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General Psychology

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Title: General Psychology


1
General Psychology
  • Chapter 8
  • Development Through the Life Span

2
Prenatal Development
  • Prenatal period from conception to birth
  • Germinal stage zygote moves down fallopian tube
  • Embryonic stage organ systems are forming and
    embryo is very vulnerable to external influences
  • Fetal stage organs continue to grow and
    increase in complexity

3
Environmental Influences on Prenatal Development
  • Maternal nutrition
  • Smoking
  • Alcohol
  • Drugs

4
Environmental Influences on Prenatal Development
  • Fetal alcohol syndrome cluster of symptoms
    (e.g., low birth weight, poor muscle tone, and
    intellectual retardation) associated with a child
    born to a mother who was a heavy alcohol drinker
    during pregnancy
  • Heavy drinking 3 or more drinks per day, or
    binge drinking during organogenesis

5
What About Dad?
  • Main issues concern the quality of the fathers
    sperm at conception
  • Sperm from fathers beyond the age of 35 or 40 may
    be partly the source of the genetic defect
    involved in Downs Syndrome
  • Fathers possible role in transmission of STDs

6
Sensory Perceptual Development
  • Neonate (newborn) SIGHT
  • Can focus on objects 1-2 ft. away
  • Can discriminate among facial expressions of
    emotions
  • Within a few hours of birth can recognize a
    picture of his or her own mother
  • Prefer patterned over unpatterned stimuli
  • Prefer patterns that look like human faces over
    patterns that do not

7
Sensory Perceptual Development
  • Other senses
  • Neonates can hear nearly as well as adults
  • Neonates can detect touch and temperature
    stimulation
  • Neonates can feel pain

8
Cognitive Development
  • The age-related changes in learning, memory,
    perception, attention, thinking, and
    problem-solving
  • Information-processing approach
  • Structural-functional approach

9
Cognitive Development
  • Information-processing approach Focuses on the
    quantitative changes in basic information
    processing systems like memory, attention, and
    learning
  • Structural-functional approach says that
    structures (schemas) change with development,
    while functions remain fixed

10
Structural-Functional Approach
  • Jean Piaget
  • Structures (schemas) change with development,
    while functions remain fixed
  • Schema organized mental representation of the
    world that is adaptive and formed by experience
  • Cognitive development is seen as a series of
    qualitative changes in intelligence

11
Piagets Theory
  • Organization predisposition to integrate
    individual schemas into organized units
  • Adaptation adapting cognitive abilities to the
    demands of the environment. Comprises
  • Assimilation incorporating new information into
    an existing schema
  • Accommodation modifying schema to account for
    new experiences

12
Table 8.1 Piagets stages of cognitive
development.
13
Piagets Stages of Development
  • Sensorimotor stage (birth to 2 years) children
    discover by sensing (sensori-) and doing (motor)
  • Children learn about causality
  • Children learn about object permanence
  • Imitation develops

14
Object Permanence
  • An appreciation that an object no longer in view
    can still exist and reappear later

15
Piagets Stages of Development
  • Preoperational Stage (2-6 years) a childs
    thinking is self-centered or egocentric

16
Piagets Stages of Development
  • Concrete Operations Stage Children (7-11)
    begin to develop many concepts and show that they
    can manipulate those concepts
  • Rule-governed behavior begins in this stage
  • Conservation is evident in this stage

17
Conservation
  • Awareness that changing the form or the
    appearance of something does not change what it
    really is

18
Piagets Stages of Development
  • Formal Operations Stage Children (12 and
    up) are beginning to be able to logically
    manipulate abstract, symbolic concepts

19
Reactions to Piaget
  • The borderlines between his proposed stages are
    much less clear-cut than his theory suggests
  • Piaget underestimated the cognitive talents of
    preschool children
  • Object permanence appears earlier than age 2
  • Little attention to the impact of language
    development and the gradual increase in memory
    capacity

20
Information-Processing
  • Development of Learning
  • Classical and operant conditioning shown in
    neonates
  • Imitation evident as young as 1 week!
  • Development of Memory
  • Memory demonstrated in very young infants
  • Children as young as 3 can understand the
    temporal nature of events and form scripts of
    those events in memory

21
Moral Development
  • Piaget believed that children could not make
    moral judgments until they were at least 3-4
    years old

22
Moral Development
  • Lawrence Kohlberg 3 levels
  • Preconventional morality prime interest of
    child is with the punishment that comes from
    breaking a rule
  • Conventional morality acceptance of social
    convention where approval matters as much or more
    than anything else
  • Postconventional morality moral reasoning
    reflects complex, internalized standards

23
Table 8.2 Kohlbergs stages of moral development.
24
Moral Development
  • Carol Gilligan believes that the moral
    reasoning for women is different than that of men
  • Women are more likely to focus on caring,
    personal responsibility and relationships
  • Men focus on rules, justice, and individual rights

25
Eriksons Psychosocial View
  • Eight-stage theory of life-span development
  • Trust vs. Mistrust
  • Autonomy vs. Self-Doubt
  • Initiative vs. Guilt
  • Competence vs. Inferiority

26
Table 8.3 Eriksons eight stages of development.
27
Developing Gender Identity
  • Once children can discriminate between the sexes,
    they develop schemas for gender-related
    information
  • Encouraged by parents, children at an early age
    (1 year), have defined preferences for choices of
    toys
  • By age 3 or 4, children tend to gravitate toward
    same-sex play groups

28
Developing Gender Identity
  • Gender identity sense or self-awareness of
    ones own maleness or femaleness
  • Most children develop this by the age of 2 or 3
  • Once gender identity is established, it is very
    resistant to change
  • By late childhood and early adolescence, peer
    pressure intensifies gender differences

29
Developing Social Attachments
  • Attachment strong emotional relationship
    between a child and his or her mother or primary
    caregiver

30
Attachment Theory
  • Strong attachments are most likely to be formed
    if the parent is optimally sensitive and
    responsive to the needs of the child
  • Two-way process
  • More than just spending time with child
  • Not just mother
  • May have life-long ramifications

31
Spotlight Parenting Styles
  • Classic model Diana Baumrind
  • Indulgent
  • Authoritarian
  • Authoritative

32
Adolescence
  • Period between childhood and adulthood, often
    begun at puberty and ending with full physical
    growth
  • Biological perspective puberty
  • Psychological perspective
  • Social perspective

33
Challenges of Puberty
  • Growth spurt dramatic increase in height and
    weight
  • Usually occurs earlier in girls than boys
  • Puberty capability of sexual reproduction
  • Menarche in girls
  • Boys seldom know when it begins exactly

34
Challenge of Identity Formation
  • Identity crisis a struggle to define a sense of
    self, what to do in life, and what ones
    attitudes, beliefs, and values should be
  • Marcia 4 ways identity issues can be resolved
  • Identity Achievement
  • Foreclosure
  • Identity Diffusion
  • Moratorium

35
Marriage and Family
  • Erikson Early adulthood revolves around the
    choice of intimacy or isolation
  • Mate selection involves availability,
    eligibility, and attractiveness (physical and
    psychological)
  • Approx. 50 of marriages end in divorce!

36
Table 8.4 Characteristics sought in mates.
37
Transition to Parenthood
  • Generativity concern for family and for ones
    impact on future generations
  • Marital satisfaction tends to drop during the
    child-rearing years of marriage
  • Marital satisfaction increases again once the
    children leave the nest

38
Career Choice
  • Ones choice and satisfaction of occupation
    affects self-esteem and identity
  • Career selection is driven by family influence
    and the potential for earning money

39
Challenges of Drug Use
  • Many adolescents experiment with drugs
  • Smoking (79) and drinking alcohol (81) lead the
    list of drug-related activities teens have tried
    at least once by ninth grade!
  • Correlational study 18year-olds in experimenter
    category were more psychologically healthy than
    frequent users or abstainers

40
Challenges of Sexuality
  • 49.9 of high-school teens have engaged in sexual
    behavior
  • Teen pregnancy is a significant social problem

41
Development During Middle Adulthood
  • One must adjust to the physiological changes of
    middle age
  • Dealing with teens and elderly parents places
    some middle-aged adults in what has been called
    the sandwich generation
  • Another task of this age is determining how to
    leave a mark on future generations

42
What it Means to be Old
  • Ageism discrimination and prejudice against a
    group on the basis of age
  • Adults over age 65 can be divided into young-old
    and old-old groups
  • Fewer than 15 of Americans over the age of 65
    live in nursing homes, but it increases to 25 by
    age 85
  • With increased age often comes increased physical
    problems, but only 28 of the elderly report
    their health as fair to poor

43
Death and Dying
  • 5 stages of facing death
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargaining
  • Depression
  • Acceptance
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