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Chapter one Human Development The scientific study of the processes of development Four Goals of Developmental Psychology ● Describe Example: When do children say their first words? ● Explain Example: How do children learn to use language? • Predict Example: Will delayed language development affect speech? ● Modify Example: Can therapy help speech delays? Life Span Development Developmental processes: change and stability Two kinds of change: • Quantitative: change in number/amount (growth, height) • Qualitative: change in kind, structure, organization Two Types of Developmental Change • Qualitative Structure or Organization Often Example: difficult to anticipate Changing from nonverbal to verbal communication • Quantitative Number or Amount Examples: Height Weight Size of Vocabulary Life Span Development Physical development: change and stability in growth of the body and brain, sensory capacities, motor skills, and health Cognitive development: change and stability in mental abilities, learning, attention, memory, language, reasoning, creativity Psychosocial development: change and stability in emotions, personality, social relationships Life Span Development Influences on development: normative: most people, similarities individual differences: specific differences Heredity & Environment Heredity: inborn traits or characteristics inherited from the parents Environment: inner and outer environment Life Span Development Maturation: Unfolding of a natural sequence of physical changes and behavior patterns, mastery of skills, ability to learn. Culture & Ethnicity Culture is the society or group’s total way of life Ethnic: people united by a distinct culture, ancestry, religion, language, or national origin Timing of Influences: Critical or Sensitive Periods Lorenz: hatched ducklings Imprinting: automatic and irreversible; instinctive bonding with mother; a predisposition to learning Critical Period: specific time when a given event (or absence) has specific impact on development. Not absolutely fixed. Plasticity: ability to modify Sensitive Periods: especially responsive to specific type of experience The Effects of Early Experience Questions to consider: 1. How important are early experiences and how much of an effect do they have on a person’s later life? 2. Are there critical periods during which a child must be exposed to certain stimulations or experiences (or forever be disadvantaged)? 3. How “plastic” is the child? That is, how can a child take and still bounce back? How much can a child endure before his/her later development will be permanently impaired? Without feedback from the environment (that is, without experience) how can further development occur? A child raised in a deprived environment with inadequate stimulation and feedback might fail to learn. The damage to a child is significant when love and attention are absent. Critical & Sensitive Periods Critical and sensitive periods are both times when the organism is biologically primed to most benefit from a particular experience. Sensitive Periods: adverse effects caused by missing a sensitive period may be overcome at a later time, although with great difficulty. Critical Periods: adverse effects caused by missing a critical period are permanent. The only clearly demonstrated critical period in human beings involves early stimulation of certain neural and body cells. Without such stimulation, these cells atrophy and die (e.g., visual neurons must have light during their early development or they will die. Depth perception may occur as well. The first 5 to 6 years of childhood may be a critical period for the development of the brain. Even when a part of the brain is damaged, if damage occurs before age 5/6, the brain may compensate and take over the functions. After age six, highly unlikely. Other ways a child may suffer permanent disability by early childhood: 1. occurrence of irreparable physical damage upon which later development will depend 2. a critical period that passes without the child’s obtaining the necessary experience or stimulation 3. a situation where the child is kept by their culture or environment from ever obtaining the learning necessary for proper development. Learning and Early Experience Sometimes a child misses an important learning experience because the environment fails to provide it. If the child eventually receives the necessary experiences they may be able to recover. Baltes’s Life Span Approach: 6 Key Principles 1. Development is lifelong Change & adaptation occur throughout life 2. Development involves both gain & loss Ex: Gaining vocabulary, but losing ability to acquire language 3. Biological & cultural influences shift over time 4. Development involves changing allocation of resources Resources used for growth, maintenance, & recovery 5. Development shows plasticity Ex: Memory can be improved with practice 6. Development is influenced by historical and cultural context. Theory & Reseach Two models: Mechanistic: locke Organismic: Rousseau The Life-Span Perspective Development is Contextual Normative agegraded influences Biological and environmental influences are similar for individuals in a particular age group Normative history- Biological and environmental graded influences influences are associated with history Non-normative life Unusual occurrences that have a major impact on a events specific person’s life The Nature of Development Processes in Development Fig. 1.3 The Life-Span Perspective Views of Child Development Original sin view Children are born into a world corrupted with inclination toward evil Tabla rasa view Children born as “blank slates” and acquire characteristics through experience (Locke) Innate goodness view Children born inherently good (Rousseau) John Locke- English philosopher • Tabula rasa: believed that the child’s mind is a blank slate, experience is imprinted • Children born with different temperaments and propensities; but the child could be infinitely improved and perfected through experience, humane treatment, and education • Adults mold children’s moral character and intellect by conditioning them to have the “right” habits • Child as malleable Key assumption: that children are mostly a product of their environment; react to their environment almost like a machine Jean-Jacques Rosseau- Swiss-born philosopher • Introduced a romantic conception of children • Born in a state of natural goodness • Adults should not shape them forcibly but protect them from the pressures of society and allow them to develop naturally • Each dimension of development (physical, mental, social, and moral) followed a particular schedule and should be respected and protected Jean-Jacques Rosseau- Swiss-born philosopher • Children are incapable of true reasoning until age 12 • During early period of development, children should be permitted to learn through discovery and experience • Key assumption: the curriculum must evolve from the natural capacities and interests of the child, and must foster the child’s progression toward higher stage of development • People are an active, growing organism that set their development in motion; initiate events, not just react; internal drive Development continuous or stages Continuous: Mechanist theorists; allows prediction of earlier behaviors from later ones; quantitative changes (frequency of response) Stages: Organismic theorists; emphasis qualitative changes; stages, building on previous problems and developments. Current theorists: Active versus passive development People change their world as it also changes them The Nature of Development Developmental Issues Extent to which development Nature and Nurture is influenced by nature and by nurture Stability and Change Degree to which early traits and characteristics persist through life or change ContinuityDiscontinuity Extent development involves gradual, cumulative change (continuity) or distinct stages (discontinuity) The Nature of Development Continuity and Discontinuity in Development Fig. 1.7 Major developmental perspectives 1-Psychoanalytic Perspective • Development shaped by unconscious forces that motivate human behavior • Psychoanalysis helps give patients insight into unconscious emotional conflict • The unconscious is the thoughts, wishes, feelings and memories that we are largely unaware • Dreams are the “royal road” to the unconscious The Mind as an Iceberg • Freud believed the mind is like an iceberg— mostly hidden, with the unconscious containing thoughts and memories of which we are largely unaware. Some of these thoughts we store temporarily in a preconscious area. • Our conscious awareness is the part of the iceberg that floats above the water. Figure 15.1 Freud’s idea of the mind’s structure Myers: Psychology, Eighth Edition Copyright © 2007 by Worth Publishers • Initially, he thought hypnosis might unlock the door to the unconscious. However, recognizing patients’ uneven capacity for hypnosis, Freud turned to free association, which he believed produced a chain of thoughts in the patient’s unconscious. He called the process (as well as his theory of personality) psychoanalysis. • Freud believed that personality arises from our efforts to resolve the conflict between our biological impulses and the social restraints against them. • He theorized that the conflict centers on three interacting systems: – the id, which operates on the pleasure principle Immediate gratification); – the ego, which functions on the reality principle, and – the superego, an internalized set of ideals. The superego’s demands often oppose the id’s, and the ego, as the “executive” part of personality, seeks to reconcile the two. Freud’s Psychosexual Stages of Development • Freud maintained that children pass through a series of psychosexual stages during which the id’s pleasure-seeking energies focus on distinct pleasure-sensitive areas of the body called erogenous zones. • During the oral stage (0–18 months), pleasure centers on the mouth • During the anal stage (18–36 months) on bowel/bladder elimination. Also independence. Freud’s Psychosexual Stages of Development • During the critical phallic stage (3–6 years), pleasure centers on the genitals. Boys experience the Oedipus complex, with unconscious sexual desires toward their mother and hatred of their father. They cope with these threatening feelings through identification with their father, thereby incorporating many of his values and developing a sense of gender identity. Electra Complex- female equivalent Freud’s Psychosexual Stages of Development • The latency stage (6 years to puberty), in which sexuality is dormant • The genital stage (puberty on) when youths begin to experience sexual feelings toward others. • In Freud’s view, maladaptive adult behavior results from conflicts unresolved during the oral, anal, and phallic stages. At any point, conflict can lock, or fixate, the person’s pleasure-seeking energies in that stage. Theories of Development Psychoanalytic Theories • Development depends primarily on the unconscious mind – Heavily colored by emotion – Behavior is a surface characteristic – Important to analyze symbolic meanings of behavior – Early experiences important in development Theories of Development Freud’s Psychosexual Theory • Id, ego, and superego create personality • Defense mechanisms and Repression • Anxiety and defense mechanisms • Five stages of psychosexual development Theories of Development Freudian Stages Fig. 1.8 Erikson Each stage is a crisis in the personality that must be resolved Theories of Development Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages Fig. 1.9 Erikson’s Eight Stages of Psychosocial Development • Erik Erikson theorized eight stages of life, each with its own psychosocial task. • In infancy (the first year), the issue is trust versus mistrust. • In toddlerhood (the second year), the challenge is autonomy versus shame and doubt. • Preschoolers (age 3 to 5) learn initiative or guilt. • Elementary school children (age 6 to puberty) develop competence or inferiority. • A chief task of adolescence is to solidify one’s sense of self—identity versus role confusion. • For young adults (twenties to early forties) the issue is intimacy versus isolation. • For middle-aged adults (forties to sixties), generativity versus stagnation. • Late adulthood’s (late sixties and older) challenge is integrity versus despair. Learning Perspective 1- Learning Theory • development results from learning, a longlasting change in behavior based on experience or adaptation to the environment • Behaviorism: describes observed behavior as a predictable response to experience • React to environment when find it pleasing, painful, or threatening • Associative learning: link is made between two stimuli/sensory events Learning Perspective Classical Conditioning Classical conditioning is a natural form of learning that occurs even without intervention. • Pavlov: taught dog to salivate • A natural response to a stimulus is paired with another stimulus through repeated associations. Learning a new response to an existing response. • Conditioned response is a learned response • Watson: little Albert Learning Perspective Operant Conditioning- Skinner • Learning that behavior has consequences; operates on environment • Baby cries, someone soothers- will cry to be soothed. • Reinforce, extinguish, use successive approximations, learning through imitation of others • Tend to repeat response that has desirable consequences and suppress a response that has a negative consequence (punishment) Punishment: process of weakening a behavior, decreasing likelihood of repetition. Suppresses a behavior thought aversive consequence. Withdrawing a positive (not using car) or aversive (jail) Reinforcement can be positive or negative Positive: reward Negative: taking away something the person does not like (aversive event) Extinguish: when no longer reinforce a behavior Behavior modification: behavioral therapy; operant conditioning to instill positive behavior. 2- Social Learning Theory (Social Cognitive)- Bandura • People learn • Development comes from the person • Learn appropriate social behavior mainly by observing and imitating modelsObservational Learning • Through feedback, gradually development standards for judging own behavior • Self-Efficacy: confidence that have what it takes to succeed 3- Cognitive Perspective- Piaget At each stage, child’s mind develops in a new way from simple to complex Organization: tendency to create increasingly complex cognitive structures (system of knowledge; ways of thinking that incorporate more and more accurate images of reality Schemas: organized patterns of behavior that a person uses to think about and act in a situation. Adaptation: how children handle new information in light of what they already know Assimilation: taking new information and incorporating it into existing cognitive structures (sucking on sippie cup versus breats) Accommodation: adjusting one’s cognitive structures to fit new information (sipping from cup/glass, changes how uses tongue/mouth) Equilibration: constant striving for a stable balance/equilibrium, dictates shift from assimilation to accommodation Theories of Development Piaget’s Four Stages of Cognitive Development Fig. 1.10 Vygotsky Sociocultural Theory of Cognitive Development • Vygotsky argued that children’s efforts to understand their world are embedded in a social context. Value educative processes. • They strive to understand their universe by asking questions of others— • The young child is an apprentice in thinking. • Parents, child-care workers, and older siblings act as mentors stimulating intellectual growth Vygotsky • Children learn to think through guided participation in social experiences that explore their world- guided social interactions • Vygotsky argued that what children can do with the help of others may be more indicative of their mental development than what they can do alone. • Shared activities help internalize their society’s modes of thinking and behaving. Vygotsky • The zone of proximal development, a range of skills that the child can perform with assistance but not quite independently. • How and when children master important skills is partly linked to the willingness of others to provide scaffolding, or sensitive structuring of children’s learning encounters. • Cognitive accomplishment occurs in a social context- through collaborative help/direction from others Information Processing Theory • Explain cognitive development by analyzing the processes involved in perceiving and handling information. • Compare brain to computer. Helps estimate later intelligence from early efficacy of sensory perception and processing. 4- Evolutionary/Sociobiological Perspectives Wilson • Concerned with evolutionary and biological forces of social behavior • Emphasis on function of behavior in promoting survival of species. • Darwin: survival of the fittest and natural selection. 5- Contextual Perspective Development understood from a social context Individual inseparable from environment Vygotsky also in this camp. Theories of Development Ecological Theory • Bronfenbrenner’s view that development influenced by five environmental systems – Microsystem – Mesosystem – Exosystem – Macrosystem – Chronosystem Theories of Development Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Theory Fig. 1.13 Research Quantitative research: objectively measurable data Qualitative research: interpretation of nonnumerical data (subjective responses, feelings, beliefs) Sampling Sample: cannot study entire population. Adequately represents the population being studied; has relevant characteristics in same proportions as entire population; otherwise cannot be adequately generalized Research Quantitative research: objectively measurable data Qualitative research: interpretation of nonnumerical data (subjective responses, feelings, beliefs) Sampling Sample: cannot study entire population. Adequately represents the population being studied; has relevant characteristics in same proportions as entire population; otherwise cannot be adequately generalized Random selection: each person has equal chance of being chosen. Scientific method: characterized by: • Identifying a problem • Formulation of hypothesis • Collecting data • Analyzing data • Forming tentative conclusions • Disseminating findings Major Methods • Self-report, diary, interview, questionnaire: asked about some aspect of their lives; highly structured or vague • Naturalistic observation: observing in natural environment with no interaction • Laboratory observation: observed in laboratory with no attempt to manipulate behavior • Behavioral measures: tested on abilities, skills, knowledge, competencies, physical responses • Operational definition: stated clearly in terms of operations and procedures used to measure a specific phenomenon Research Designs Case Studies: single person studied Emotions, beliefs, or life history of a single individual. Ethnographic Studies: study of culture/subculture Correlational study: attempt to find positive/negative relationship between variables. Correlations are reported as numbers from –1.0 (perfect negative correlation) to +1.0 (perfect positive correlation) Research in Life-Span Development Possible Explanations for Correlational Data Fig. 1.17 Experiment: controlled procedure; controls independent variable to determine effect on the dependent variable. Experimental group: exposed to the treatment/item studied Control group: do not receive the treatment Independent variable: controls; wants to see if effects the dependent variable Dependent variable: may/may not change as result of the independent variable Research in Life-Span Development Principles of Experimental Research Fig. 1.18 Longitudinal: involves repeated measurements obtained from the same subject over time. Cross-Sectional: requires that a number of subjects of different ages be measured, tested, or observed at one given time. Ethics: rules and guidelines to follow Informed consent, avoidance of deception when possible; not cause undue pain, anxiety or harm; debrief; share results; assess any harm/suffering. Research in Life-Span Development Research Ethics • • • • • • Informed consent Confidentiality Debriefing Deception Gender bias Cultural and ethnic bias – ‘Ethnic gloss’ and over-generalizing