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Social and Emotional Development of Children and Adolescents

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Social and Emotional Development of Children and Adolescents I. THEORIES OF SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT Erikson s Psychological Theory of Human Development Bandura ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social and Emotional Development of Children and Adolescents


1
Social and Emotional Development of Children and
Adolescents
2
I. THEORIES OF SOCIOEMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Eriksons Psychological Theory of Human
    Development
  • Banduras Social-Cognitive Theories
  • Golemans Emotional Intelligence

3
A. Erik Eriksons Psychosocial Theory of Human
Development
  • Trust vs. Mistrust (Hope)
  • Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt (Will)
  • Initiative vs. Guilt (Purpose)
  • Industry vs. Inferiority (Competence)
  • Identity vs. Role confusion (Fidelity)
  • Intimacy vs. Isolation (Love)
  • Generativity vs. Stagnation (Care)
  • Integrity vs. Despair (Wisdom)

4
Trust vs. Mistrust
  • Erikson acknowledged the major role the caregiver
    (mother) plays in the most critical stage and
    that is the first life crisis.

5
Identity vs. Role Confusion
  • Central adolescent dilemma
  • Every adolescent goes through examination,
    his/her identity and the roles he/she must occupy.

6
Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • The fusion of identities can only be reached when
    young people have already formed a clear
    identity contrary to what is usually perceived
    as finding identity in any relationship.

7
Generativity vs. Stagnation
  • Establishing and guiding the next generation

8
Banduras Social Cognitive Theory
  • Learning may occur as a result of watching
    someone else perform an action and experience
    reinforcement or punishement. This kind of
    learning is called observational learning or
    modeling.
  • Bandura also calls attention to a class of
    reinforcements called intrinsic reinforcements.
    These are reinforcements within an individual.
  • Bandura has bridged the gap between learning
    theories and other approaches by emphasizing the
    role of cognitive (mental) elements in learning.

9
Cont. Banduras Social Cognitive Theory
  • Another important consideration is maturation. It
    needs maturity to be able to understand/perform a
    more complicated task.
  • Bandura suggests that what an observer learns
    from a particular model is influenced by his own
    goals, expectations about what kinds of
    consequences are likely if he adopts the models
    behavior and judgment of his own performance (Bee
    and Boyd 2002).

10
Cont. Banduras Social Cognitive Theory
  • There are four sets of processes/phases to
    produce a behavior that matches that of a model
  • Attention a childs experience in a particular
    situation influences his ability to achieve a
    modeled behavior.
  • Retention whatever skills are retained from what
    a child has observed are a collection of
    cognitive skills
  • Reproduction the reproduced behavior is
    dependent on other cognitive skills, that
    includes feedback from others
  • Motivation produce the behavior is influenced by
    various incentives his own standards, and his
    tendency to compare himself with others (Bandura,
    1989 as cited by Hetherington, et al., 2006)

11
Emotional Intelligence
  • a type of social intelligence that affords the
    individual ability to monitor his own and others
    emotions, to discriminate among them, and to use
    the information guide his thinking and actions.
  • Three component of EQ
  • the awareness of ones own emotions
  • the ability to express ones emotions
    approximately and
  • the capacity to channel emotions into the pursuit
    of worthwhile objectives

12
Major qualities that make up emotional
intelligence and how they can be developed
  • Major qualities that make up emotional
    intelligence and how they can be developed
  • Self-Awareness. The ability to recognize a
    feeling as it happens is the keystone of
    emotional intelligence.
  • Mood Management. The ability to change mood from
    good to bad and vice versa
  • Self-Motivation. Trying to feel more enthusiastic
    and developing more zeal and confidence to arrive
    at concrete achievement.
  • Impulse Control. The essence of emotional
    self-regulation is the ability to delay impulse
    in the service of a goal.
  • People Skills. The ability to feel for another
    person, whether in job, in romance and friendship
    and in the family.

13
II. SOCIALIZATION AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF
IDENTITY AND SOCIAL RELATIONS
  • Socialization is the process by which parents and
    others set the childs standards of behavior,
    attitude, skills, and motives to conform closely
    to what the society deems appropriate to his role
    in society.

14
A. Development of Identity
  • James E. Marcia, has identified four identity or
    statuses and correlated them with other aspects
    of personality. These are the following
  • Anxiety
  • Self-esteem
  • Moral reasoning
  • Patterns of social behavior
  • Marcia defines crisis as a period of conscious
    decision-making while commitment as a personal
    investment in an occupation or a system of
    beliefs (ideology).

15
Cont. Devt of Identity
  • Marcia identifies four categories of identity
    information
  • Identity Achievement (crisis leading to
    commitment). Characterized by flexible strength
    and tendency to be thoughtful, although not too
    introspective, under stress, have sense of humor.
  • Foreclosure (commitment without crisis).
    Characterized by rigid strength self-assurance,
    self-satisfied, and strong sense of family ties.
  • Identity Diffusion (no commitment). Those who are
    shy away from commitment.
  • Moratorium (in crisis). They may not necessarily
    be in good relationship but express preference
    for intimacy. They are characteristically
    talkative, competitive, lively, and anxious.

16
B. The Process of Identity Consolidation
  • Children take on what they see on terms of
    behaviors and ways of fathers and mothers. Most
    likely, they develop the same patterns of doings
    things and acting out in the roles of the family.
    This process is called identity formation.

17
Gender Differences in Identity Formation
  • The process by which children acquire the
    motives, values and behaviors viewed as
    appropriate for males and females within a
    culture is called gender typing.
  • Gender-based beliefs are ideas and expectations
    about what is appropriate behavior for males and
    females.
  • Gender stereotypes are beliefs and
    characteristics typified in the behavior of males
    and females and which are deemed appropriate and
    therefore acceptable.
  • Gender roles are the composites of behaviors
    typical of the male of female in a given culture.

18
Cont. Gender Differences in Identity Formation
  • Gender identity is the perception of oneself as
    either masculine or feminine.
  • Androgynous persons are those with both masculine
    and feminine psychological characteristics.
  • The developmental theory of Kohlberg states that
    gender-typed behavior is not seen until a child
    is able to achieve gender constancy.
  • Gender-schema theory suggests that children need
    only basic information about gender in order to
    develop naïve mental schemas that help them
    organize their experiences and form rules
    concerning gender.

19
III. THEORIES OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF MORAL
REASONING, ATTITUDES AND BELIEFS KOHLBERG,
TURIEL, GILLIGAN
  • 3 Basic Components of Morality
  • Cognitive involves knowledge of ethical rules
    and judgments what is good and what is bad.
  • Behavioral the persons actual behavior, his
    response to situations involving ethical
    considerations
  • Emotional involves the persons feelings and
    conduct in reaction to situations that need moral
    and ethical decisions.

20
Lawrence Kohlbergs Cognitive Theory of Moral
Development
  • Level 1 Preconventional Morality
  • Stage 1 Obedience and Punishment Orientation
  • Stage 2 Naïve Hedonistic and Instrumental
    Orientation

21
Level 2 Conventional Morality Conventional
Rules and Conformity
  • Stage 3 Good boy Morality
  • Stage 4 Authority and Morality that maintain
    the Social Order

22
Level III Postconventional Morality
Self-accepted Moral Principles
  • Stage 5 Morality of Contract Individual
    Rights, and Democratically Accepted Law
  • Stage 6 Morality of Individual Principles and
    Conscience

23
  • According to Elliot Turiel that even very young
    children can distinguish moral values from what
    are dedicated by conventions and are accepted
    ways of doing things

24
Carol Gilligans Theory of Moral Development
  • Most females think of morality more personally
    than males do
  • Females tend to see themselves in terms of their
    relationships with others. On the contrary, males
    have the tendency to view themselves as distinct
    and separate from others.

25
Cont. Carol Gilligans Theory of Moral
Development
  • The moral development in females is traced
    through three levels
  • The primary concern is with oneself
  • Females equate morality with goodness, self,
    sacrifice, and caring for others
  • Morality is equated with care for both themselves
    and others

26
IV. FACTORS AFFECTING DEVELOPMENT PARENTING,
ROLE MODELS, PEER GROUPS AND INTERACTIONS
  • Parenting
  • Role Models
  • Peer Group and Interactions

27
Parenting
  • Parenting Style
  • Authoritative -is a style of parenting that
    stresses self-reliance and independence
  • Authoritarian - is a style of parenting that
    stresses obedience respect for authority, and
    traditional values
  • Indulgent - is a style of parenting characterized
    by show of affection, love, warmth, and
    nurturance but with little supervision
  • Neglectful - is a style of parenting
    characterized by little warmth, nurturing, and
    supervision

28
Resulting Social Behavior in Child
  • Authoritative Social competence and
    responsibility
  • Authoritarian Ineffective social interaction
    inactive
  • Indulgent Social competence, well-adjusted
    peer oriented misconduct
  • Neglectful poor orientation to work and school
    behavior problems

29
Role Models
  • Working mothers normally serve as role models for
    their children
  • The children of both mothers who were full-time
    homemakers and mothers who worked outside the
    home were similar in cognitive, socioemotional,
    academic, motivational, and behavioral domains
    from infancy through adolescence.
  • For as long as there is alternative child care,
    maternal employment does not usually have bad
    effects on children.
  • Peers also influence acquisition of knowledge
    behaviors.
  • Children also imitate older, more powerful and
    more prestigious peer models
  • As children age, they learn to reinforce peers
    behaviors

30
Peer Group and Interactions
  • As the young are experiencing rapid physical
    changes, they take comfort with other people who
    are undergoing the same changes.
  • Peer group has always been a source of affection,
    sympathy and understanding.

31
V. EXCEPTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
  • Gifted children are those who score 130 or above
    in an intelligence test and have creative,
    artistic, leadership.
  • There are average and above average intelligence
    and manifest a discrepancy between expected and
    actual performance

32
Juvenile Delinquents
  • it is anti-social, different from what is normal
    action
  • 2 Classifications
  • Status Offender
  • considered crime regardless of who commits

33
Causes of Juvenile Delinquency
  • Industrialization and urbanization which take the
    adults away from home and leave the young by
    themselves
  • The fast life and varied activity of cities prove
    tempting to the young who may not have money to
    finance said activities. They may resort to
    illegal ways of getting the necessary funds
  • Frustrations wherein the resulting disappointment
    is vented against society

34
Causes of Juvenile Delinquency
  • Emotional deprivation that makes the youth feel
    that if nobody cares for him, he does not care
    for society in turn
  • Deep seated conflicts and problems which makes
    the young hostile toward the world
  • Gangs or barkada of the wrong kind
  • Poverty which cannot satisfy certain desires
  • Broken homes where children are torn in their
    loyalties and their sense of security

35
Causes of Juvenile Delinquency
  • Irregular discipline
  • Rejection if youth is rejected, he also rejects
    society and turns anti-social
  • Lack of affection and sense of belonging
  • Idleness which leads to mischief

36
Psychological Disorders that Affect Children
  • Conduct Disorder manifests in repetitive and
    persistent pattern of behavior where a young
    person transgresses on the basic rights of others
    or violates societal norms or rules
  • Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
    is a persistent pattern of inattention and
    hyperactivity or impulsivity that is far in
    excess of such behaviors observed in children in
    various stages of development
  • Anxiety Disorder characterized by the feeling
    of apprehension and low self-confidence that may
    be felt through the adult years
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