INFANCY EARLY CHILDHOOD MIDDLE CHILDHOOD ADOLESCENT Growth and Development.
Infancy & Childhood
description
Transcript of Infancy & Childhood
Infancy & ChildhoodChapter 8
Objectives
Describe the processes of intellectual development and Piaget’s theory
Discuss the development of languageCompare the theories of social developmentSummarize the cognitive-development theory
and Kohlberg’s stages of moral reasoning
Key TermsAccommodationAnal stageAssimilationConservationCritical PeriodDevelopmental
psychologyElectra complexGenital stageGrasping reflex
Identification ImprintingLatency stage MaturationObject permanenceOedipal conflictOral stagePhallic stageRepresentational
thought
Role takingRooting reflexSchemasSeparation anxietySocializationSublimationTelegraphic speech
Developmental Psych
Young children live in a strange world of wonders and delights where doorknobs and table legs are mysterious objects. Mom and Pops are the source of all life’s great pleasures, and many of its pains. Each day there is something new to be learned.
About 15 years ago you were taking your first steps and then playing doctor or writing on the walls. You have changed faster and learned more in childhood than you ever will again
Developmental Psych
Developmental psychology: is the study of the changes that occur as people grow up and grow older.
Covers the entire life cycle from conception to death
Developmental Psych
Questions developmental psychologists seek to answer
What does the newborn know? How does the infant respond in the early
years of life? How do we learn to walk and talk, to think
and feel? How do we develop our unique
personalities?
The Beginning of Life
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.
Birth puts new demands on a baby’s capacity to adapt and survive. Baby goes from an environment in which he is
totally protected from the world to one in which he is assaulted by lights, sounds, touches, and extreme temperature.
Developmental Psych
Newborn is capable of certain inherited, automatic, coordinated movement patterns, called reflexes
Grasping reflex: Is a response to a touch on the palm of the hand Infants can grasp an object, such as a finger, so strongly
that they can be lifted into the air
Rooting reflex: Infant’s response in turning toward the source of touching that occurs anywhere around their mouth Breast feeding
Developmental Psych
Besides grasping and sucking, newborns look at their bodies and at their surroundings. From birth, unless they are sleeping, feeding, or crying, they direct their gazes toward bright patterns and faces, tracing the outlines of those patterns with their eye movements.
Developmental Psych
How to measure the capabilities of newborn infants who cannot speak or understand the questions of curious psychologists?
Take advantage of things infants can do Suck, turn their head, look at things, cry, smile,
and show signs of surprise or fright
By measuring these stimulations, we can infer how infants perceives the world
More about…
Read reflexes on page 184
How Do Babies Grow
Maturation At about 3 months baby will lift head Smile at 4 months Grasp objects at 5-6 months Crawling appears at 8-10 months
By this time baby is able to pull self into standing position
3-4 months later baby will walk, gradually acquiring a sense of balance
Maturation
Maturation: Internally programmed growth Is as important as learning or experience, especially in the
first years
Unless child is underfed, severely restricted in movements, or deprived of human contact and thing to look at, child will develop more or less according to schedule.
No amount of coaching will push a child to walk or speak before child is physiologically ready (maturational readiness)
Maturation
Why? One twin, but not the other, was given special
training in climbing stairs, building with blocks, and the like, The child did acquire some skill in these areas. But in a short time the second child learned to climb and build just as well as his twin, and with much less practice.
Why? Because he had matured to the point where he
could coordinate his legs and hands more easily
Maturation
Process of maturation becomes obvious when you think about walking. An infant lacks the physical control walking requires. However, by the end of the first year the nerves connected to the child’s muscles have grown. He or she is ready to walk
MaturationBy recording the ages at which thousands of
infants first began to smile, to sit upright, to crawl, and to try a few steps, psychologist have been able to draw up an approximate timetable for maturation.
This schedule helps doctors and other professionals to spot problems and abnormalities. If the child has not begun to talk by the age of 2 ½ a doctor will recommend tests to determine if something is wrong
Maturation
HOWEVER Each child is unique, and some start sooner than
others while others start later in some stages
Babies have own temperament Some are active while others are quiet Some are cuddly and some are stiff Some cry while others hardly whimper
No 2 are exactly alike or mature according to the same schedule
At a Glance
Ethnic Differences in infants Read page 186
Sequence of Motor Development
See figure on page 187
Activity Recreate schedule for wonderful babies
Learning
Infants and children are exceptionally responsive. Each experience changes the child, teaches him something, pushes him in some direction.
Babies turn head at sound of buzzer, fed bottle Movie screen and pacifier, focus of picture
Intellectual Development
Oh c’mon! Why does he always have to play with my friends and I, he is too little.
Sound familiar?
How many times has your younger brother or sister played with you and messed up the game of hide and seek? Why couldn’t your brother or sister understand that he or she had to keep quiet or he’d be found right away?
Intellectual Development
Jean Piaget set out to answer that question over 70 years ago
Common sense told him intelligence or the ability to understand develops gradually as the child grows 4 year old vs. 7 year old
Piaget
Spent years observing, questioning, and playing games with babies and young children Concluded that young children aren’t dumb, but
think in a different way than older children Use of different kind of logic
Piaget was able to detail the ways in which a child’s thinking changes and says that every child passes through the same predictable stages. Each stage builds on the last, increasing the child’s ability to solve more complex problems
How Knowing Changes
Schemas: Plans for knowing or understanding the world
Assimilation: Piaget’s theory of cognitive development, fitting the world into our schemas
Accommodation: Change of scheme to fit the characteristics of the world
Assimilation and accommodation work together to produce intellectual growth
How Knowing Changes
According to Piaget, newborns have a set of ready made responses Bright lights= blinking Objects in hand= grasping Loss of support= throwing arms and legs out Object near mouth= sucking
Theses reflexes let babies understand and cope with things
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentSTAGE 1: Sensorimotor (birth
- 2 years)Thinking is displayed in action, such
as grasping, sucking, and looking schemas, Child gradually learns to discover the location of hidden objects at about 18 months, when the concept of object permanence is fully understood
Object Permanence
A baby’s understanding of things lies totally in the here and now. The sight of a toy, the way it feels, the sensation. The baby does not imagine it, picture it, think of it, remember it, or even forget it. When hidden baby acts as if it didn’t exist.
Toy under blanket 7-12 months, this pattern begins to change. 12-18 baby will keep searching for toy. Act surprised 18-24 Toy must be somewhere (Giant step in
intellectual development)
Object Permanence
Achievement of object permanence Piaget calls it representational thought
Representational thought: Intellectual ability of a child to picture something in his or her mind
Child can picture thing in mind
Children will mimic others
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentSTAGE 2: Preoperational
Stage (2 – 6 years)Beginning of symbolic
representation. Language first appears; child begins to draw pictures that represent things. Child cannot represent a series of actions in his or her head in order to solve problems
Conservation
Ages 5-7 Piaget calls conservation: principle that a
given quantity does not change when it appearance is changed.
Dimensions
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentSTAGE 3: Concrete Operational
Stage (6 – 12 years)Ability to understand conservation
problems. Ability to think of several dimensions or features at same time. Child can now do elementary math problems, such as judging the quantity of liquid containers and checking addition of numbers by subtraction
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentSTAGE 4: Formal Operational
Stage (12 years to adulthood)Thinking becomes more abstract and
hypothetical. The individual can consider many alternative solutions to a problem, make deductions, contemplate the future, and formulate personal ideals and values.
Worksheet
Intellectual Development: Jean Piaget Front and back
Homework
CrosswordApplication of the stages of Cognitive
Development
Separation Anxiety
Separation Anxiety: A phase many children experience after 12 months, characterized by fear and anxiety at any prolonged absence of the primary caregiver.
A 5-month old baby does not react this way. Why does a 1-year old? Disappearance led to uncertainty (Nursery room
door/closet)
Imprinting
Konrad Lorenz Imprinting: A social learning capacity in
some species by which attachments are formed to other organisms or to objects very early in life
Geese
Critical period: 13-16 hours after birth, makes a deep impression that resists change
Surrogate mothers
Harry Harlow Video
Read page 202 Effects Later in Life
Infant begins to develop a strong attachment to its mother by the age of 6 months
Imaginary Playmate
Page 203
Socialization
Boys vs. Girls!
Socialization
Some rules have gray areasBoys are encouraged to express
aggression but not fearGirls have been raised to express
emotions but not ambitions
Rules have changed over time
Socialization
Story
Socialization
Socialization: Learning the rules of behavior of the culture in which you are born and grow up
To live with other people, a child has to learn what is considered acceptable and unacceptable behavior.
Sigmund Freud
Freud’s Theory
Psychosexual Development Freud believed that all children are born with
powerful sexual and aggressive urges that must be tamed.
In learning to control these impulses, children acquire a sense of right and wrong They become “civilized”
Freud’s Theory
In the first few years of life, boys and girls have similar experiences Erotic pleasures through breast feeding
Oral stage: Weaning period of frustration and conflict, child’s first experience with not getting what he/she wants
Anal stage: Children associate erotic pleasure with the elimination process Child enjoys pushing out or holding in feces until required
Freud’s Theory
Major conflict comes between ages 3-5, when children discover the please they obtain from their genitals
As a consequence, they become extremely aware of of the differences between themselves and members of the opposite sex
Freud’s Theory
Phallic stage Child becomes a rival for the affections of the
parent of the opposite sex.
The boy wants to win his mother for himself and finds himself in hostile conflict with his father.
The girl wants her father for herself and tries to shut out her mother
These struggles take place on an unconscious level; no clear awareness this is going on
Freud’s Theory
Freud called this crisis the Oedipal Conflict Oedipus, the king in Greek tragedy who
unknowingly killed his father and married his mother
Read page 207
Identification: The process by which a child adopts the values and principles of the same-sex parent Learns to behave a certain way, morals, voice
inside (conscience)
Freud’s Theory
Electra complex: Daughter finds herself sexually attracted
to father, hostility toward mother. Identifies with mother to reduce punishment
Read page 208
Freud’s Theory
Latency stage: Sexual desires are pushed into the background and the child becomes involved in exploring the world and learning new skills
Sublimation: Redirecting sexual impulses into learning tasks that begins at about age 5
Genital stage: During which an individual’s sexual satisfaction depends as much on giving pleasure as receiving it (Adolescence)
Today Few psychologists believe that sexual feelings disappear in
childhood Young girls experience penis envy Young boys fear castration
Freud was attempting to set off a revolution and probably overstated his case
Controversial, but hard to deny that children learn to control powerful sexual and aggressive desires, and that the belief that early childhood experiences can have a long-term effect on adult personality and behavior
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Erik Erikson Takes a broader view of human development than
Freud
Recognizes the child’s sexual and aggressive urges, he believes that the need for social approval is just as important
Erikson believes childhood experiences have a lasting impact on the individual, he views development as a lifelong process
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Trust vs. Mistrust Age 0-1
If an infant is well cared for, she will develop faith in the future. But is she experiences too much uncertainty about being taken care of, she will come to look at the world with fear and suspicion
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Autonomy vs. Doubt Age 2-3
Here the child learns self-control and self-assertion. But if he receives too much criticism, he will be ashamed of himself and have doubts about his independence
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Initiative vs. Guilt Age 4-5
When the child begins to make her own decisions, constant discouragement or punishment could lead to guilt and a loss of initiative
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Industry vs. Inferiority 5-Puberty
The child masters skills and takes pride in his competence. Too much criticism of his work at this stage can lead to long-term feels of inferiority
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Identity vs. Role Confusion Adolescence
The teenager tries to develop her own separate identity while “fitting in” with her friends. Failure leads to confusion over who she is
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Intimacy vs. Isolation Early Adulthood
A person secure in his own identity can proceed to an intimate partnership in which he makes compromises for another. The isolated person may have many affairs or even a long-term relationship, but always avoid true closeness
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Generativity vs. Stagnation Middle Age
A person who becomes stagnated is absorbed in herself and tries to hang onto the past. Generativity involves a productive life which will serve as an example to the next generation.
Theory of Psychosocial Development
Integrity vs. Despair Later Adulthood
Some people look back over life with a sense of satisfaction, and accept both the bad and the good. Others face death with nothing but regrets
Learning Theories of Development
Conditioning Imitation
Albert Bandura experiment Bobo Doll
Conditioning and modeling work together Children do not imitate everything they see, only
behavior that seems to bring rewards
Moral Development
Lawrence Kohlberg In Europe, a woman was near death from a disease.
One drug might save her, a form of radium that a druggist in the same town had recently discovered. The druggist was charging $2,000, ten times what the drug cost to make. The sick woman’s husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to borrow the money, but he cold only get about half of it. He told the druggist that his wife was dying and asked him to sell it cheaper or let him pay later. But the druggist said “NO”. The husband got desperate and broke into the man’s store to steal the drug for his wife. Should the husband have done that? Why?
Moral Development
At every age, some children said that the man should steal, some that he should not.
What interested Kohlberg was how children arrived at the conclusion What reasoning?
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
After questioning 84 children, Kohlberg identified 6 stages of moral development
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
STAGE 1Children are generally egocentric
Do not consider other people’s point of view No sense of right and wrong Main concern is avoiding punishment
Child in this stage will say that the man should steal because people will blame him for his wife’s death if he does not, or that he should not steal because he might go to prison
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Stage 2 Better idea of how to work the system to receive rewards
as well as to avoid punishment
“Marketplace orientation”
Interpret golden rule as “Help someone if he helps you, and hurt him if he hurts you”
Evaluate acts in terms of consequence, not in terms of right and wrong
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Stage 3: Children become acutely sensitive to what other
people want and think
Child in this stage will say that the man in the story should steal because people will think he is cruel if he lets his wife die, or that he should not steal because people will think he is a criminal.
In other words, children want social approval, so they apply rules other people have decreed literally and rigidly
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Stage 4 A child is less concerned with the approval of
others
Key issue is law and order- Law seen as moral rule and is obeyed because of a strong belief in established authority
Many stay in this stage for their whole lives
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Stage 5 Person is primarily concerned with whether a
law is fair or just
Believes the laws must change as the world changes, and they are never absolute
Question whether a law is good for society as a whole
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Stage 6 Involves acceptance of ethical principles that
apply to everyone, like the Golden Rule
“Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”
Moral laws cannot be broken, more important than written law
Kohlberg’s 6 stages of Moral Development
Worksheet: Kohlberg Stages of Moral Development