilling Strings and laces shoelace Cuts following a line Strings 10 beads Copies figure X Opens and places clothespins (one- handed) Builds a 5-block bridge Pours from various containers Prints first name Folds paper in halves and quarters Traces around hand Draws rectangle, circle, square, triangle Cuts interior piece from paper Uses crayons appropriately Makes clay object with 2 small parts Reproduces letters Copies 2 short words Listed in approximate order of difficulty in each period
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Handedness Origin and Development of Handedness –Genetic inheritance –Right-handedness dominant in all cultures 90% right-handed –Ultrasound: preference in fetal thumb sucking –Newborns and infants show preferences –Many preschoolers use both hands; preference seems to develop later How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Handedness Handedness, the Brain, and Language –Approximately 95% of right-handed individuals process speech primarily in left hemisphere –Left-handed individuals Show more variation in processing More likely to have reading problems How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Handedness Handedness and Other Abilities –Left-handers more common among Mathematicians Musicians Architects Artists –20% of top-scoring SAT group were left handed How Do Young Children’s Motor Skills Develop?
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Sleep and Sleep Problems Most young children –Sleep through the night –Need 11-13 hours sleep –Have daytime nap –Disruptive patterns in 4- to 5-year-olds linked to adjustment in preschool –Slow down before bedtime lowers resistance What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Sleep and Sleep Problems Transitional objects (bedtime companions) –Increases emotional adjustment Sleep problems –Estimated: 40% have sleep problem at some time in development Hyperactivity linked to sleep walking Resistance to bedtime linked to conduct Night terrors linked to emotional problems What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Sleep and Sleep Problems Sleep Problems –Lack of sleep linked to peer problems, depression, anxiety, and accidental injury –Nightmares: frightening dreams –Night terrors: sudden arousal, intense –Somnambulism: sleep walking; most outgrow –Sleep talkers: not abnormal in children What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Nutrition Energy needs –Calorie needs increase with age –Needs vary by age, sex, and size Dieting, eating behavior, parental influence –Diets worsen as children age, go out of home –Children need healthy, balanced diets –Today’s meals exceed dietary needs –Eating behavior influenced by caregivers What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Nutrition Fat and sugar consumption –Avoid excessive fat, sugars, fast foods –Linked to health, dental, behavioral problems “Fussy Eaters,” Sweets, and Snacks –Allow child to develop tastes in food –Expose to healthy foods/snacks; limit sweets What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Nutrition Overweight Young Children –A serious health problem –CDC: child obesity categories can create stigma –BMI: overweight - at or above 95th percentile –Obesity: 11% of 2- to 19-year-olds –Weight linked to psychological well-being Study of 34 countries: –U.S. has 2nd highest rate of childhood obesity What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Nutrition Malnutrition in Young Children from Low- Income Families –Most common: iron deficiency anemia Causes chronic fatigue –Lower intake of fresh fruits, vegetables –Less education, more processed foods –Linked to cognitive deficits, physical growth –Can improve with use of U.S. food programs –Linked to behavioral, conduct problems What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Health, Safety, and Illness Preventing Childhood Injuries –Last 50 years: shift from fighting diseases to prevention and treatment (vaccines) –Child more at risk for serious injury, accidents –Accidents: leading cause of death in children Most can be prevented, safety laws enacted Safety linked to behaviors, environment, family Most accidents occur in the home What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Main Causes of Death in Children
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Health, Safety, and Illness Contexts of Young Children’s Health –Poverty: low income, poor medical insurance, exposure to lead poisoning and environmental hazards –Ethnicity linked to child’s health; lack of English proficiency is problem –Caregivers influence children’s behaviors Competent care is important Best parenting strategies: most effective What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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Health, Safety, and Illness Contexts of Young Children’s Health –Eliminate: Tobacco smoke exposure – causes respiratory problems, vitamin depletion Lead exposure – causes ADHD, lower IQ and achievement, memory problems UNICEF: Under-5 mortality rate –U.S. has a lower rate Causes: poverty, inadequate health care What Are Some Aspects of Young Children’s Health?
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The State of Illness and Health of the World’s Children UNICEF: Under-5 mortality rate –Other countries’ causes: Poverty, hunger, and malnutition Illness, inadequate access to health care Unsafe water, lack of protection from harm –Leading childhood deaths in poor countries Dehydration caused by diarrhea Acute respiratory infections HIV/AIDS
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