Chapter 1 Flashcards
3 components of development
physical (dev brain), cognitive (how you think, perception), psychosocial (interactions with others)
5 characteristics of development
- lifelong process
- multidirectional (intellect/musical skills)
- involves gain and loss (honing skills)
- lifelong plasticity
- shaped by historical/cultural context (pandemic)
What are 4 historical changes that occurred?
1) 17th century: childhood as an age of innocence
2) 19th/20th century: adolescence - transitional times/changes (Amish allowed to leave the community
3) 20th century: middle age, empty nest (children leave when they grow up)
4) 20th century: old age as retirement
Stanley Hall (4)
- founder of developmental psychology
- first president of the APA
- pioneered research on childhood, adolescence, and old age
- characterized adolescence as a period of “storm and stress”
Nature (3) vs Nurture (10)
Nature
- biological unfolding of the individual (maturation)
- innate and inborn (biological disposition)
- genes (heredity passed on from parents to child)
Nurture
-environment, learning, experience, cultural influence, neighborhood, family peers, pollution, teachers, social interactions
2 principles of nature and nurture
- nature (genetic tendencies) shape our nurture (life experiences)
- we need the right nurture (life experiences) to express of nature (genetic talents)
- belskey
How is development studied? (3)
- scientific method
- systematic observation/data
- goal: believe data & weed out flawed ideas
2 components of the scientific method (1, 5)
-theory, hypothesis (conjecture, suppositions, speculations, postulations, if/then)
Good theories are…(3)
- internally consistent, does not present contradictory hypothesis
- falsifiable, can be prove wrong
- supported by data
research sample, population
- group of individuals being studied
- well defined group from which a sample is draw
random sample (3)
- carefully selected group of individuals
- confidence in research sample
- makes generalization possible
3 methods of data collection
1) verbal reports
2) physiological measures (responses, MRI)
3) behavioral observation (naturalistic & structured)
3 research methods
- case study: in-depth analysis of an individual or group; hypothesis good source but cannot be generalized
- experimental method: independent & dependent variable
- correlational method: 2 or more variables related in a systematic way (r -1 (negative correlation) to 1 (positive correlation))
3 research designs
1) cross-sectional design
- study of cohorts of various ages
- provides info about age differences, not development
- quick & easy
2) longitudinal design
- study of same group/cohort repeatedly over time
3) sequential design
- combines cross and long
- age trends
- extremely costly
4 parts to protect the rights of research participants
informed consent, debriefing (telling purpose of the study after experiment ends), protection of harm, confidentiality