Human Development Flashcards
What are maturational tasks?
Tasks that are achieved at each stage, heralding transition to the next stage
Social development at 4-6 weeks?
Social smile at 6 weeks
Recognise mums face
Shows preference for human faces
Maturational task at 6-8 weeks?
Cooing
When goes grasp reflex disappear?
3 months
When can a baby localsie a sound source?
3 months
What social development occurs at 3 months?
Squeals with pleasure
Discriminates smile
When do sound experiments occur?
5 months
When do babies reach out/oral exploration?
5 months
When does palmar grasp occur?
6 months
Which language task occurs at 6 months?
Double syllable sounds
When does hand to hand transfer occur?
6 months
What sensory maturational task occurs at 6 months?
Localise sounds 45cm lateral to either ear
When does stranger anxiety occur?
9-10 months
When can peek-a-boo be played?
9-10 months
When can a baby crawl?
9-10 months
When does pincer grasp occur?
9-10 months
When does a baby start looking for dropped toys?
9-10 months
When can a baby say 1-2 words?
1 year
When can a baby stand momentarily?
1 year
When does separation anxiety occur?
1 year
When can a child walk alone?
18 months
When can a child jump with both feet?
18 months
When can a child throw a ball?
18 months
When can a child use a spoon?
18 months
When can a child build a tower of 3-4 cubes?
18 months
When does a child show rapproachement?
18 months
When can a child run?
2 years
When can a child make sentences?
2 years
When does a child show parallel play?
2 years
When is a child dry by day?
2 years
When can a child speak in sentences?
3 years
When does a child have imaginary companions?
3 years
When does a child show cooperative play?
3 months
When does a child go upstairs 1 foot per step and down 2 feet?
3 years
When can a child copy a circle?
3 years
When can a child draw a man?
3 years
When can a child build a tower of 9 cubes?
3 years
When can a child copy a cross?
4 years
When can a child skip?
4 years
When is a child toilet trained?
4 years
When can a child copy a triangle?
5 years
When can a child hop?
5 years
When can a child dress and undress alone?
5 years
When is a child fluent with grammer?
5 years
When can a child copy a diamond?
6 years
When can a child count number of fingers?
6 years
What are motor tasks at 3 months?
Hold head up
Grasp reflex disappears
Motor tasks at 5 months?
Hand to hand transfer
Rolling over
Palmar grasp
When can a child roll over?
6 months
Motor tasks at 9-10 months?
Crawls
Sits unsupported
Picks up objects with pincer grasp
Social development at 9 months?
Stranger anxiety followed by object permanence
Language development at 1 year?
One or two words
Motor tasks at 18 months?
Walks alone Holds rails and climbs Jumps with both feet Builds tower of 3-4 cubes Uses spoon
Social development at 2 years
Parallel play
Dry by day
Language development at 3 years
Speaks in sentences
Key concepts of Temperament theory
Temperaments are biologically based traits - inhibited or uninhibited. Temperament elicits environmental response that perpetuates pattern of behaviour.
Key concepts of PIaget’s Organismic stage theory
Development occurs in stages with transition occurring due to interaction between child and environment.
Key concepts of Freud’s psychosexual stage theory
Stage-specific behaviours are driven by inner conflicts resulting in anxiety signals.
Successful resolution of conflicts aid in progressive maturation.
Who created the psychosocial stage theory of development?
Erikson
Key concepts of Psychosocial stage theory?
Psychosocial developmental stages are characterized by conflicts but resolution is not mandatory for further development.
Key concepts of Vygotsky’s collaborative learning theory?
Development is not private - child acts as an apprentice in social surroundings. Parents/teachers carry out scaffolding to introduce familiarity for child to develop own expertise.
What is collaborative learning in the collaborative learning theory?
Parents and teachers carry out role of scaffolding to introduce familiarity for child to develop its own expertise.
What is zone of proximal development in collaborative learning theory?
Functions not yet fully achieved but in process of pipeline whose development is aided by scaffolding.
Key concepts of Maturational growth theory (Gesell)?
Maturation of nervous system as principal driver of various aspects of human behaviour.
Freuds psychosexual stages
Oral Anal Phallic/oedipal Latency Genital
When does oral stage occur in Freuds theory?
0-1.5 years
When does anal stage occur in Freuds theory?
1.5-3 years
When does phallic/oedipal stage occur in Freuds theory?
3-5 years
When does latency stage occur in Freuds theory?
5-11
When does genital occur in Freuds theory?
Puberty onwards
When happens in oral stage in Freuds theory?
Drive discharge via sucking - oral erotogenic zone.
What occurs in early stages of oral stage?
Oral erotism (sucking, licking).
What occurs in late stages or oral stage?
Oral sadism - biting, chewing
What develops at oral stage?
Ego
What happens in Anal stage?
Anal erotogenic zone - drive discharge via sphincter behaviour.
Three behaviours in anal stage
Anal erotism
Anal sadism
Anal fixation
What occurs in anal erotism?
Sexual pleasure in anal functioning
What occurs in anal sadism?
Aggressive wishes linked to fecal expulsion
What occurs in anal fixation?
OCD like pattern, ambivalence and sadomasochistic tendencies.
What occurs in phallic/oedipal stage?
Genitals are organs of interest - masturbation-like activity.
What is the oedipus complex?
Wish to have libidinal relationship with opposite sex, leading to fear of retaliation from rival parent.
What is the electra complex?
Oedipal complex in girls.
What is fear of retaliation in both boys and girls?
Boys - castration anxiety
Girls - loss of mothers love
What is the electra complex?
Penis envy, wish to have penis accompanied by blaming mother for absence of mother.
Wish to displace mother as object of fathers love and bear his baby.
What occurs at resolution of Oedipus/electra complex?
Identification with aggressor
Super-ego develops from introjection of parental values
What occurs during latency period?
Socialization
Interest in peers
Sexual energy sublimated towards school work
What occurs during genital period?
Biological maturation
Genital sexuality is born
What is a critical period in development?
Time when individual is acutely sensitive to effects of external influences.
Types of stress responses in young children
Positive
Tolerable
Toxic
What is the positive stress response in children?
Brief, mild response
Moderated by availability of carer
Growth-opportunity
What is tolerable stress response in children?
Exposure to non-normative experience e.g. death in family.
What is toxic stress response in children?
Strong, frequent or prolonged activation of body’s stress response in absence of protection from adults.
Disrupts brain circuitry
What is monotropy in Bowlbys theory?
Strong, innate tendency to attach to one adult gemale
When does attachment behaviour peak?
12-18 months
Phases of attachment according to Bowlby
Pre-attaching
Indiscriminate attachment
Clearcut attachment
>25 months - mother is independent
When does preattachment phase occur?
Birth to 8-12 weeks
When does indiscriminate attachment occur?
8-12 weeks to 6 months
What happens during indiscriminate attachment phase?
Baby allows strangers to handle, infants become attached to one or more person in environment
When does clear-cut attachment occur?
6-24 months
What occurs during clear-cut attachment?
Preferential attachment, seperation anxiety, object permanence, stranger anxiety.
Who conducted the attachment experiments on rhesus monkeys?
Harlow
What led to the A-C categories of babies attachments?
Ainsworth’s experiments
Describe Type A attachment
Anxious avoidant. 15% Indifferent attitude to mother leaving/entering. Distressed when alone. Stranger can comfort child.
Which attachment type is seen in bullying behaviour?
Type A
Describe Type B attachment
70%
Distressed when mother leaves.
Comforted by mother, not by stranger.
Describe Type C attachment
Anxious resistant.
15%
High level of distress, especially when mother leaves. Not comforted by mother and resistant to stranger.
Which attachment pattern is greater in the West?
Type A
What is Type D attachment?
Disorganised
Maltreated/maternally deprived
Child is insecure, frightened of mother.
Who devised the Adult attachment interview?
Main
What are the four patterns noted from the Adult attachment interview?
Secure autonomous
Dismissing of experiences
Entangled
Unresolved disorganised
What is the secure autonomus behaviour in AAI?
Those with secure attachment provide coherent answers and talk freely re negative experiences in childhood - Type B.
What is the dismissing of experiences in AAI?
Those who had Type A minimise their experiences.
What is Entangled in AAI?
Those who were Type C use multiple emotionally laden responses and ramble excessively.
What is anaclitic depression?
Short period of separation from primary caregiver (e.g. hospitalisation) results in loss of loved one.
Who created the term anaclitic depression?
Spitz
Who created seperation-individuation theory?
Margaret Mahler
What are Mahler’s stages?
Normal Autism (0-2 months)
Symbiosis (2-5 months)
Separation - individuation
What occurs during normal autism?
Child sends time asleep
What happens during symbiosis?
Inner and outer world studied via senses but perceives mother and self as one.