LESSON 2 | STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT AND DEVELOPMENTAL TASKS | REVIEWER Flashcards
- From conception to birth
- A tremendous growth from a single cell to an organism with brain and behavioral capabilities.
PRENATAL PERIOD
- From birth to 18-24 months
- Extreme dependents on adults
- Beginning of psychological activities (language, symbolic thought, sensorimotor coordination, social learning)
INFANCY
- End of infancy to 5-6 years old (Grade 1)
- Preschool years
- Young children become self-sufficient and to care for themselves
- Develop school readiness skills and spend many hours in play with peers.
EARLY CHILDHOOD
- 6 to 11 years old (Elementary)
- Fundamental skills of reading, writing and arithmetic
- The child is formally exposed to the larger world and its culture
MIDDLE AND LATE CHILDHOOD
- 10 to 12 years old ending up to 18 to 22 years of age
- Rapid physical changes
- Development of sexual characteristics, changes in body contour, dramatic gains in height and weight
ADOLESCENCE
- Late teens or early 20s lasting through 30s
- Establishing personal and economic independence, career development, selecting a mate, learning to live with someone in an intimate way.
EARLY ADULTHOOD
- 40 to 60 years of age
- Time of expanding personal and social involvement and responsibility
- Assisting the next generation to be competent and useful members of society
- Reaching and maintaining satisfaction in career
MIDDLE ADULTHOOD
- 60s and Above
- Time for adjustment to decreasing strength and health
- Life review, retirement, adjustment to new roles
LATE ADULTHOOD
• Learning to walk
• Learning to take solid foods
• Learning to talk
• Learning to control the elimination of body wastes
• Learning sex differences and sexual modesty
• Acquiring concepts and language to describe social and physical reality
• Readiness for reading
• Learning to distinguish right from wrong and developing a conscience
INFANCY CHILDHOOD (0-5)
• Learning physical skills necessary for ordinary games
• Building a wholesome attitude toward oneself
• Learning to get along with age mates
• Learning an appropriate sex role
• Developing fundamental skills in reading, writing, and calculating
• Developing concepts necessary for everyday living
• Developing conscience, morality, and a scale of values
• Achieving personal independence
• Developing acceptable attitudes toward society
MIDDLE CHILDHOOD (6-12)
• Achieving mature relations with both sexes
• Achieving a masculine or feminine social role
• Accepting one’s physique
• Achieving emotional independence of adults
• Preparing for marriage and family life
• Preparing for an economic career , acquiring values and an ethical system to guide behavior
• Desiring and achieving socially responsible behavior
ADOLESCENCE (13-18)
• Selecting a mate
• Learning to live with a partner
• Starting a family rearing children
• Managing a home
• Starting an occupation
• Assuming civic responsibility
EARLY ADULTHOOD (19-29)
• Helping teenage children to become happy and responsible adults
• Achieving adult social and civic responsibility
• Satisfactory career achievement
• Developing adult leisure time activities
• Relating to one’s spouse as a person
• Accepting the physiological changes of middle age
• Adjusting to aging parent
MIDDLE ADULTHOOD (30-60)
• Adjusting to decreasing strength and health
• Adjusting to retirement and reduced income
• Adjusting to death of spouse
• Establishing relations with one’s own age group
• Meeting social and civic obligations
• Establishing satisfactory living quarters
LATER MATERNITY