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Title: Development Through the Lifespan 2nd edition Laura E. Berk


1
Development Through the Lifespan 2nd edition
Laura E. Berk
  • Chapter 10

Emotional and Social Development in Middle
Childhood
PowerPoint Presentations Produced by
Joe Rizzo - Professor of Behavioral Sciences Rick
Lizotte - Curriculum Developer Felix Rizvanov -
Instructional Designer
Northern Essex Community College
2
Chapter 10Emotional and Social Development in
Middle Childhood
  • Development Through the Lifespan
  • 2nd edition Berk

3
ERIKSON'S STAGES
4
ERIKSON'S THEORY
  • Basic conflict of middle childhoodIndustry
    versus Inferiority
  • Freud's latency stage, in which sexual instincts
    are dormant
  • Marked by the beginning of formal schooling

5
SELF-DEVELOPMENT
  • Changes in Self-Concept
  • More refined self-concept
  • Social comparisons are made.
  • Cognitive development affects the structure of
    the self.
  • Well-organized self emerges. (Margaret Mead)
  • Children are better at reading others.
  • Peer influence increases.

6
Development of Self-Esteem
  • Hierarchically Structured
  • Contexts of evaluation
  • Classrooms, playgrounds, and peer groups
  • Age 6 to 7, three self-esteemsacademic, social,
    and physical
  • Physical appearance is primary through
    adolescence.

Figure 10.1
7
Development of Self-Esteem(cont.)
  • Changes in Level of Self-Esteem
  • Drops in first years of elementary school.
  • More realistic self-appraisal
  • From fourth to sixth grade, self-esteem rises.

8
Influences on Self-Esteem
  • Children with high social self-esteem are better
    liked by peers.
  • Academic self-esteem predicts school achievement.
  • Culture
  • Japanese/Taiwanese children place more emphasis
    on social comparison.
  • Child-Rearing Practices
  • Authoritative child-rearing style leads to
    self-esteem.
  • Warm, positive parenting
  • Firm but appropriate expectations

9
Making Achievement-Related Attributions
  • Attributions
  • Common explanations of behavior
  • Mastery-oriented attributions
  • Success credited to ability
  • Failure to factors that can be changed
  • Learned helplessness
  • Success credited to luck and failure to low
    ability.
  • Belief that ability is not changeable
  • Giving up on difficult tasks

10
Influences on Achievement
  • Related Attributions
  • Learned-helpless have parents with high
    standards.
  • Positive teachers evoke more work.
  • Girls more than boys blame ability for failure.
  • New Australian and indigenous children believe
    prejudice will lead to failure.

11
Supporting Children's Self-Esteem
  • Attribution retraining for learned-helpless
  • Exert more effort
  • Focus more on mastery than grades
  • Teach metacognition and self-regulation

12
EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Self-Conscious Emotions
  • Pride and guilt integrate with personal
    responsibility.
  • Pride motivates children to take on challenges.
  • Guilt prompts making amends, striving for
    self-improvement.

13
Emotional Understanding
  • Explain emotion by making reference to internal
    states.
  • By age 8, realize they can experience more than
    one emotion at a time
  • Take more information into account in detecting
    emotions of others.
  • Understanding is supported by cognitive
    development and social experiences.

14
Emotional Self-Regulation
  • By age 10, strategies for managing emotions
  • Emotionally well-regulated children are
  • Upbeat in mood
  • Empathic and pro-social
  • Liked by their peers.

15
UNDERSTANDING OTHERS
  • Perspective taking
  • Imagining what other people may be thinking and
    feeling
  • Selman's Model of Perspective Taking
  • Asked youngsters to respond to social dilemmas in
    which the characters have differing information
    and opinions about an event

16
UNDERSTANDING OTHERS
Table 10.1
17
Perspective Taking and Social Skills
  • Varies greatly among children of the same age.
  • Children with poor social skills have difficulty
    imagining others thoughts and feelings.
  • Interventions
  • Provide practice in perspective taking
  • Helpful in reducing antisocial behavior
  • Increases empathy and prosocial responding

18
MORAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Learning about Justice through Sharing
  • Distributive justice
  • Beliefs about how to divide resources fairly
  • Damon studied ideas of distributive justice.
  • 5 to 6 years Equality
  • 6 to 7 years Merit
  • Around age 8 Benevolence

19
Changes in Moral Understanding
  • As ideas of justice advance, linkage created
    between moral rules and social conventions.
  • Diverse cultures use same criteria to distinguish
    moral and social conventions.
  • Children identify a domain of personal matters.
  • Fosters concepts of personal rights and freedom

20
PEER RELATIONS
  • Peers become an increasingly important context
    for development.
  • Aggression declines in middle childhood,
    especially physical attacks.

21
Peer Groups
  • Peers generate
  • Shared values and standards
  • Social structure of leaders and followers
  • Peer culture consists of vocabulary, dress code,
    and place to "hang out.
  • Children who deviate are often rebuffed.

22
Peer Groups (Cont.)
  • Context to practice
  • Cooperation, leadership and followership, loyalty
  • Participation in Girl Scouts, Boy Scouts, 4-H,
    church groups, and other associations promote
    gains in social and moral understanding.
  • From third grade on, relational aggression rises
    among girls. Boys are more hostile toward
    "outgroup."

23
Friendships
  • Like each other's personal qualities and respond
    to one another's needs
  • Trust is the defining feature. Violations of
    trust are a serious breach.
  • Same age, sex, ethnicity, and SES
  • Schools and neighborhoods can affect friendships.
  • Learn emotional commitment

24
Peer Acceptance
  • Assessed by self-reports of likeability
  • Four types of response
  • Popular children
  • Many positive votes
  • Rejected children
  • Actively disliked
  • Controversial children
  • Positive and negative votes
  • Neglected children
  • Seldom chosen

25
Peer Acceptance (Cont.)
  • Two-thirds fit one of these categories.
  • Predicts psychological adjustment
  • Rejected
  • Unhappy, alienated, low self-esteem
  • Poor school performance, dropping out, antisocial
    behavior, and delinquency

26
Peer Acceptance (Cont.)
  • Social behavior determines whether liked or
    rejected
  • Popular are sensitive, friendly, and cooperative
  • Rejected-aggressive are hostile, hyperactive,
    inattentive, and impulsive
  • Rejected-withdrawn are passive and socially
    awkward, at risk for abuse by bullies
  • Controversial are hostile and disruptive, but
    engage in positive, prosocial acts
  • Neglected are well adjusted but shy

27
Peer Acceptance (Cont.)
  • Helping Rejected Children
  • Coaching, modeling, and reinforcement of positive
    social skills
  • Intensive academic tutoring improves both their
    school achievement and social acceptance.

28
GENDER STEREOTYPING
  • Gender-Stereotyped Beliefs
  • Girls
  • Reading, art, and music
  • Boys
  • Math, athletics, and mechanical skills
  • Tolerance for girls' violations of gender roles,
    but not boys'

29
Gender Identity and Behavior third to sixth
grade
  • Boys identify more strongly with the masculine
    role.
  • Girls' feminine identification declines.

30
Cultural Influences on Gender Typing
  • Girls are less likely to engage in "masculine"
    activities where gap between male and female
    roles is strong.
  • Boys who care for a younger sibling become less
    stereotyped.

31
FAMILY INFLUENCES
  • Parent-Child Relationships
  • Amount of time with parents drops.
  • Reasoning improves.
  • Coregulation
  • Parents exercise general oversight, permitting
    children to be in charge moment-by-moment.
  • Children press for more independence.
  • But know they need parents' support

32
Siblings
  • Provide mutual support
  • Rivalry due to parental comparisons
  • Quarrel more when same sex and close in age
  • Try to be different to reduce rivalry
  • Oldest has IQ and achievement advantage
  • Younger more popular

33
Only Children
  • Siblings are not essential for normal
    development.
  • As well adjusted as other children
  • Score higher in self-esteem and achievement
    motivation

34
Divorce
  • U.S. divorce rate highest in world
  • One-half of American marriages end in divorce,
    and three-fourths involve children.
  • Children in divorced families average 5 years in
    single-parent home.
  • Two-thirds of divorced parents marry again.

35
Immediate Consequences
  • Family conflict rises.
  • Mother-headed homes experience drop in income
  • Divorced mothers often move for economic reasons.
  • Children's Age
  • Younger blame themselves
  • Older understand better
  • With high family conflict, older children have
    adjustment difficulties.
  • More mature behavior in some older children

36
Immediate Consequences (cont.)
  • Children's Temperament and Sex
  • Problems magnified for temperamental children
  • Girls internalize reactions
  • More demanding, attention-getting behavior
  • Boys have more adjustment problems in
    mother-custody.
  • Both sexes show declines in school achievement.

37
Long-Term Consequences
  • Improved adjustment 2 years after divorce
  • Boys and the temperamental have lasting problems.
  • Girls have rise in sexual activity and child
    bearing at adolescence.
  • Adjustment determines how well custodial parent
    handles stress.
  • Stressed intact family worse than low-conflict,
    single-parent household.

38
Other Issues
  • Divorce mediation
  • Meetings between divorcing adults and trained
    professionals to help settle disputes
  • Joint custody
  • Both parents share in the child's upbringing.
  • Child support
  • Noncustodial parents payment toward support of
    child

39
Remarriage
  • Blended (reconstituted) family
  • Remarriage of divorced parent that includes
    parent, child, and new steprelatives

40
Remarriage (cont.)
  • Father/Stepmother Families
  • More confusion for children
  • Noncustodial fathers
  • Remarriage often leads to reduced contact with
    previous families.
  • Girls have a harder time getting along with
    stepmother.
  • Mother/Stepfather Families
  • Boys adjust quickly.
  • Older and adolescent youngsters find it harder to
    adjust.
  • Stepfather can disrupt close ties of girls with
    mother.

41
Working Parents
  • Single and married mothers work in equal
    proportions.
  • 70 percent with school-age children are
    employed.
  • Maternal Employment and Child Development
  • Children of mothers who enjoy work and are
    committed to parenting show positive adjustment.
  • Girls profit from image of female competence.
  • Employed mothers who value parenting are more
    likely to be authoritative parents.
  • Working long hours is associated with less
    favorable outcomes.

42
Support for Employed Mothers and Fathers
  • Husband shares household responsibilities
  • Work and government policies that help
  • Part-time employment
  • Liberal paid maternity and paternity leaves

43
Child Care for School-Age Children
  • Self-care children
  • 2.4 million 5- to 13-year-olds in U.S.
  • Those with authoritative parents appear
    responsible and well adjusted.
  • Those left to themselves bend to peer pressure.
  • Maturity is necessary in self-care.
  • Boys show better adjustment if quality after-care
    is available.

44
COMMON DEVELOPMENTAL PROBLEMS
  • Fears and Anxieties
  • Media events may trouble children.
  • 20 percent develop intense anxiety.
  • School phobia
  • Severe apprehension often accompanied by physical
    complaints
  • Most cases appear at age 11 to 13.

45
Sexual Abuse
  • Characteristics of victims
  • More often girls
  • Highest in middle childhood
  • Characteristics of abusers
  • Male
  • Parent or someone well-known
  • No impulse control
  • Psychological disorders
  • Alcohol or drug abuse
  • Pick out weak, emotionally deprived, and
    isolated.
  • Linked to poverty and marital instability

46
Consequences of Sexual Abuse
  • Depression, low self-esteem, mistrust of adults,
    and feelings of anger and hostility
  • Younger children may have sleep difficulties,
    loss of appetite, and generalized fearfulness.
  • Adolescents may run away and show suicidal
    reactions, substance abuse, and delinquency.
  • Abused girls often enter into unhealthy
    relationships and many become promiscuous.

47
Prevention and Treatment of Sexual Abuse
  • Reactions of family members can increase
    distress.
  • Long-term therapy is necessary.
  • Prevention is best.
  • Prosecuting abusers
  • Children's testimony taken more seriously
  • Sex education programs

48
Fostering Resilience in Middle Childhood
  • Three factors protect against maladjustment
  • Child's personal characteristics (easy
    temperament and a mastery-oriented approach)
  • Warm, well-organized family life
  • Adults outside immediate family who offer support
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