Lifespan Development-ch20: Concepts Of Growth And Development Flashcards
Physical change and increase in size.
Ex: height, weight, size, dentition; measured quantitatively
Growth
An increase in the complexity of function and skill progression; the capacity and skill of a person to adapt to the environment.
Ex: walk, talk, run
Development
Genetics, temperament, family, nutrition, environment, health, and culture affect/influence this.
Growth and development
The complex concept that is difficult to define, can be considered as the outward (interpersonal) expression of the inner (intranet sonar)self.
It encompasses a person’s temperament, feelings, character traits, independence, self-esteem, self-concept, behavior, ability to interact with others, and ability to adapt to life changes.
Personality
Part of the person’s mental life of which the person is unaware.
(Freud)
Unconscious mind
The source of instinctive and unconscious psychological urges.
It resides. In the unconscious and, operating on the pleasure principle, seeks immediate pleasure and gratification.
(Freud)
Id
Includes consciousness and memory, which serves to mediate between primitive instinctual drives (id), internal social prohibitions (superego), and reality;
The realistic part of the person, balances the gratification demands of the id with the limitations of social and physical circumstances.
(Freud)
Ego
The result of conflicts between the id’ impulses and the anxiety created by the conflicts due to social and environmental restrictions.
(Freud)
Defensive mechanisms aka adaptive mechanisms
Contains the conscience and the ego ideal;
Conscience of personality; the source of feelings of guilt, shame, and inhibition
(Freud)
Superego
Urge or desire of sexual activity;
Underlying motivation to human development
Freud
Libido
Immobilization or the inability of the personality to proceed to the next stage because of anxiety
Fixation
Level of achievement for a particular segment of the persons life.
-infancy, early childhood, late childhood, school age, adolescent, young adult, adulthood, maturity
(Erickson)
Developmental stages
Skill or behavior pattern learned during stages of development;
A task which arises at or about a certain period in the life of an individual, successful achievement of which leads to his happiness and to success with later tasks, while failure leads to unhappiness in the individual, disapproval by society, and difficulty with later tasks
(Havighurst)
Developmental task
Recognition of developmental levels of learners, and acknowledgments of the learners motivation and environment
Refers to the manner in which people learn to think, reason, and use language and other symbols
Cognitive theory / development
- assimilation: process through which humans encounter and react to new situations by using the mechanisms they already possess
- accommodation: process of change whereby cognitive processes mature sufficiently to allow the person to solve problems that were unsolvable before
- adaptation: coping behavior; the ability to handle the demands made by the environment
Cognitive development