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Transcript Document 7136424
Kathleen Stassen Berger
Part III Chapter Eight
The Play Years: Biosocial Development
Body Changes
Brain Development
Injuries and Abuse
Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield
Tattoon, M.A.
1
The Play Years: Biosocial Development
Children grow bigger and stronger…
become more skilled at tasks… by
age 6, they can skip, write, and much
more, as long as they have had
enough practice.
2
Body Changes
– 1-year-olds are cute and chubby, while
6 year olds are “grown up”
– the body and brain develop according to
powerful epigenetic forces
– biologically driven as well as socially
guided, experience-expectant and
experience-dependent…
3
Body Changes
• Growth Patterns
– children become slimmer
– the lower body lengthens
– lose baby fat and gain muscle
4
Body Changes
• Growth Patterns
– gone is the protruding belly
– round face
– short limbs
– large head (that characterize the
toddler)
5
Body Changes
• Growth Patterns
– each year from age 2–6, well-nourished
children add almost 3 inches and gain
about 4 ½ pounds
– 6-year-olds weigh about 46 pounds
6
Body Changes
• Growth Patterns
– A typical 6-year-old:
• is at least 3 ½ feet tall
• weighs between 40 and 50 pounds
• looks lean, not chubby
• has adult-like body proportions
7
Body Changes
• Growth Patterns
– ethnic groups living together in the same
developed nation, children of:
• African descent tend to be the tallest, then
• European descent
• Asian descent
• Latino descent
8
Body Changes
• Eating Habits
– Infants and young children today play
outside less than their parents or
grandparents did
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Body Changes
• Eating Habits
– Nutritional deficiencies
• children in developed nations consume
enough calories but lack iron, zinc, and
calcium
• most cultures encourage their children to
eat sweets
10
Body Changes
• Eating Habits
– Just right
• “just right” or “just so” phenomenon is
normal and widespread among children
• most young children’s food preferences
and rituals are far from ideal
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Body Changes
• Eating Habits—Just Right
– phase peaked at about age 3...
– have things done in a particular order or
in a certain way
– strong preference to wear or not wear
certain clothes
– prepare for bedtime by engaging in a
special activity, routine, or ritual
– strong preference for certain foods
12
Body Changes
• Eating Habits
– by age 6 the “just right” fades
– parents should be patient until the “just
right” obsession fades
13
Brain Development
“Brains grow rapidly even before birth.”
• by age 2 the brains increase in size
– a great deal of pruning of dendrites has
already occurred
– brain growth after infancy is a crucial
difference between humans and other
animals
14
Brain Development
• Speed of Thought
– continued proliferation of the
communication pathways (dendrites and
axons) results in some brain growth
– Myelination is the process by which axons
become coated with myelin, a fatty
substance that speeds the transmission of
nerve impulses from neuron to neuron
15
Brain Development
• Connecting the Brain’s Hemispheres
– Corpus Callosum
• a long band of nerve fibers that connect the left
and right hemispheres of the brain
– Lateralization
• the specialization of certain functions by each
side of the brain, with one side dominant for
each activity
16
Brain Development
• The Left-Handed Child
– infants and toddlers usually prefer one hand over
the other
– for centuries, parents who saw a preference for the
left-hand forced their children to be right-handed
– developmentalist advise against trying to switch
a child’s handedness, because it might interfere
with the natural and necessary process of
lateralization
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Brain Development
– The left half controls the right side of the
body and contains the areas dedicated
to logical reasoning, detailed analysis,
and the basics of language.
– The right half controls the left side of
the body and contains the area
dedicated to generalized emotion and
creative impulses, including appreciation
of most music, art, and poetry.
18
Brain Development
– severely brain-damaged people are exclusively
left-brained or right-brained
– every cognitive skill requires both sides of the
brain
– older children have more myelinated fibers in the
corpus callosum, resulting in better thinking and
less clumsy actions
19
Brain Development
• Planning and Analyzing
– the prefrontal cortex or frontal cortex is an
area in the front part of the brain’s outer
layer
– it is the executive part of the brain… ruling
all the other areas
– this area underlies higher-order cognition
20
Brain Development
• Maturation of the Prefrontal Cortex
• Notable benefits occur from age 2 – 6
• sleep becomes more regular
• emotions become more and responsive
to specific stimuli
• temper tantrums subside
• uncontrollable laughter or tears become
less common
21
Brain Development
• Attention
• a major function of the prefrontal cortex
is to focus attention and thus curb
impulsiveness
• perseveration is the tendency to
persevere in, or stick to, one thought or
action for a long time
22
Brain Development
• Emotions and the Brain
– amygdala
• a tiny brain structure that registers emotions,
particularly fear and anxiety
– hippocampus
• a brain structure that is a central processor of
memory, especially the memory of location
– hypothalamus
• a brain area that responds to the amygdala and
the hippocampus to produce hormones that
activate other parts of the brain and body
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Brain Development
• Emotions and the Brain
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Brain Development
• Emotions and the Brain
– stressful experiences… can foster growth if
the child has someone or something to
moderate the stress
– prolonged physiological responses to stress
put children at risk for a variety of problems :
• physical and mental disorders
• poor emotional regulation
• cognitive impairments
25
Brain Development
• Motor Skills
– maturation of the prefrontal cortex
improves impulse control
– myelinaton of the corpus callosum and
lateralization of the brain permits better
coordination
26
Brain Development
• Gross Motor Skills
– involves large body movement
• Fine Motor Skills
– involve small body movement (are harder to
master)
– many fine motor skills involve two hands…
both sides of the brain
27
Brain Development
• Artistic Expression
– during the play years children are imaginative,
creative, and not yet very self-critical
– all forms of artistic expression blossom during
early childhood
– in every artistic domain, maturation of brain
and body is gradual and comes with practice
28
Brain Development
• Artistic Expression
29
Injuries and Abuse
• more young children die of violence,
either accidental or deliberate than from
any other cause
• they are more vulnerable to injuries
and abuse than older children
• they are impulsive, yet depend on
others
30
Injuries and Abuse
• Avoidable injury
– worldwide injuries cause millions of
premature deaths among young adults
as well as children
– injury control/harm reduction
• practices that are aimed at anticipating,
controlling, and preventing dangerous
activities
31
Injuries and Abuse
• Avoidable injury—3 Levels of Prevention
– Primary Prevention
• actions that change overall background
conditions to prevent some unwanted event
or circumstances, such as injury, disease, or
abuse
32
Injuries and Abuse
• Avoidable injury
– Secondary Prevention
• actions that avert harm in a high-risk
situation, such as stopping a car before it
hits a pedestrian
33
Injuries and Abuse
• Avoidable injury
– Tertiary Prevention
• actions, such as immediate and effective
medical treatment, that are taken after
an adverse event occurs, and are aimed
at reducing the harm or preventing
disability
34
Injuries and Abuse
• Avoidable injury
35
Child Maltreatment
• Child Maltreatment
– intentional harm to, or avoidable endangerment
of, anyone under 18 years of age
• Child Abuse
– deliberate action that is harmful to a child’s
physical, emotional, or sexual well-being
• Child Neglect
– failure to meet a child’s basic physical,
educational, or emotional needs
36
Child Maltreatment
• Reported Maltreatment
– harm or endangerment about which
someone has notified the authorities
• Substantiated Maltreatment
– harm or endangerment that been
reported, investigated, and verified
37
Child Maltreatment
• First warning signs of maltreatment are:
– delayed development
– slow grow
– immature communication
– lack of curiosity
– unusual social interaction
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Child Maltreatment
• Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
– is a delayed reaction to a trauma or shock
– may include hyperactivity and hypervigilance
– displaced anger, sleeplessness, sudden
terror or anxiety
– and confusion between fantasy and reality
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Child Maltreatment
• Consequences of Maltreatment
– is effected by cultural context
– maltreatment compromises basic health
– maltreated children and adolescents are
often bullies or victims or both
– these perspectives can last for a life span
40