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Transcript
Chapter 2-Theories of Human Development
Developmental theory
Ideas proposed to describe/explain phenomena
Provides means to organize, interpret, explain facts or observations
Guides collection of new data
Five Key Developmental Issues
Goodness-badness of human nature
Evidence of biologically-based tendencies for good and bad
Nature-nurture issue
Biological forces or environmental forces
Activity-passivity issue
Are humans active agents in their own development or passively shaped by forces
beyond their control?
Continuity-discontinuity issue
Are changes over the lifespan gradual or abrupt (like stair steps)?
Are changes quantitative (a matter of degree) or qualitative (changes in kind)?
Universality-context-specificity issue
Are developmental changes common to all humans or different across cultures,
subcultures, contexts, and individuals?
Freud’s Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality
Central notion: humans have instincts that motivate behavior
Unconscious motivation
Humans possess psychic energy that is divided among three components of the
personality
Id – impulsive, selfish part of personality
Ego – rational aspect that seeks to gratify instincts
Superego – internalized moral standards
Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Development
As a child biologically matures, libido seeks to gratify different biological needs
Libido – psychic energy of the sex instinct
Child moves through five stages
Oral – infancy
Anal – toddlerhood
Phallic –3 to 6 years of age
Latent – 6 to 12 years of age
Genital - adolescence
Concepts in Freud’s Theory of Psychosexual Development
Fixation – arrested development; the libido is tied to an earlier stage of development
Oedipus complex – a young boy loves his mother and fears his father will retaliate
by castrating him
Resolves this conflict by identification – taking on or internalizing the attitudes and
behaviors of the other person
Electra complex – a young girl desires her father, views her mother as a rival
Resolves the conflict by identifying with her mother
Defense mechanisms – unconscious coping devices that the ego adopts to defend itself
against anxiety
Repression
Regression
Projection
Reaction formation
Strengths and Weaknesses of Freud’s Theory
Weaknesses
Theory said to be ambiguous, internally inconsistent, not testable, and therefore not
falsifiable
Strengths
Many insights have held up and been influential
Called attention to unconscious processes
Emphasized importance of early experience
Emphasized importance of emotions and emotional conflicts
Erik Erikson
Most influential neo-Freudian
Some differences with Freud
Less emphasis on sexual urges
More emphasis on rational ego
More positive, adaptive view of human nature
Development continues through adulthood
Erikson’s Stages: Approximate Ages
Trust vs. mistrust: infancy
Autonomy vs. shame and doubt: toddlerhood
Initiative vs. guilt: preschool
Industry vs. inferiority: school-age childhood
Identity vs. role confusion: adolescence
Intimacy vs. isolation: young adulthood
Generativity vs. stagnation: middle age
Integrity vs. despair: Late life
Strengths and Weaknesses of Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory
Strengths
Emphasis on rational and adaptive nature
Emphasis on interaction of biological and social influences
Influenced research into adolescence and adulthood
Weaknesses
Sometimes vague and difficult to test
Describes human personality development but does not explain how
development occurs
Learning Theories: Classical Conditioning
Behaviorism: conclusions should be based only upon observable behavior
Principles of classical conditioning and learning by association
UCS: automatic, unlearned stimulus
UCR: automatic, unlearned response
CS: learned stimulus
CR: learned response
Learning Theories: Operant Conditioning
Learner’s behavior is more/less probable depending upon the consequences it produces
People tend to repeat behaviors that have desirable consequences and reduce
behaviors that have undesirable consequences
We learn new skills and good and bad habits
Learning Theories: Operant Conditioning
Reinforcement occurs when a consequence strengthens a response or makes it more
likely to occur
Two forms of reinforcement
Positive – something pleasant or desirable is added
Negative – something unpleasant or undesirable is removed, escaped, or
avoided
Learning Theories: Operant Conditioning
Punishment decreases the strength of a behavior or weakens it
Two forms of punishment
Positive – occurs when an unpleasant stimulus is applied or added to the
situation following the behavior
Negative – occurs when a desirable stimulus is removed following the
behavior
Learning Theories: Operant Conditioning
Spanking: A Form of Punishment
Best to use more positive approaches before resorting to spanking, but . . .
Spanking can have short-term effect if it
Is administered immediately after the act
Is administered consistently
Is not overly harsh
Is accompanied by explanation
Is administered by an otherwise affectionate person
Is used sparingly and combined with efforts to reinforce desirable behavior
Bandura’s Social-Cognitive Theory
Formerly called social-learning theory
Emphasizes the motivating, self-regulating role of cognition in human behavior
Includes observational learning – the most important mechanism through which
human behavior changes
Observational learning
Accomplished by observing the behavior of others (models)
Learners pay attention, construct and remember mental representations,
retrieve the representations from memory, and use them to guide behavior
Famous Bobo doll study
Includes the processes of latent learning and vicarious reinforcement
Additional aspects of social-cognitive theory
Human agency – ways in which people deliberately exercise cognitive control
Self-efficacy – a high or low sense that one can effectively produce desired
outcomes in a particular activity
Reciprocal determinism – mutual influences among the person, the person’s
behavior, and the environment
Learning Theories: Strengths and Weaknesses
Strengths
Theories are precise and testable
Can test via carefully controlled experiments
Principles apply across the lifespan
Practical applications are possible
Weaknesses
Inadequate accounts of developmental changes
Too little consideration of genetic and maturational processes
Concepts in Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Intelligence: process that helps a person adapt to the environment
Constructivism: children construct new understandings of the world based on their
experiences
Interaction between biological maturation and experiences is responsible for
children’s developmental progress from one stage to the next, qualitatively different,
stage
Stages of Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Sensorimotor stage
Infants deal with the world through their senses and their motor skills
Properational stage
Preschoolers can use symbolic thought but cannot yet use logical problem-solving
Cannot demonstrate conservation
Concrete operations stage
School-age children are more logical and can use trial-and-error approach to
problem-solving
Formal operations stage
Adolescents are able to think abstractly and hypothetically
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Strengths
Well-accepted by developmentalists
Well-researched, mostly supported
Influenced education and parenting
Weaknesses
Too little consideration of influences of motivation and emotion upon thought
processes
Questionable that the stages constitute a coherent, general mode of thinking
Perhaps underestimated cognitive abilities of young children
Too little emphasis upon parents and caregivers
Stages may not be universal
Vygotsky’s sociocultural perspective
View that cognitive development is shaped by its sociocultural context and
children’s interactions with members of their culture
Information-processing approach
Examines fundamental processes of attention, memory, decision-making, etc.
Systems Theories
Systems theories attribute changes over the lifespan to ongoing, reciprocal transactions
between a changing organism and a changing environment
¨The Ecology of Development
¨Urie Bronfenbrenner proposed a bioecological model to explain how biology and
environment interact in development
¤Microsystem: direct immediate environment
¤Mesosystem: linkages between microsystems
¤Exosystem: indirect linkages of social systems
¤Macrosystem: larger cultural context
¤Chronosystem: changes occur in a time frame
Urie Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological model of development pictures environment as a
series of nested structures. The microsystem refers to relations between the
developing person and her immediate environment, the mesosystem to connections
among microsystems, the exosystem to settings that affect but do not contain the
individual, the macrosystem to the broader cultural context of development, and the
chronosystem to the patterning over time of historical and life events. Researchers
face many challenges in studying the developing person in context.
Gottlieb’s Epigenetic Psychobiological Systems Perspective
Development is the product of interacting biological and environmental influences that
form a larger system
Evolution endowed humans with genetic makeup
Genes and environment interact because humans actively change their environments
Occurs at the species level
Biological and cultural evolution contribute to change over time in the human
species
Epigenesis: “over and above” genes
Nature and nurture, genes and environment, co-act to yield developmental
outcomes
Epigenetic process
Activity of genes
Activity of neurons
Organism’s behavior
Environmental influences
Strengths and Weaknesses of Systems Theories of Development
Strengths
Call attention to ongoing transactions between the individual and the environment
Weaknesses
Only partially formulated and tested, No coherent developmental theory
Categories of Human Development Theories
Freud, Erikson, and Piaget
Stage theorists
Development guided in universal directions by biological-maturational forces
Parents are supporters of development
Watson, Skinner, and Bandura
Learning theorists
Emphasize environment more than biology
Parents are their children’s trainers
Systems and contextual theorists
View biology and environment as inseparable components of a larger system
Humans are active contributors to development, but environment also is an active
participant.
Parents view themselves as partners with their children in the development process