PSYC 102: Chapter 1 Flashcards
Developmental Science
A field of study that focuses on the range of children’s physical, intellectual, social, and emotional development
Goals:
- To understand the basic biological and cultural processes that account for the complexities of development
- To devise ways of safeguarding children’s health and well-being
Periods of development
Developmentalists divide time btw. conception and adulthood into 5 periods that are recognized in most cultures
1. Prenatal Period (conception ~ birth) 2. Infancy (birth ~ 2) 3. Early childhood (ages 2 ½ ~ 6) 4. Middle childhood (ages 6 ~12) 5. Adolescence (ages 12 ~ 18)
Domain of Development
- Social
- Emotional
- Cognitive (intellectual)
- Physical
Development in any domain influences and is influenced by other domains
Contexts of Development
- Physical Environments
- Cultural beliefs and Practices
- Families and Peers
- Neighborhoods and Communities
- Institutions ( e.g.: schools, government)
4 fundamental issues concerning the process of development
- Questions about the Sources of Development
- How do the forces of biology, the environment, and the child’s own activities interact to produce new ways of thinking, feeling, and behaving?
- Emphasis: Importance of biology and environment
Nature and Nurture - Questions about Plasticity
- To what extent and under what conditions is the course of development plastic and subject to change as a result of either deliberate intervention or chance experience?
- Impact and emphasis: Sensitive periods - Questions about Continuity/ Discontinuity
- Is development a gradual, continuous process of change, or is it punctuated by periods of rapid change and the sudden emergence of new ways of thinking and behaving? - Questions about Individual Differences
- No two human beings are exactly alike
- How does a person come to have characteristics that make him or her different from all other people, and how stable are these characteristics over time?
Psychodynamic Theories
Explore influence on the development and developmental stages of the universal biological drives and life experiences of individuals
- Sigmund Freud: influenced by Darwin - Erik Erikson
Behaviorist Theories
Focus on development as a result of learning and on changes in behavior as a result of forming associations btw. Behavior and its consequences
- Watson - Thorndike - Skinner
Constructive Theory
Focus on children’s active construction of reality based on their experiences w/ the world
- Piaget - Stages
Sociocultural Theory
Emphasizes the influence of culture on the development
- Vygotsky
Evolutionary Theories
Explain human behavior in terms of how it contributes to the survival of the species
Look at how our evolutionary past influences individual development
- Darwin - Ethologists
Social Learning Theories
Focus on learning of associations between behaviors and their consequences
Emphasis on learning at occurs through the observation of, and interaction with, others
- Bandura
Modeling
The process by which children observe and imitate others
Self-efficacy
Beliefs about personal abilities to meet standards and achieve goals
Information-Processing Theories
Look at cognitive development in terms of how children come to perceive, remember, organize, and manipulate information in increasingly efficient ways
Often include a description of mental functioning in terms of a computer
Systems Theories
Envision development in terms of complex wholes made up of parts and explore how these wholes and their parts are organized and interact and change over time
Influential Types
Dynamic Systems Theory
Addresses how new, complex systems of behavior develop from the interaction of less complex parts
Ecological Systems Theory
Focuses on organization and interactions of the multiple environmental contexts within which children develop
5 interrelated, nested systems
- Microsystem
( a child’s immediate surroundings, e.g.: home, church, peer group, neighborhood, childcare center) - Mesosystem
( links face-to-face settings to one another; strength and nature of these connections are important for child development, e.g.: parents’ interaction with teachers, schools’ interaction with daycare providers) - Exosystem
( social institutions which affect children indirectly, settings that affect but do not usually include the child, e.g.: parents workplace, gov’t agencies, mass media, extended family networks, neighboorhood-community contexts) - Macrosystem
( broader cultural values, beliefs, laws, & governmental resources, e.g.: children in war-torn areas will experience a different kind of development than children in peaceful environments) - Chronosystem
( useful dimension of time, the influence of both change and constancy in the children’s environments, e.g.: a child who frequently bullies smaller children at school may portray the role of a terrified victim at home)