Title: Early Childhood
1Early Childhood
- Ages 2-6
- aka Preschool Years
2Physical Growth
- Age 2 25-30 pounds, 34 inches
- Age 6 45 pounds, 45 inches
- Arms and legs lengthen
- Size relationship between head and body more
adultlike
3Internal Changes
- Longer, sturdier bones
- Muscle mass increases
- Sense organs mature
- e.g. change of Eustachian tube in inner ear from
horizontal to angular --- source of all those
earaches
4Nutrition
- Period where lifelong eating habits are developed
- Adequate diet generally available in US
- Increasing concern with obesity ( than 20 of
average weight) - closely related to extent mothers control or
over-control childs food intake
5Health
- Generally a health period for most children,
colds excepted - Growing concern with failures and complacency in
immunization practices - Immunization rate has fallen over the last 20
years in US - Increasingly irrational decisions against
immunization
6Brain Growth
- 2 year olds have 75 of adult brain mass
- 5 year olds have 90 of adult brain mass (but
only 30 of adult body mass) - Rapid increase the product of
- increased number of dendrite-axon connections
- increase in myelinization
7Brain Lateralization
- Lateralization the process in when certain
functions are located more in one hemisphere of
the brain than the other. - Left brain
- speaking, reading, thinking, reasoning
- Right brain
- spatial relations, pattern recognition, emotional
expression
8Gender Differences in Lateralization
- Boys have language mostly in left hemisphere,
girls in both - Boys have better developed hemispheric
specialization in lower body reflexes - Girls have better developed hemispheric
specialization for auditory processing
9Development of handedness
- Usually seen clearly by age 4 although there may
be earlier signs - About 90 are right-handed, 10 are left handed
- Left handedness may give some advantages
- 20 of the top scorers on the SAT are left
handed, twice the predicted rate
10Gross Motor Development
- Very rapid development during this stage
- Partly the result of extensive practice -- the
highly active child - Small gender differences
- Boys better at throwing and jumping
- Girls better coordinated
11Gross Motor Skills at 3
- Cannot turn or stop quickly
- Can jump 15-24 inches
- Climbs stairs with alternating feet
- Hops with and irregular series of jumps
12Gross Motor Skills at 4
- Has effective control of stopping and turning
- Jumps 24-33 inches
- Can descend a long stairway with alternating feet
- Can hop 4-6 steps on one foot
13Gross Motor Skills at 5
- Stops and turns effectively in games
- Make a running jump of 28-36 inches
- Easily hop a distance of 16 feet
14Fine Motor Development
- Skills involving delicate small muscle movement
- Require more concentrated deliberate practice
than gross motor skills - At age 3, children can draw circles and squares,
do simple jigsaw puzzles, fit different shaped
blocks into matching holes - At age 4, children can draw a person that looks
right, fold paper into triangles, hold a pencil
15Testing Fine Motor Skills
- The Bender Visual Motor Gestalt Test
- origins in childrens chalk drawing on New York
sidewalks - The Goodenough Draw a Person Test
- remarkably accurate age and perceptual
development measure
16Cognitive Development
- Period of dramatic cognitive growth
- A variety of theories that explain the changes
that take place
17Piagets Preoperational Thinking Stage
- Piagets stage marked by increasing use of
SYMBOLIC thought, mental reasoning and increased
concept formation - Children still unable to do Operations formal
logical mental processes
18Symbolic Function
- The ability to use a mental symbol, a word or an
object to stand for or represent something that
is not physically present. - One of the controversies in Developmental
Psychology - does better thinking skills lead to an
improvement in language, or does better language
lead to an improvement in thinking.
19Centration
- Concentrating on one limited aspect of a stimulus
and ignoring other aspects - Tendency to focus on superficial, obvious
elements that are within sight - Which row contains more buttons?
-
-
20Egocentric Thought
- Thinking that does not take into account the
viewpoints of others - Two forms
- lack of awareness that other see things from a
different physical perspective - failure to realize that others may hold thoughts,
feelings, and points of view different from their
own
21Examples of Egocentrism
- What happens when you give a 4 year old socks or
underwear when he was expecting a new toy truck? - Why do children talk to themselves, even in the
presence of others? - Why does a 3 year old think she is hidden when
she has her head (only) under a pillow?
22Transformation Problems
- Transformation the process in which one state
is changed into another. - Children tend to ignore intermediate steps in a
process - understanding of a pencil falling
- All ants are the same ant
23Emergence of Intuitive Thought
- Thinking that uses primitive reasoning and simple
knowledge accumulation to reach conclusions - Knowing something without being able to explain
how they know - At end of stage merges into functionality, the
idea that actions and events are related in fixed
patterns.
24Conservation Problems
- Conservation the knowledge that the quantity is
unrelated to the physical appearance and
arrangement of objects - Classic tall, skinny vs. short, fat water glass
demonstration - Cows and barns on green paper fields.
25Information Processing Theory and Cognitive
Development
- Focus on
- memory development
- attention span
- ways of thinking
26Autobiographical Memory
- memory of particular events in ones own life.
- Is not accurate until after age 3
- 3 year olds can remember central features of
routine happenings - Tend to fade quickly
- Highly susceptible to suggestion
27Improvements in Attention Span
- ability to pay attention longer
- ability to attend to more than one dimension of
an object at the same time - ability to monitor and play HOW they will attend
to something
28Changes in approaches to problems
- Analogous to the way computer programs change
over time as programmers modify them to work more
efficiently or to do more.
29Cultural Influences on Cognitive Development
- Based on work by L.S. Vygotsky
- Differences in the ways different cultures
approach problems influence cognitive development - Cognitive development is a function of social
interactions in which partners (child and
parents, child and peers) jointly work to solve
problems.
30The Zone of Proximal Development
- ZPD the level at which a child can almost, but
not fully, comprehend or perform at task on his
or her own. - Cognitive growth takes place when appropriate
instruction occurs within the ZPD
31Language Development
- Period of dramatic language growth
- Age 2 telegraphic speech, 400 word vocabulary
- Age 6 adult grammar and syntax, 14000 word
vocabulary
32Types of Speech
- Private Speech spoken language not intended for
others. Practice for internal monologs and
thinking. - Social Speech directed toward another person
and meant to be understood.
33Theories of Language Development
- Learning Theory Language acquisition follows
the basic laws of reinforcement and conditioning. - Universal Grammar and LAD Chomskys idea that
all languages share a similar underlying
structure and that humans have a neural system, a
Language Acquisition Device, that generates
language skill.
34Poverty and Language
- Language addressed to children varies
significantly as a function of social class. - The nature of language varies as a function of
social class, with prohibitions (no, dont,
stop,) more common in poorer families. - Reflected in IQ scores.
35Psychosocial Development
- Self-concept
- Gender Identity
- Socialization
- peer
- parent
- Moral Development
36Self-concept
- An individuals identity or set of beliefs about
what they are like as individuals - Basic identity established by age 2
- Tend to be pretty positive and not necessarily
realistic - Im a good runner
- I like to color
- Im a big girl (boy).
37Self and Culture
- Self concept reflects the way a specific culture
considers the self - Individualistic orientation (Western cultures)
- emphasizes personal identity and the uniqueness
of the individual - self seen as in competition with others and
highly autonomous
38Self and Culture (contd)
- Collectivist orientation (Asian cultures)
- emphasizes interdependence and the importance of
the group - stresses social networks and interconnectedness
- Turtles vs Mighty Mouse
39Eriksons Stages
- autonomy vs shame and doubt (18 months to 3 yrs)
- developing independence and self-reliance
- Initiative vs guilt (3-6 yrs)
- realization you are a person in your own right,
make decisions and shape self
40Gender Identity
- the sense of being male or female as defined by a
given society - well established by age 2, both for self and
others
41Gender and Play
- preference for same-sex play groups
- begins at age 3 for girls, age 4 for boys
- stronger in some cultures than others (China)
- stronger than ethnic preferences
42Gender rigidity
- expectations are more rigid than at any other
time in life - most pronounced at about age 5, more flexible by
age 7
43Gender Expectations
- Boys
- competence
- independence
- competitiveness
- Girls
- warmth
- expressiveness
44Biological Influences on Gender
- Androgen-exposed girls
- prefer boys as playmates
- prefer toys usually seen as male
- Estrogen-exposed girls
- more stereotypically female behaviors
- Girls have greater development in corpus collosum
- may be influenced by experience
45Freud and early childhood
- The phallic stage
- Oedipus and Electra processes
- castration anxiety and penis envy
- primary task Identification with same sex parent
46Social Learning and Gender
- observation of male and female behavior provides
models for gender appropriate behavior - Influenced by media -- and likely older,
stereotyped media images - TV defines females in relationship to males, and
makes them victims
47Cognitive Approaches to Gender
- Gender is a schema like other schemas
- New gender information is accommodated or
assimilated like other material - Develop operations or rules about what it means
to be male or female
48Modifying Gender Schema
- Sandra Bems idea that parents can teach children
to exhibit both male and female characteristics - Calls the concept androgyny
- Provides a larger range of available behaviors
49Socialization Processes
- provided by both peers and parents
- serves to teach skills needed for survival in a
given social environment - marked by complex interactions
50Peer Socialization
- The growth of Friendship
- real friendships develop at about age 3
- marked mostly by being in the same place at the
same time - fill needs for companionship, play and
entertainment
51Changes in Friendship
- at age 3, focus on shared activities
- by age 5, focus on trust, support, shared
interests - tolerance of disagreement increases from 3 to 6
52Popularity
- Physical attractiveness is very important
- More attractive children are judged more likeable
by peers and adults - Behavior in interpreted in light of
attractiveness - Attractive children are judge more leniently than
less attractive children
53Other Determinants of Attractiveness
- Liked children
- Outgoing, sociable, more verbal
- Better understanding of others emotions
- Better able to read nonverbal cues
- Disliked Children
- More aggressive, more disruptive
- Less cooperative, less likely to take turns
- More likely to impose on others
54Categories of Play
- Functional Play simple repetitive activities
that may involve objects or repetitive muscle
movements - Constructive Play objects are manipulated to
construct or build something - Parallel Play play with similar toys in a
similar manner but without interaction
55Categories of Play (condt)
- Onlooker Play passive observation of the play
of others without actual participation - Associative Play two or more children actively
interact with one another by sharing or borrowing
toys, while not doing the same things - Cooperative Play genuine play, taking turns,
making rules, devising contests
56Parent Socialization
- Parents role in teaching desired behavior
- Most research has centered on Parental Style,
the typically characterizes most parents patterns
of discipline.
57Parental Styles Authoritarian
- Characteristics controlling, punitive, rigid,
cold - Relationship with Children Their word is law,
they value strict, unquestioning obedience and do
not tolerate expressions of disagreement
58Parental Styles Permissive indifferent
- Characteristics lax and inconsistent feedback
- Relationship with Children Usually uninvolved
in childrens lives, little interest or concern
with childrens well-being
59Parental Styles Permissive indulgent
- Characteristics lax and inconsistent feedback
- Relationship with Children more involved than
permissive-indifferent, but place little or not
limits or controls on the childs behavior
60Parental Styles Authoritative
- Characteristics firm, setting clear and
consistent limits - Relationship to Children tend to be relatively
strict, but are more receptive to disagreement
and encourage independence. Use reason, provide
explanations and communicate the rationale for
punishments
61Effects of Parental Styles
- Authoritarian Children tend to be withdrawn,
low sociability, unfriendly. Girls tend to be
dependent, boys hostile. - Permissive-indifferent Children tend to be
dependent, moody, low social skills, poor
self-control.
62Effects of Parental Styles
- Permissive-indulgent Children tend to have poor
self-control, feel privileged or entitled, have
difficulty with delayed gratification - Authoritative Children tend to be independent,
friendly, self-assertive and cooperative. Have
good achievement motivation and are typically
successful.
63Moral Development
- The changes in reasoning about morality, their
attitudes towards moral transgressions, and their
behavior when faced with moral issues - Not widely addressed by theorists for this age
range - Possible hidden assumption that it is too early
to expect moral thinking/behavior - Generally related to cognitive development
64Piagets Heteronomous Morality
- The initial stage of moral development in which
rules are seen as invariant, unchangeable and
beyond personal influence or control (ages 2-7) - Often leads to reliance on idiosyncratic versions
of rules or the development of personal rules.
65A Concrete Morality
- Rules and behaviors are understood to apply
without reference to intent - 1 cup or 15 cups
- Enforced by sense of immanent justice the notion
that rules that are broken earn immediate
punishment.
66Empathy and Moral Behavior
- Empathy the ability to perceive and understand
the feelings of others. - First signs may appear as early as age 1
- Crying when other infants are heard crying
- Neglect and abuse tend to diminish ability to
empathize, leading to later antisocial or
immoral behaviors
67Test is next.