Title: Chapter 3 Human Development
1Chapter 3Human Development
2Heredity and Genes
- Developmental Psychology The study of
progressive changes in behavior and abilities - Heredity (Nature) Transmission of physical and
psychological characteristics from parents to
their children through genes - DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) Molecular structure,
shaped like a double helix that contains coded
genetic information - Genes Specific areas on a strand of DNA that
carry hereditary information - Dominant The genes feature will appear each
time the gene is present - Recessive The genes feature will appear only if
it is paired with another recessive gene
3Figure 3.3
FIGURE 3.3 Gene patterns for children of
brown-eyed parents, where each parent has one
brown-eye gene and one blue-eye gene. Because the
brown-eye gene is dominant, one child in four
will be blue-eyed. Thus, there is a significant
chance that two brown-eyed parents will have a
blue-eyed child.
4Temperament and Environment
- Temperament The physical core of personality
- Easy Children 40 relaxed and agreeable
- Difficult Children 10 moody, intense, easily
angered - Slow-to-Warm-Up Children 15 restrained,
unexpressive, shy - Remaining Children Do not fit into any specific
category
5Environment
- Environment (Nurture) All external conditions
that affect development - Sensitive Periods A period of increased
sensitivity to environmental influences also, a
time when certain events must occur for normal
development to take place
6Environment (cont'd)
- Teratogen Anything capable of causing birth
defects (e.g., narcotics, radiation, cigarette
smoke, lead, and cocaine) - Deprivation Lack of normal stimulation,
nutrition, comfort, or love - Enrichment When an environment is deliberately
made more complex and intellectually stimulating
7The Mozart Effect Real or Rubbish?
- Rauscher Shaw (1998) claimed that after college
students listened to Mozart they scored higher on
a spatial reasoning test - Original experiment done with adults tells us
nothing about infants - What effect would listening to other styles of
music or other stimuli have? - Most researchers unable to duplicate the effect
- Conclusion Those who listened to Mozart were
just more alert or in a better mood
8Maturation
- Physical growth and development of the body,
brain, and nervous system as a child gets older - Increased muscular control occurs in patterns
- Cephalocaudal From head to toe
- Proximodistal From center of the body to the
extremities
9Emotional and Social Development
- Social Smile Smiling elicited by social stimuli
not exclusive to seeing parents - Invites parents to care for them
- Infants focal distance approx 12 inches
- Distance from parents cradled arms to their
faces - Infants especially interested in faces
- Motherese
- All these promote bonding / attachment
10Figure 3.9
FIGURE 3.9 Infants display many of the same
emotional expressions as adults do. Carroll Izard
believes such expressions show that distinct
emotions appear within the first months of life.
Other theorists argue that specific emotions come
into focus more gradually, as an infants nervous
system matures. Either way, parents can expect to
see a full range of basic emotions by the end of
a babys first year.
11Mary Ainsworth and Attachment
- Separation Anxiety Crying and signs of fear when
a child is left alone or is with a stranger
generally appears around 8-12 months - Quality of Attachment The Strange Situation
- Secure Stable and positive emotional bond upset
by mothers absence - Insecure-Avoidant Tendency to avoid reunion with
parent or caregiver - Insecure-Ambivalent Desire to be with parent or
caregiver and some resistance to being reunited
with Mom
12Figure 3.10
FIGURE 3.10 In the United States, about two
thirds of all children from middle-class families
are securely attached. About one child in three
is insecurely attached. (Percentages are
approximate. From Kaplan, 1998.)
13Attachment
- Predicts later outcomes resiliency, curiosity,
problem-solving abilities, social skills in grade
school - Possibly on into adulthood
14Optimal Caregiving
- Maternal Influences All the effects a mother has
on her child - Paternal Influences Sum of all effects a father
has on his child - Goodness of Fit (Chess Thomas) Degree to which
parents and child have compatible temperaments - Example
15Parenting Styles (Baumrind, 1991)
- Authoritarian Parents Enforce rigid rules and
demand strict obedience to authority. Children
are obedient and self-controlled. - Overly Permissive Give little guidance. Allow
too much freedom, or dont hold children
accountable for their actions. Children tend to
be dependent and immature and frequently
misbehave. - Authoritative Provide firm and consistent
guidance combined with love and affection.
Children tend to be competent, self-controlled,
independent, and assertive have higher
self-esteem.
16Types of Child Discipline
- Power Assertion Using physical punishment or a
show of force fear, hatred, lack of warmth
spontaneity defiance aggression, low
self-esteem - Withdrawal of Love Withholding affection
refusing to speak to a child or threatening to
leave insecure, dependent, perfectionistic,
low self-esteem - Management Techniques Combine praise,
recognition, approval, rules, and reasoning to
encourage desirable behavior self-control,
higher self-esteem
17Jean Piaget and Cognitive Development
- Piaget believed that all children passed through
a set series of stages during their intellectual
development like Freud, he was a Stage Theorist. - Transformations Mentally changing the shape or
form of a substance children younger than 6 or 7
cannot do this. (Clay ball vs. flat Water
tall/thin vs. short/fat) - Assimilation Application of existing mental
patterns to new situations. (nail/screw
dog/cow) - Accommodation Existing ideas are changed to
accommodate new information or experiences.
18Jean Piaget Sensorimotor Stage
- Sensorimotor (0-2 Years) All sensory input and
motor responses are coordinated most
intellectual development here is nonverbal. - Object Permanence Concept that objects still
exist when they are out of sight.
19Figure 3.16
FIGURE 3.16 The panels on the left show a
possible event, in which an infant watches as a
toy is placed behind the right of two screens.
After a delay of 70 seconds, the toy is brought
into view from behind the right screen. In the
two panels on the right, an impossible event
occurs. The toy is placed behind the left screen
and retrieved from behind the right. (A duplicate
toy was hidden there before testing.)
Eight-month-old infants react with surprise when
they see the impossible event staged for them.
Their reaction implies that they remember where
the toy was hidden. Infants appear to have a
capacity for memory and thinking that greatly
exceeds what Piaget claimed is possible during
the sensorimotor period.
20Jean Piaget Preoperational Stage
- Preoperational Stage (2-7 Years) Children begin
to use language and think symbolically (e.g.,
words), BUT their thinking is still intuitive and
egocentric. - Intuitive Makes little use of reasoning and
logic. - Egocentric Thought Thought that is unable to
accommodate viewpoints of others. Examples - View from the backseat
- mystery pronoun use
21Jean Piaget Concrete Operational Stage
- Concrete Operational Stage (7-11Years) Children
become able to use concepts of time, space,
volume, and number BUT in ways that remain
simplified and concrete, not abstract. - Conservation Mass, weight, and volume remain
unchanged when the shape or appearance of objects
changes. (Water poured between different
containers) - Reversibility of Thought Relationships involving
equality or identity can be reversed. (Clay
shape)
22Jean Piaget Formal Operations
- Formal Operations Stage (11 Years and Up)
Thinking now includes abstract, theoretical, and
hypothetical ideas. - Abstract Ideas Concepts and examples removed
from specific examples and concrete situations. - Hypothetical Possibilities Suppositions,
guesses, or projections. - Deductive Scientific thinking
23Lev Vygotskys Sociocultural Theory
- Childrens cognitive development is heavily
influenced by social and cultural factors. - A childs thinking develops through dialogues
with more capable persons - Zone of Proximal Development Range of tasks a
child cannot master alone, but can master with
guidance from a more capable partner. Optimal
challenge / learning. - Scaffolding Adjusting instruction so it is
responsive to a beginners behavior and so it
supports the beginners efforts to understand a
problem or gain a mental skill. - Implications for teaching / helping
24Lawrence Kohlberg and Stages of Moral Development
- Moral Development When we acquire values,
beliefs, and thinking abilities that guide
responsible behavior - Three Levels
- Preconventional Moral thinking guided by
consequences of actions (punishment, reward,
exchange of favors) - Conventional Reasoning based on a desire to
please others or to follow accepted rules and
values - Postconventional Follows self-accepted,
universal moral principles (justice, dignity,
equality) - Stage theorist, like Freud and Piaget
25Erik Eriksons Eight Stages ofPsychosocial
Dilemmas
- Stage One Trust versus Mistrust (Birth-1)
Children are completely dependent on others - Trust Established when babies given adequate
warmth, touching, love, and physical care - Mistrust Caused by inadequate or unpredictable
care and by cold, indifferent, and rejecting
parents - Stage Two Autonomy versus Shame and Doubt (1-3)
- Autonomy Doing things for themselves
- Shame Doubt Overprotective or ridiculing
parents may cause children to doubt abilities and
feel shameful about their actions
26Erik Eriksons Eight Stages of Psychosocial
Dilemmas (cont'd)
- Stage Three Initiative versus Guilt (3-5)
- Initiative Parents reinforce via giving children
freedom to play, use imagination, and ask
questions - Guilt May occur if parents criticize, prevent
play, or discourage a childs questions - Stage Four Industry versus Inferiority (6-12)
- Industry Occurs when child is praised for
productive activities - Inferiority Occurs if childs efforts are
regarded as messy or inadequate
27Erik Eriksons Eight Stages of Psychosocial
Dilemmas (cont'd)
- Stage Five (Adolescence) Identity versus Role
Confusion - Identity For adolescents, answering, Who am I?
Hopefully through exploration of possibilities. - Role Confusion Occurs when adolescents are
unsure of where they are going and who they are - Stage Six (Young adulthood) Intimacy versus
Isolation - Intimacy Ability to care about others and to
share experiences with them - Isolation Feeling alone and uncared for in life
28Erik Eriksons Eight Stages of Psychosocial
Dilemmas (cont'd)
- Stage Seven (Middle adulthood) Generativity
versus Stagnation - Generativity Interest in guiding the next
generation - Stagnation When one is only concerned with ones
own needs and comforts - Stage Eight (Late adulthood) Integrity versus
Despair - Integrity Self-respect developed when people
have lived richly and responsibly - Despair Occurs when previous life events are
viewed with regret experiences heartache and
remorse
29Effective Parenting
- Have stable rules of conduct (consistency)
- Makes childs world secure and predictable
- Show mutual respect, love, encouragement, and
shared enjoyment - Have effective communication
- Use I-Messages Tells children the effect their
specific behavior had on you - Avoid You-Messages Threats, name-calling,
accusing, bossing, criticizing, or lecturing
30Effective Parenting
- Use Natural Consequences Effects that naturally
follow a particular behavior intrinsic effects - no coat cold
- Use Logical Consequences Rational and reasonable
effects - broke friends toy replace it
- Give them choices (all of which work for you)
- Rather than carry a child You can either hold
my hand or walk on your own.