Child Development L1 Flashcards
What’s important for clinical psychologists to know when trying to determine what is normal and abnormal?
The age of the client
What is the definition of development?
The sequence of physical and psychological changes that human beings undergo as they grow older.
What is the definition of developmental psychology?
The scientific study of age-related changes in
behaviour, thinking, emotion, and personality.
Does development stop when we physically resemble adults?
No, after puberty has finished there is still a lot of psychological changes that occur throughout adulthood. We never stop developing.
List the three big questions in developmental psychology….
- Continuity and Change
- Sources of Development
- Individual Differences
What are we trying to find out about developmental psychology with the question involving continuity and change?
3 things
- Are we as human beings distinctive from other species?
- Is individual development continuous?
- Are there critical periods in development?
What are we trying to find out about developmental psychology with the question involving sources of development?
- Nature versus Nurture debate
- In other words is it our genetics that shapes us or the environment
- Often study using identical twins which have been spilt to grow up in different families
What are we trying to find out about developmental psychology with the question involving individual differences?
- What makes individuals different from each other?
- To what extent are individual characteristics stable over time? (e.g. if you are shy as a baby will you be shy as an adult?)
Why is it important that we know if human beings develop differently from other species?
We need to know if we can generalize findings from animal studies to us.
What are the two types of development? (provide examples)
- Discontinuous: Qualitative, there is a change
(e. g. frog development, flowering of plants, development of walking to crawling to running)
-Continuous: Quantitative, gradual accumulation of small changes we can measure (e.g. vocab)
What is a critical period? How is it different from a sensitive period?
- Critical period: Something has to happen at a certain time in order for development to proceed in a certain way (e.g. imprinting)
- Sensitive period: best to happen at certain time but a bit more flexible (e.g. language)
What is epigenetics?
The idea of the environment and genes interacting
What are the four ways you can collect data in developmental psychology?
- Self-Report
- Observation
- Experimental Methods
- Clinical Interview Methods
What might self-reporting involve as a method to collect data?
Benefits or Faults
- Ask the person directly or parents (if too young).
- Could be unreliable due to memory problems or hiding the truth due to embarrassment
- E.g. In hospitals use the happy face scale to measure pain of children.
What might observations involve as a method to collect data?
- Going into the child’s environment (e.g. school) to see what is happening
- Collecting data by taking photos, counting how often a behaviour occurs etc.