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Human Development & Socialization

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Title: Human Development & Socialization


1
Human Development Socialization
  • Chapter 8

2
Human Development
  • Changes in physical, psychological Social
    behavior experienced by individuals across the
    life span from conception to death

3
Socialization
  • The process by which the individual becomes a
    member of a particular culture takes on its
    values and behaviors

4
Ecological System
  • Children are more than inborn predisposition
    growing within a larger cultural system
    (Vygotsky, 1932 Bronfenbrenner, 1979 Berry,
    1995)

5
TheEcologicalApproach
6
Quality of Life Child Development
  • Family size family relationship correlate w/
    industrial financial advancement
  • 2nd/3rd generation Mexican-American kids living
    in U.S. less altruistic than 1st generation w/
    less money (Knight Kagan, 1977)
  • U.S. kids in families w/ less than 15, 000 are
    more likely to be abused (Berger, 1995)

7
Parental Instructions
  • Vygotsky (1932) thought kids w/ knowledgeable
    partner advances their intellectual development
  • Mexican mothers of low socioeconomic status use
    more tactile interactions (Zepeda, 1985)
  • Preindustrial parents in Africa Pacific expect
    children to learn on their own (Rogoff, 1990)

8
Prenatal development
Conception
30 Hours
6 weeks
4 months
9
Attachment
  • Attachment A deep emotional bond that an infant
    develops with its primary caretaker
  • Contact Comfort In primates, the innate pleasure
    derived from close physical contact it is the
    basis of the infants first attachment.

10
Styles of Attachment
  • Strange Situation Test A parent-infant
    separation and reunion procedure that is staged
    in a laboratory to test the security of a childs
    attachment
  • Secure Attachment A parent-infant relationship
    in which the baby is secure when the parent is
    present, distressed by separation, and delighted
    by reunion
  • Insecure Attachment A parent-infant relationship
    in which the baby clings to the parent, cries at
    separation, and reacts with anger or apathy to
    reunion.

11
Cognitive Development
  • Language
  • Thinking
  • Moral Reasoning

12
Language
  • Telegraphic Speech A childs first word
    combinations, which omit (as a telegram did)
    unnecessary words.
  • Language Acquisition Device According to many
    psychologists, an innate mental module that
    allows young children to develop language if they
    are exposed to an adequate sampling of
    conversation.

13
Cognitive DevelopmentPiagets Theory
  • Cognitive development consists of mental
    adaptations to new observations and experiences.
  • Adaptation takes two forms
  • Assimilation Absorbing new information into
    existing cognitive structures.
  • Accommodation Modifying existing cognitive
    structures in response to experience and new
    information.

14
Piagets Stages of Thinking
  • Infancy (Birth-2) Sensorimotor
  • Thinking based on overtly physical acts
  • Early childhood (2-6) Preoperational
  • Overcoming limitations to logical thinking
  • Due to one-sidedness (i.e., the inability to keep
    two aspects of a problem in mind), as seen in the
    beaker and wooden beads experiments
  • Middle childhood (6-12) Concrete Operational
  • Manipulation of symbols and internalized mental
    operations that combine, separate, and transform
    information logically
  • Adolescence (12-19) Formal Operational
  • Thinking systematically about all logical
    relations within a problem keen interest in
    abstract ideas and thinking itself

15
Conservation of Liquid Task
The critical question is always Why do you
think so?
16
Conservation of Substance Number
  • Conservation of Substance
  • Two identical balls of clay
  • One is deformed
  • Do the two pieces have the same amount of clay?
  • Conservation of Number
  • Two identical rows of pennies
  • One row is rearranged
  • Do the two rows have the same number of pennies?

17
Evaluating Piagets Theory
  • Stage changes are neither as clear-cut nor as
    sweeping as Piaget believed.
  • Children sometimes understand more than Piaget
    believed.
  • Preschoolers are not as egocentric as Piaget
    thought.
  • Cognitive development depends on the childs
    education and culture
  • Piaget overestimated the cognitive skills of many
    adults.

18
Moral Reasoning Kohlbergs Theory
  • Preconventional Level
  • Punishment and obedience
  • Instrumental relativism
  • Conventional Level
  • Good boy-nice girl
  • Society-maintaining
  • Postconventional Level
  • Social contract
  • Universal ethical principles

19
Criticisms of Kohlbergs Theory
  • Tends to overlook educational and cultural
    influences
  • Some cultural differences not reflected in this
    theory
  • Moral reasoning is often inconsistent across
    situations
  • Connection between moral reasoning and moral
    behavior is often indirect

20
Gender Development
  • Influences on Gender Development
  • Gender Over the Life Span

21
Gender Development
  • Biological Factors
  • Cognitive Factors
  • Learning Factors

22
Influences on Gender Development
  • Gender Identity The fundamental sense of being
    male or female it is independent of whether the
    person conforms to social and cultural rules of
    gender.
  • Gender Typing Process by which children learn
    the abilities, interests, personality traits, and
    behaviors associated with being masculine or
    feminine in their culture.

23
How Much Do Parents Matter?
  • The Power of Parents
  • Limits on Parental Influence

24
The Power of Parents
  • Power Assertion A method of child rearing in
    which the parent uses punishment and authority to
    correct the childs misbehavior.
  • Induction A method of child rearing in which the
    parent appeals to the childs own resources,
    abilities, sense of responsibility, and feelings
    for others in correcting the childs misbehavior.

25
Limits on Parental Influence
  • Temperaments
  • Peers

26
Adolescence
  • The Physiology of Adolescence
  • The Psychology of Adolescence

27
The Physiology of Adolescence
  • Adolescence The period of life from puberty to
    adulthood
  • Puberty The age at which a person becomes
    capable of sexual reproduction.
  • Menarche A girls first menstrual period
  • Spermarche A boys first ejaculation

28
The Psychology of Adolescence
  • Turmoil and Adjustment
  • Separation and Connection

29
Adulthood
  • Stages and Ages
  • The Transitions of Life
  • Old Age

30
Eriksons Eight Stages - I
  • Trust vs. Mistrust
  • Infancy (0-1 year)
  • Autonomy vs. Shame and doubt
  • Toddler (1-2 years)
  • Initiative vs. Guilt
  • Preschool (3-5 years)
  • Industry vs. Inferiority
  • Elementary School (6-12 years)

31
Eriksons Eight Stages - II
  • Identity vs. Role confusion
  • Adolescence (13-19 years)
  • Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • Young adulthood (20-40 years)
  • Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • Middle adulthood (40-65 years)
  • Integrity vs. Despair
  • Late adulthood (65 and older)

32
The Transitions of Life
  • Starting Out
  • The Middle Years
  • Menopause The cessation of menstruation and the
    production of ova it is usually a gradual
    process lasting up to several years.

33
Old Age
  • Fluid Intelligence The capacity for deductive
    reasoning and the ability to use new information
    to solve problems it is relatively independent
    of education and tends to decline in old age.
  • Crystallized Intelligence Cognitive skills and
    specific knowledge of information acquired over a
    lifetime it depends heavily on education and
    tends to remain stable over the lifetime.

34
Intellectual Changes Over the Lifespan
  • Some intellectual abilities dwindle with age.
  • Numerical and verbal abilities remain relatively
    steady over the years.

35
Are Adults Prisoners of Childhood?
36
Challenging Our Assumptions
  • Recovery from war Only 20 of WWII war orphans
    had problems after being adopted and moving to
    the U.S. Most of these eventually established
    happy lives.
  • Recovery from abusive or alcoholic parents Their
    children are at risk for developing these
    problems, but the majority do not.
  • Recovery from sexual abuse More emotional and
    behavioral symptoms, but most adjust and recover.
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