Title: Socioemotional Development
1Socioemotional Development
- Chapter 3 Santrock
- Attachment (NOT IN BOOK)
2Covering
- Attachment
- Self concept, self-esteem
- Eriksons stages
- Divorce
- Parenting Styles
- Stages of Friendship
- Peer Relations and Acceptance
3What is Attachment?
- Attachment-strong affectional tie that humans
feel toward special people in their lives.
4Why is attachment important?
- Spitz study
- well nourished infants became severely depressed,
retarded in social, cognitive, physical
development w/ no one on one
5Also,
- Hospitalized children out of contact w/ parents
become depressed - Harry Harlows monkey studies
- little monkeys fed but not allowed to bond
- depressed, abnormal, and
- had severe mating disorders
6Early Theories of Attachment
- Behaviorists believed that infants attachment
beh were learned - Drive reduction model
- Operant conditioning model
7Bowlbys Ethological Theory
- Attachment is viewed as evolved response that
promotes infant survival - Infant arrives w/ innate responses that call the
parent to the babys side - (crying, smiling)
- Over time, affectional bond develops
8Bowlby was followed by Ainsworth
- Same approach
- Attachment defined as a certain set of behaviors
- One person at first, then others
9Attachment Behaviors
- Child seeks total love, attention, approval
from person - Seeks contact comfort
- Uses adult as security base
- Separation anxiety appears, child protests
separation - Seeks warm reunion w/ attachment figure
10Secure vs. Insecure Attachments
- Mary Ainsworths specific contribution
- Developed Strange Situation-series of short
separations/reunions w/ parent or caregiver to
measure attachment
11Outcomes of Strange Situation
- One secure attachment
- 3 insecure ones
- Secure, avoidant, resistant, disorganized/disorien
ted attachment
12Secure Attachment
- Seek total attention approval
- Seek contact comfort
- Use parents as a secure base
- Protest when separated seek contact when they
return - 65 of American babies
13Avoidant Attachment
- Infants seem unresponsive to the parent when she
is present - 20 of American babies
14Resistant attachment
- Before separation, infants seek closeness to the
parent often fail to explore - When she returns they display angry, resistive
behavior - 10-15 of American babies
15Disorganized/disoriented Attachment
- Seems to reflect the greatest insecurity
- At reunion, show a variety of confused behaviors
- 5-10 of American babies
16How stable is attachment?
- Stable through first years of life
- From age 1 to age 10, .75 correlation in
diagnosis - Cultural variations more avoidants in Germany,
more resistants in Japan.
17Child Abuse Neglect
- Linked to all kinds of attachment insecurity
18What about Dads?
- No reason mom has to be caregiver
- Moms/dads do tend to relate to babies in
different ways - Fathers now spend more time w/children
19Attachment Later Development
- Toddlers-more elaborate make-believe play,
greater enthusiasm, persistence in
problem-solving - Preschool-higher self-esteem, social competence,
are more cooperative, popular empathic
20School age
- Better relations w/ peers, more socially skilled,
more likely to have close relationships - Achievement motivation-more persistence, likely
to favor mastery motivation
21Day Care Attachments
- 60 of mothers w/ preschool aged children work
- 50 of women w/ infants under 1 year old work
22Empathy Development
23Development of Empathy
- Definition the ability to understand the
feelings of others respond w/ complementary
emotions. - Involves an interaction of perspective taking
understanding emotion.
24Empathy Stages
- Infancy-babies cry in response to other babies
crying. - About 2 may attempt to relieve the other persons
unhappiness instead of crying seeking comfort
for himself.
25Preschool on
- Begin verbally consoling peers.
- Elementary school-understand a wider range of
emotions. Can use multiple cues to understand
another persons feelings.
26Empathy in Pre Post Adolescence
- Can react empathetically not only to immediate
distress but also to general life conditions.
27Socializing Emotional Expressions
- Social referencing-relying on another persons
emotional reaction to appraise uncertain
situation. - Infants rely on parents for emotional
information. Or other adults.
28Social Referencing
- Preschool older-children will try things and
then look to see if it is ok to do. - Parents emotional reaction can help children know
what to do.
29Emotional Display Rules
- Knowing when to show emotions and which emotions
are not appropriate. - Infancy-U.S. parents start discouraging negative
emotion display almost immediately.
30Display Rules
- Preschool-children learn to suppress negative
affect. - First, only in presence of an adult.
- School aged-older children know more display
rules refer to social norms often.
31Self-Regulation
- Middle childhood to adolescence-learn more
strategies. - distract themselves w/ alternative
behaviors - changing ways to interpret the event
32Emotional Understanding
- By 3 days old, infants can imitate emotional
expressions of others - By 3 or 4 months old, can tell difference between
happy and sad, angry vs. surprise etc. - Prefer happy faces
33Preschool
- 4 or 5 can judge correctly the CAUSES of basic
emotions - Tend to favor external factors over internal
states - Can suggest ways to ameliorate the situation
34Middle Childhood
- Consider multiple sources of information when
explaining others emotions - Recognize that we can experience more than one
emotion at a time - Older children understand that a change in
thoughts can lead to a change in feelings
35Preadolescence
- Recognize that emotions can be based on mental
states not the situation - Have better insights into feelings of others
- Can predict others emotions better
36Sex Differences
- Significant sex differences do not appear until
late adolescence - Girls are better at decoding emotions than boys
37Educational Implications
- Teaching children emotional control can help w/
classroom management - Violent children are particularly unskilled at
this
38Eriksons Theory of Personality
- Stages are framed as crises in persons life
- As they are resolved (or not) personality is
formed
39Eriksons key stages (for us)
- 3. Initiative vs. guilt Ages 3 to 5
- 4. Industry vs. inferiority Ages 6 to puberty
- 5. identity vs. identity confusion 10-20
- See p.71 for other stages
40Self Concept Self-Esteem
41Definitions
- SELF-CONCEPT
- -attributes, abilities, attitudes, values
that a person uses to define who he/she is. Ones
identity. - -can be simple or complex.
-
42Self-esteem
- Evaluation of self, judgment of ones worth
-
- May be high or low
43Development of Self Concept
- Before 12 months old, infants see an image and
think its someone else - By 2 years, well established.
44Preschool Self Concept
- Develop Theory of Mind
- know you can have thoughts others cant see
(about 4) - Know others can have different interpretations of
reality - Know difference between real and pretend
45Milestones in Self-Concept Development
- Toddlers and preschool define themselves by
external characteristics (sex, age, possessions) - By preschool, may have references to competency
- Use some psychological terms (nice, mean)
46Middle Childhood Self Concept
- By 5-6 use many psychological traits
- Divide self-concept into different spheres
- By 7 use relational terms comparing self with
others
47Attractiveness
- Unfortunately, becoming more important to global
self-worth in children - Popularity also important
48Preadolescence S-C
- Complicated w/ many components
- Includes social roles (class clown, helper)
- Includes others opinions
- Has multiple conflicting images
49Adolescence Self-Concept
- Becomes integrated
- Self definition more abstract all encompassing
- Go through a period of searching for this
identity, trying on different identities
50SELF-ESTEEM
- High self-esteem---accepts strengths weaknesses
- generally willing to take risks
- happier outlook attitude
- Low Self-esteem
- -overly boasting
- - overly timid
- - associated with a raft of problems
51Development of Preschool SE
- Very high-overly high. Thought to be a protective
factor because children face so many frustrating
situations.
52Middle Childhood SE
- By 7-8 self-esteem levels drop
- - dips as children realize that there are
things they cant do - - have global self-esteem-do poorly in one
area it influences all other areas -
53Middle Childhood SE
- By 9-10 years of age and older
- -- self-esteem levels rise in general.
- --child who are academic failures continue to
have low levels of SE - --begin to develop 3 separate self-esteems
academic, social, and physical
54Adolescent SE
- Dip in S.E. levels at preadolescence and the
beginning of adolescence - Self-esteem begins to rise through adulthood
- New aspects friendships, dating, looks, clothes,
and gender.
55Effects of Intervention Programs
- Most programs did not improve SE (esp.
affirmative statements, stickers for being me) - Programs where there was real learning at the
same time were moderately successful. - No antidote for low SE like actual
accomplishment.
56Parenting Styles
57Baumrinds Parenting Styles
- Authoritative parenting
- Authoritarian parenting
- Neglectful parenting
- Indulgent parenting
58Neglectful Parenting
- Uninvolved with childrens lives
- Dont have much control
- Viewed as having the most negative outcomes for
children
59Indulgent Parenting
- Highly involved but place few limits on their
behavior - Children get their own way
- Now thought the children dont learn to control
their own behavior
60Authoritative Parenting
- High expectations for children
- Demanding
- Firm, but warm
- Transfer some of the power as the child develops
- Most optimal parenting style
61Authoritarian Parenting
- View children as having few rights
- but many responsibilities
- Not allowed to make decisions about their own
lives - Punitive measures, including physical punishment
62Outcomes for Children
- More likely to be depressed
- Less prosocial
- Lower self-esteem
- Conforming
63Divorce Children
64Divorce for children
- 50 will see parents break up
- Of these, about half will see 2nd marriage break
up - 10 will see 3 or more family break ups
65Is divorce good for women?
- Women more likely to break up relationships,
marriages - Then, womens economic lifestyle drops 45
- 20-33 wind up in poverty
66What about divorced men?
- 42 GAIN in standard of living
- 20 of men comply fully with paying for children
- 15 pay irregularly
- About ΒΌ dont see their children at all
67What about the kids?
- Not much says divorce is good for them
- More than 2x as likely to drop out
- Poor school outcomes generally
- Teens who murder, 75 from broken homes
68Fatherless homes-correlations
- 63 of youth suicides
- 90 of homeless runaways
- 85 of children w/ behavior problems
- 71 of high school dropouts
- 85 of youth in prison
69What about stepfamilies?
- Boys in stepfamilies are 3x as likely to have
committed a crime or gone to jail - Children are 5x as likely to be sexually abused
- 40x more likely to be the victims of nonfatal
child abuse - 100x more likely to be a fatality in child abuse.
70Peer Group
71Role of Peer Groups in Dev
- Reinforce (RF) model specific behaviors
- Act as a staging ground for dangerous behaviors
- Learn things that your parents dont tell you
- Emotional buffer support
72Preschool
- Overtures increase. Both positive neg
interactions increase. - Spontaneous sharing low until about 4-5 years
old. - Fighting increases, mostly physical until 5 years
old then more verbal
73Preschool
- Structure
- --play w/ who you are sitting next to
- --little structure, constant changes.
- --by 5 may dev preference for 1 person.
- --play in groups of 2-3. 4 difficult for them and
usually becomes 2 groups of 2.
74Preschool
- Rough and tumble play emerges at 5
- Dramatic play increases
- Can play in groups
75School Age
- Changes in composition of the group
- --more diversity than in preschool
- --sex cleavage-(e.g. boys have cooties)
- --insiders and outsiders by 3-4th grade
- --dominance hierarchies
- emerge within a few days
- difficult to change, need outside threat
76Boys Girls
- Wider networks
- Shared activities
- Win/lose games
- Smaller, usually one on one
- Sometimes 3 girlstrouble
- More affective talk
- Distressed at break ups
- Typical play NOT win-lose
77School Age
- Fewer negative interactions. Less physical, more
verbal aggression. - More sharing and cooperation.
- Sensitive to needs of others, improved
perspective taking.
78Vygotsky (theorist)
- Play is the activity w/ the most potential for
development - During play children learn self-regulation in
order to play - Play helps the child function at their highest
level
79Adolescence
- Structure
- --cliques-groups of 5-6 children who have similar
interests, hang out together - --crowds-named groups made up of several cliques.
You are place in a crowd by others. - --same sex at beginning of adolescence, by 18
mixed groups.
80Adolescence
- Peer Pressure
- strongest in early adolescence
- peaks at 16
- cross-pressure-pressure to do things against
your parents values not as strong as once
believed.
81Peer Pressure
- For minorities, peers may exert an anti-school,
anti-achievement pressure - Thus, high achieving blacks/Hispanics may have to
disassociate themselves from peers
82Peers Parents
- Influence day to day decisions
- What to wear
- What to see
- music
- Career choice
- College choice
- Often drinking, sexual relations
83Peer Group J. Delinquency
- Anti-social values in the family.
- Coercive discipline, disorganized, unpredictable
interactions w/ children. - Contact w/ the law before 3rd grade.
- Likely to have been extremely aggressive,
anti-social - Likely to have been rejected by peers.
84Friendship Levels
- By Damon
- Necessary for Lab 4
85Level I-Friendship as Handy playmate (4-7 years)
- Friendship viewed concretely-who plays what you
want them to play, who has cool toys - Quarrels solved by leaving, hitting, giving in
- Fights occur more often w/ friends
- Friendship is one-way.
86Level II-Mutual Trust AssistanceAge 8-10 years
- Personalities matter.
- Make effort to be together
- Friends tell each other secrets dont share
them - Mutual aid
- Victim has to forgive, must feel even.
87Level III-Intimacy Loyalty Age 11 -Adult
- Shared psychological intimacy (he really knows me
well). - Divulge real feelings to a friend
- Friend is a support through good/bad times. They
are loyal. - Make up for loneliness distress.
- Distinguishes trivial vs. serious quarrels.
- Understanding is sufficient for forgiveness.
88Peer Acceptance and
89Popular or Accepted Children
- many more like than dislike ratings
- children nominated by everyone
- NOTE this is not how we use the term in common
speech
90Rejected Children
- Nominated by virtually everyone but
- Negative nominations
- Positively correlated with low self-esteem,
unhappiness, poor school performance,
delinquency, aggression
91Neglected Children
- Nominated by few children
- Loners, but not necessarily lonely
- WARNING you tend to worry most about these
children but should NOT - They are fine, but solitary people
92Controversial Children
- Nominated by everyone but
- Half are positive and half negative
- Boys in this category tend to be smart, athletic,
or socially talented active but - Prone to anger rule violations
93Average Children
- Nominated by some children
- Mostly positive
94Stability of Status
- Accepted (popular), rejected, neglected status
is very stable. - Status measured in 3rd grade stable for more than
5 years. - Controversial and average status changes more
with time.
95Peer Status later dev
- Powerful predictor of current future
psychological functioning - Rejection sets children up for problems
- Acceptance for adjustment pos self-esteem
96Factors Associated with A/R
- Accepted children were friendly
- had better social problem solving skills
- more friends
- more likely to make pos statements
- higher levels of empathy
- better social merging skills
97Rejected Children
- Extreme aggression, immaturity, hyperactivity
- Argumentative and antagonistic
- Likely to misread cues of others
- Unpredictable
- Low levels of empathy
- No social merging skills
98Training Social Skills
- Model good social strategies
- Coaching may work if intensive rehearsals are
used - Children as young as 4 can benefit from training
99Identity
- James Marcia and
- Erik Erikson
100Individual Identity
- Crisis period of role experimentation
decision-making among alternatives. - Commitment personal involvement in areas of
occupation, religion, political ideology
101James Marcias 4 statuses
- Identity-achieved have already experienced a
crisis time have made occupational and
ideological commitments - Crisis commitment
102Identity-foreclosed
- Havent experienced crisis but demonstrate strong
occupational ideological commitments - No crisis commitment
103Identity moratorium
- Involved in an ongoing crisis
- Commitments may be diffuse.
- Crisis uncertain commitment
104Identity confusion
- May or may not have had a crisis
- No commitment
- Crisis (?) no commitment
105Negative Identity (Erikson, not Marcia)
- In the absence of any success, may attempt the
ultimate bad-boy image - Admire anti-socials, gang leaders, etc.
- J.D. types