Social Development Flashcards
Psychosocial
Changes and continuities in personal and interpersonal aspects
- Encompasses changes in feelings, self concept, interpersonal thought and behaviour across the lifespan
- Critical issues: attachment and its future implication for adult functioning
- Socialisation by parents and peers
- Continues throughout the lifespan
Cognitive
• Cognitive: Changes and continuities in perception, language, memory, learning etc
Physical
• Physical: The growth of the body and its organs
Attachment
• Attachment: Refers to an enduring emotional tie between child and primary caregiver
- Involves desire of the child to be close to the caregiver
- A sense of security around the caregiver
- Feelings of distress when the caregiver is absent
- Interaction between two people who react to each others signals
- Early attachment theories that it was the attachment between a mother and child and may reflect the feeding of the mother and child
- However research by Harlow demonstrated that contact comfort was a crucial element in forming attachment relationships in primates
Bowlbys theory of attachment: Phase One
- Phase One Indiscriminate sociability: Responds actively with cries, coos and gazes to promote contact and affection from other people; uses limited attachment behaviour less selectively than when older
Bowlbys theory of attachment: Phase Two
- Phase Two Attachments in the making: Increasing preference for individuals that are most responsive and familiar to their needs, tolerates temporary separation from parents, accepts certain forms of care and attention from strangers
Bowlbys theory of attachment: Phase Three
- Phase Three: Specific, clear cut attachments: Preference for specific people becomes much stronger
Bowlbys theory of attachment: Phase Four
- Phase Four: Goal-coordinated partnerships: Growing ability to understand parental feelings and points of view so adjust behaviour accordingly, able to tolerate short parental absences
Secure Attachment
- Secure: Child welcomes mothers’ return and seeks closeness to her (most common)
Avoidant Attachment
- Avoidant: Child ignores mother
Ambivalent Attachment
- Ambivalent: Child exhibits anger at mother while seeking to be close to her
Disorganised Attachment
- Disorganised: Child may approach mother but gaze away, and may show odd motor behaviour and dazed facial expression
Attachment across the lifespan
- Security of attachment in infancy predicts a range of behaviours as children age- from self control and peer acceptance to performance in the classroom
Socialisation
• Socialisation: Refers to the process by which children learn values, beliefs, skills and behaviour patterns of their society
Authoritative parents
Authoritative Parents: Make reasonable, age appropriate demands, promotes self regulation, warm, receptive, rational, verbal give and take, value discipline, self reliance and uniqueness Child: Independent, socially responsible, self controlled, explorative, self reliant