Chapter 2 Flashcards
Erik Erickson (10)
- father of lifespan development
- psychoanalytical/psychosocial theory
- infancy (0-1) basic trust/belief: human world is caring
- toddlerhood (1-2) autonomy celebrates separate self
- early childhood (3-6) initiative: tackling big projects
- middle childhood (7-12) industry: work/friends/school
- adolescence (teens-20s): identity vs role confusion
- early adulthood (20-40s): intimacy vs isolation
- middle adulthood (40 to 60s) generativity
- late adulthood (60+) integrity
the Albert experiment
-loud noise paired with rat. initially neutral stimulus (rat) becomes associated with fear. baby will cry as sight of rat
4 types of developmental theories
- a) psychoanalytical/psychosexual = Freud
b) psychoanalytical/psychosocial = Erickson - learning
- cognitive development = Piaget
- systems = Brofenbrennar
Bandura (4)
- social cognitive theory
- observational learning is learning by observing the behavior of other people (models)
- children learn by imitation
- observational = more cognitive
B. F. Skinner (7)
- operant conditioning
- behavior comes from consequences
- repeat behaviors with desirable consequences and cut down behaviors with negative consequences
- positive reinforcement: addition of something positive (father gives into whining by letting kid play nintendo, increasing behavior in the future)
- negative reinforcement: something undesirable removed (fasten seat belt to escape unpleasant beeping sound, strengthens behavior
- positive punishment: unpleasant stimulus (spanking)
- negative punishment: desireable stimulus removed (loose tv privilege)
Piaget
-cognitive-developmental theory
0-2: sensorimotor - baby manipulates objects to learn basics of physical reality/dev of language
2-7: preoperational - children’s perceptions are captured by their immediate appearance
7-12: concrete operations - children have a realistic understanding of the world. they reason conceptionally about concrete objects. But cannot think abstractly in a scientific way
12+ formal operations - reasoning at the pinnacle, hypothetical, scientific, flexible, fully adult (cognitive)
brofenbrenner
-bioecological model
1) microsystem: immediate physical and
social environment
Ex. family, daycare, peers, school
2) mesosystem: interrelationships between 2+ microsystems
Ex. stressful events in family microsystem bleed into the school microsystem and doing unwell
3) Exosystem: social settings that do not experience directly but influence their development
Ex. the kind of neighborhood they live in
4) Macrosystem: cultural/societal context
Ex. paid time off to be parents
pros and cons of systems theories
Pros
-capture complexity of the life-span human development
Cons
- partially formulated and tested
- not a clear picture/path of development