Transcript Chapter 4

Chapter 9
Psychological Development
Developmental Psychology
• Developmental psychology: The study of
how organisms change over time as the
result of biological and environmental
influences
How Do Psychologists
Explain Development?
Development is a process of
growth and change brought
about by an interaction of
heredity and the
environment
The Nature-Nurture
Interaction
• Nature-nurture issue: Long-standing
discussion over relative importance of
nature (heredity) and nurture
(environment) in their influence on
behavior and mental processes
The Nature-Nurture
Interaction
• Identical twins: pair from a single
fertilized egg which later split into two
distinct individuals
• Fraternal twins: pair from two separate
fertilized eggs that shared the same womb
Performance
Gradual versus Abrupt
Change
Continuity view
Discontinuity view
Age
• Continuity view vs. Discontinuity view
Gradual versus Abrupt
Change
• Developmental stages: Periods of life
initiated by significant transitions or
changes in physical or psychological
functioning
Cooperative Learning Activity
• Goal:
– Understand that development is a lifelong process.
• Directions:
– Think about and discuss your given scenario.
– Write a list of relevant questions about it that might
help you better understand the scenario.
– Think about it – What information would you want about
contributing factors across the lifespan to help you
better understand/deal with the situation?
• What biological, social, cognitive factors are at work here?
– Discuss how you might handle the situation.
Chapter 9: Development
What Capabilities Does the
Child Possess?
Newborns have innate
abilities for finding
nourishment, interacting with
others, and avoiding harmful
situations; the developing
abilities of infants and
children rely on learning.
Prenatal Development
• Prenatal period : The developmental period
before birth
– Zygote: up to 14 days
– Embryo: 14 days to end of 2nd month
– Fetus: 3 months to birth
• Placenta: An organ that develops between
the embryo/fetus and the mother
• Teratogens: Toxic substances that can
damage the developing organism
Neonatal Period
(from birth to one month)
• Sensory abilities
• Motor abilities
–
–
–
–
Grasping reflex
Rooting reflex
Sucking reflex
Stepping reflex
Infancy
(one month to about 18 months)
• Maturation: The unfolding of genetically
programmed processes of growth and
development over time
Maturation Timetable
• 1 month: responds to sound, vocalizes
occasionally
• 2 months: smiles socially, recognizes caregiver, rolls from side to back, holds head up
• 3 months: vocalizes to sounds/smiles, searches
for sound source, sits with support
• 4 months: gaze follows interesting objects,
sits with less support
Maturation Timetable
• 5 months: discriminates b/w strangers &
familiar persons, distinctive vocalizations
• 6 months: lifts objects, smiles at own image,
reaches for objects
• 7 months: sits on own, crawls
• 8-9 months: verbalizes around 4 syllables,
pulls to standing position
• 10-11 months: plays hand games, stands alone
• 1 year: walks alone
Learning in Infancy
• Conditioning – classical and operant
• Imprinting – in animals, not children
Social and Emotional
Development
• Theory of Mind: An awareness that
other people’s behavior may be
influenced by beliefs, desires, and
emotions that differ from one’s own
• Temperament: An individual’s
characteristic manner of behavior or
reaction (strong biological origin)
Attachment Styles
• Humans apparently have an inborn need for
attachment – deep, enduring socio-emotional
relationship with another
• Strange Situation (Ainsworth, 1978)
– Secure attachment
– Insecure attachment
• Anxious-ambivalent attachment
• Avoidant attachment
Social and Emotional
Development
• Most approaches to child rearing fall into
one of the following styles (Baumrind):
1.
2.
3.
4.
Authoritarian parents
Permissive parents (permissive-indulgent)
Uninvolved parents (permissive indifferent)
Authoritative parents
Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages
Age/Period
Principal Challenge
0 to 1 1/2 years
Trust vs. mistrust
1 1/2 to 3 years
Autonomy vs. self doubt
3 to 6 years
Initiative vs. guilt
6 years to puberty
Confidence (Industry) vs. inferiority
Adolescence
Identity vs. role confusion
Early adulthood
Intimacy vs. isolation
Middle adulthood
Generativity vs. stagnation
Late adulthood
Ego-integrity vs. despair
What Are the
Developmental Tasks of
Infancy and Childhood?
Infants and children face
especially important
developmental tasks in the areas
of cognition and social
relationships – tasks that lay a
foundation for further growth in
adolescence and adulthood
Cognitive Development
• Jean Piaget
• Cognitive development: The process by
which thinking changes over time
• Schemas: Mental structures or programs
that guide a developing child’s thoughts
Cognitive Development
• Assimilation: Mental process that modifies
new information to fit it into existing
schemas
• Accommodation: Mental process that
restructures existing schemas so that new
information is better understood
Piaget’s Stages of
Cognitive Development
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete
Operational
Formal
Operational
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive
Development
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete
Operational
Formal
Operational
• Birth to about age 2
• Relies on innate motor
responses to stimuli
• Schemas – see & touch
• Sensorimotor intelligence
• Mastery of these marks
end of stage:
• Mental representations
• Object permanence
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive
Development
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete
Operational
Formal
Operational
• About age 2 to age 6/7
• Marked by welldeveloped mental
representation and the
use of language
• Seen in this stage:
• Egocentrism
• Animistic thinking
• Centration
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive
Development
Sensorimotor
Concrete
Operational
• About age 7 - 11
• Child understands
conservation but is
incapable of abstract
thought
• Simple logic only
Formal
Operational
• Conservation
• Mental operations
Preoperational
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive
Development
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete
Operational
Formal
Operational
• From about age 12 on
• Abstract thought
appears
What Changes Mark the
Transition of Adolescence?
Adolescence offers new
developmental challenges
growing out of physical
changes, cognitive changes,
and socio-emotional changes
The Transitions of
Adolescence
• Adolescence: Developmental period
beginning at puberty and ending at
adulthood
• Rites of passage: Social rituals that
mark the transition between
developmental stages, especially
between childhood and adulthood
Physical Maturation & Cognition
Changes in Adolescence
• Puberty: Onset of sexual maturity
• Problems with self-image, self-esteem – more
aware of physical attractiveness
• Formal operational stage: abstract and complex
thought
• Hormones rise to high levels
• The frontal lobes undergo a “remodel”
– This leads to sensation seeking and risk taking, and
preoccupation with body image and sex
Social Identity in
Adolescence
• Identity crisis
• The increasing influence of peers
• Common social problems in
adolescence
• Delinquency
Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Reasoning
• I. Preconventional morality
– Stage 1: Pleasure/pain orientation
– Stage 2: Cost/benefit orientation; reciprocity
• II. Conventional morality
– Stage 3: “Good child” orientation
– Stage 4: Law-and-order orientation
• III. Postconventional (principled) morality
– Stage 5: Social contract orientation
– Stage 6: Ethical principle orientation
Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral
Reasoning
• Not tightly linked to one’s age
• Moves from morality based on reward/
punishment to one based on abstract
ethical principles.
• Gender and morality
– Carol Gilligan: Kohlberg’s stages are
biased; based on males; female morality
embedded in social relationships
What Developmental
Challenges Do Adults Face?
Nature and nurture continue
to produce changes
throughout life, but in
adulthood these changes
include both growth and
decline
The Developmental
Challenges of Adulthood
• Early Adulthood (Erikson)
– Intimacy versus isolation
• Middle Adulthood (Erikson)
– Generativity versus stagnation
– Generativity: making a commitment beyond
oneself to family, work, society, or future
generations
The Last Developmental
Issues You Will Face
• Late Adulthood (Erikson)
– Ego-integrity vs. Despair
– Ego-integrity: ability to look back on life without
regrets and to enjoy a sense of wholeness
• Impact on physical, cognitive, social and
emotional abilities:
– Vision, hearing, thinking/learning/problem solving,
memory, sexual functioning, selective social
interaction, emotions
• 5 Stages of Death/Dying/Grieving (Kubler-Ross):
Denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance