The Role of the Family. What is a family? Nuclear family Extended family Functions of family ...

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The Role of the Family

Transcript of The Role of the Family. What is a family? Nuclear family Extended family Functions of family ...

Page 1: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

The Role of the Family

Page 2: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

What is a family?

Nuclear family Extended family Functions of family

Sustenance Developmental advocacy

Page 3: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

The Family System

The family is a social system A constellation of subsystems defined in terms of

generations, gender and roles

Important terms: Reciprocal socialization Scaffolding Family Life cycle

Page 4: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

The Family Life Cycle

First stage: Launching, leaving home and becoming a single adult

2nd stage: The New Couple, Joining families through marriage

3rd stage: Becoming parents and families with children 4th stage: Families with an adolescent 5th stage: Families in mid-life 6th stage: Families in later life

Page 5: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

Parenting Roles and Styles

Baumrind, 1971 Authoritarian Authoritative Permissive (neglectful/indifferent and indulgent)

Page 6: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood

Page 7: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

Physical Development in Middle Childhood

Weight: First close to 2 lbs. Lighter at age 6, 2 cm shorter at age 6 At age 11, girls experience growth spurt Not until age 14 or so do boys becoming heavier and taller

Gradual decrease in fatty tissue, increase in bone/muscle development

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Nutrition and Health

With nourishment, children 6-12 grown 2-3 inches and gain 5-7 lbs. A year

Height is better indicator of good nutrition than weight gain. Height requires better nutrition -protein, vitamins, minerals,

etc.

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Obesity

Contributing Factors Overeating – consume more than is expended Genetics – Metabolic rate Modeling of eating patterns Inactivity (possibly a very prevalent factor in U.S.) Use of food as a reward (emotion induced eating)

Page 10: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

Controlling Obesity

Primary control method is prevention Especially with children genetically predisposed

Balanced diet Food Pyramid

Self-control Do not use food as a reward

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Sex Differences in Motor Skills

Boy’s physical strength is superior to girls even though the average girl in this age range is taller and heavier

Boys out jump girls and are better at kicking, throwing, catching, running and batting

Girls are better at muscular flexibility tasks and rhythmic movements

Are the differences biological or learned?

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Cognitive Development

Piaget’s Views: Concrete Operations Ability to conserve Logic of classes and relations Understanding of numbers Thinking is still concrete (not abstract) Reversibility in thinking

Page 13: The Role of the Family. What is a family?  Nuclear family  Extended family  Functions of family  Sustenance  Developmental  advocacy.

Figure 9.4  When asked to draw the fluid level in a tilted jar, young children typically draw the figure shown in (A) rather than (B)—not because they have ever seen anything like (A) in the real world, but because the logic they use in their attempts to make meaning out of their experiences is not always appropriate.

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Horizontal Decalage

Intellectual accomplishments in one area may not generalize to other areas

Learning conservation of mass What about volume? What about number? What about weight? What about area?

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Conservation

Thought Question: How could conservation skills be enhanced?

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Figure 9.5  Some simple tests for conservation, with approximate ages of attainment.

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Figure 9.5 (cont.)  Some simple tests for conservation, with approximate ages of attainment.

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3 rules of logic important to acquisition of conservation

Identity: nothing ahs been added or taken away, so must be identical

Reversibility: deformed object can be reformed into what it was so it must contain the same amount

Compensation: deformed object appears to have more material b/c of it’s shape (longer), but its thinness makes up for its length.

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Figure 9.6  Suppose X comes in exactly two shapes, each of which can be either black or white. How many different X’s are there? Right There are four. The concrete-operations child may have some difficulty with the simple classification problem because it’s too abstract. X is not concrete enough. The problem is simpler if we ask, instead, “How many kinds of balls do we have f we have big and small red ones, and big and small green ones?” Such a problem can be used to test a child’s ability to classify objects.