Title: 85011 Education Foundations 1: Development and Learning
185011 Education Foundations 1Development and
Learning
- Unit Specification
- Staff
- Objectives
- Assessment
- Teaching Method
- Web site
2Chapter 1 History, Theory, and Research
Strategies
- Development Through the Lifespan 2nd edition
Berk
3DEVELOPMENT AS A FIELD OF STUDY
- Devoted to understanding constancy and change
throughout the lifespan - Human development research is of both scientific
and applied (practical) importance. - It is also interdisciplinary it grows through
the efforts of people from many fields.
4Human Development and Other Disciplines
Psychology
Sociology
Anthropology
Biology
Medicine
Public Health
Social Services
5BASIC ISSUES
- Theory
- An orderly, integrated set of statements that
describes, explains, and predicts behavior - Theories provide organizing frameworks for
observations. They - guide and give meaning to observations.
- help us understand development.
- tell us what to do in our practical efforts.
6Is Development...
- Continuous?
- Infants and children respond to the world the
same as adults, but more simply. - Development is gradual change.
- Discontinuous?
- Infants and children have unique ways of
thinking, feeling, and behaving. - Development is in stages.
7Is There One Course of Development or Many?
- Children and adults live in distinct contexts
that is, unique combinations of biological and
environmental circumstances. - Contemporary theorists regard the contexts that
shape development as complex.
8Nature or Nurture?
- Nature
- Genetic factors/heredity
- Stability
- Individuals who are high or low in a
characteristic will remain so at later ages.
- Nurture
- Environmental factors
- Plasticity
- Change is possible and likely if new experiences
support it.
9THE LIFESPAN PERSPECTIVE A BALANCED POINT OF
VIEW
- Both continuous and discontinuous change
characterize development and alternate with each
other. - Due to the expansion of research from a focus on
the first two decades to include adult life
10Four Ways to View Development
- Lifelong
- At all periods in the life course, significant
changes take place.
Physical Development
Cognitive Development
Emotional and Social Development
11Views of Development
- Multidimensional and Multidirectional
- Multidimensional
- Affected by a complex blend of biological,
personal, and social forces - Multidirectional
- Always a joint expression of growth and decline
over time and within the same domain - Highly Plastic
- Open to change at all ages. Development can take
many forms and varies across individuals.
12Table 1.1 Major Periods of Human Development
13Views of Development
- Embedded in Multiple Contexts Change is diverse
because development is subject to - Age-graded influences
- Events strongly related to age and predictable in
when they occur and how long they last - History-graded influences
- Forces unique to a particular era, such as
epidemics, wars, or economic depression - Nonnormative influences
- Irregular, unpredictable events that happen to
just a few people
14HISTORICAL FOUNDATIONS
- Modern theories of human development are the
result of centuries of change in Western cultural
values, philosophy, and scientific progress. - Many early ideas continue as important forces in
current theory and research.
15Philosophies of Childhood
- Preformationism
- Medieval view that once infancy was complete,
children were considered miniature adults
16Philosophies of Childhood (cont.)
- John Locke
- Viewed the child as a tabula rasa, meaning
"blank slate." Children, passive and mechanistic,
could be shaped by experience. - Development as continuous
- Forerunner of behaviorism
- Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- Children as noble savages, naturally endowed with
sense of right and wrong and an innate plan for
growth - Development as discontinuous, stage process
- Concepts of stage and maturation, a genetically
determined, naturally unfolding growth
17Philosophies of Adulthood and Aging
- Tetens
- Addressed nature of individual differences, the
degree of behavioral change in adults, and the
impact of historical eras on development - Carus
- Moved beyond Rousseau identifying four periods
that span the life course childhood, youth,
adulthood, and senescence
18Scientific Beginnings
- Darwin
- Forerunner of scientific child study
- Two related principles
- Natural selection and survival of the fittest
- Similarities in prenatal growth of many species
- Early attempts by other scientists to document
parallels between individual development and
human evolution led to the science of studying
children.
19Scientific Beginnings (cont.)
- Normative Period
- G. Stanley Hall and Arnold Gesell regarded
development as automatic and genetically
determined. - Launched the normative approach to child study
- Objective age-related averages are computed to
represent typical development. - Mental Testing Movement
- Alfred Binet developed an intelligence test to
identify retarded children in Paris. - Sparked interest in differences in individual
development
20MID-TWENTIETH-CENTURY THEORIES
- Psychoanalytic Perspective
- Children move through stages, confronting
conflicts between biological drives and social
expectations. The resolution determines
psychological adjustment. - Freud's Theory
- Personality development is determined by how
parents manage their child's early sexual and
aggressive drives.
21Freuds Theory (cont.)
- Three Parts of the Personality
- Id
- Present at birth represents biological needs and
requires immediate gratification - Ego
- By early infancy the conscious, rational part of
personality the mediator between id and superego - Superego
- Values of society and one's conscience
- Relations between the three parts determine
personality.
22Psychosexual Development
- Five stages in which sexual impulses shift focus
from the oral to the anal to the genital regions
of the body. - To advance to next stage, child needs to receive
the correct amount of gratification. - Freud emphasized family relationships and early
experiences as crucial to later development. - Criticized for overemphasis on sexuality and for
being culturally specific to 19th-century
Victorian society.
23Erikson's Theory
- Expanded Freud's views and created a psychosocial
theory that covered the life span - Recognized that normal development must be
understood in relation to the cultural context
24EriksonsStages
Table 1.3
25Contributions and Limitations of Psychoanalytic
Theory
- Acceptance of the clinical method
- Synthesizes information from a variety of sources
into a picture of an individual's functioning. - Inspired research on such topics as attachment,
aggression, gender roles, and morality - Is limited by the difficulty in empirically
testing psychoanalytic concepts
26Behaviorism and Social Learning Theory
- John Watson
- Began the American study of behaviorism
- Primarily concerned with studying directly
observable stimuli and responses rather than
unobservable workings of the mind - Through classical conditioning, adults could mold
children's behavior by controlling
stimulus-response associations. - B. F. Skinner's operant conditioning theory
- Views environmental reinforcers and punishments
as determinants of behavior.
27Social Learning Theory
- Albert Bandura emphasized modeling (imitation or
observational learning) as basis for development. - Stresses cognition, particularly how we think
about ourselves and other people
28Contributions and Limitations of Behaviorism and
Social Learning Theory
- Applied behavior analysis combines conditioning
and modeling to eliminate undesirable behaviors
and increase socially acceptable responses. - Overemphasizes environmental factors,
underestimating people's contributions to their
own development
29Jean Piaget's Cognitive-Developmental Theory
- Development occurs as children actively
manipulate and explore the environment.
30Piaget's Stages
- Child's mental structures adapt to the
understanding of external world and to achieve
mental balance or equilibrium. - Sensorimotor stage
- Infants use senses to explore.
- Preoperational stage
- Preschoolers use symbolic thought and play.
- Concrete operational stage
- School-age children use more organized reasoning.
- Formal operational stage
- Adolescents and adults use abstract reasoning.
31Stages of Cognitive Development (cont.)
Formal Operations- deductive, abstract reasoning
11
Concrete Operations- conservation, logical
thought 7-11
Preoperational- symbolic play, egocentrism 2-7
Sensorimotor- object permanence 0-2
32Methods of Study
- Observed his own children, presented them with
problems, and studied their reactions. - Later conducted clinical interviews in which task
response was the basis for subsequent questions.
33Contributions and Limitations of Piaget's Theory
- Children are active learners with structured
minds. - Stimulated research on children
- Underestimated abilities of some age groups
- Criticism is Piaget concluded no major cognitive
changes take place after adolescence.
34RECENT THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES
- Information Processing
- Computer metaphor to explain thought processes,
describing stimuli as inputs and responses as
outputs. - Uses flowcharts to map problem-solving steps.
Figure 1.4
35Information Processing (Cont.)
- People as active beings who modify their thinking
in response to the environment - Strength is its commitment to rigorous methods to
investigate cognition. - Limitations includes lack of consideration for
cognitive abilities such as imagination or
creativity and real-life learning situations.
36Ethology
- Studies the survival value of behavior and its
evolutionary history - Ethologists want to understand physical, social,
and cultural aspects of the environment. - Sensitive period
- An optimal time in a child's life for specific
capabilities to emerge in which the individual is
especially responsive to environmental
influences. - According to John Bowlby
- Attachment development is a long process leading
infants to form ties to caregivers.
37Vygotsky's Sociocultural Theory
- Focuses on how culture is transmitted to next
generation - Influential in the study of cognitive development
- Cognitive development is a socially mediated
process, dependent on the support that adults and
mature peers provide as children try new tasks. - May neglect the biological side and children's
capacity to shape their own development
38Ecological Systems Theory
- Urie Bronfenbrenner
- The person develops within a multilayered system
of relationships. - Ecological transitions, or shifts in contexts,
are important turning points in development. - The temporal dimension is the chronosystem.
39Four Nested Structures in the Environment
- Microsystem
- Innermost level of the environment and includes
bi-directional influences in the person's
immediate environment - Mesosystem
- Connections among microsystems that foster
development - Exosystem
- Contexts not including the developing person that
affect their microsystem and mesosystem
experiences - Macrosystem
- Outermost layer that includes a culture's laws,
values, and customs
Figure 1.5
40COMPARING AND EVALUATING THEORIES
- Developmental theories can be distinguished by
their focus on various aspects of development and
by their differing views of what the development
process is like. - All theories have strengths and weaknesses. No
theory provides a complete account of development.
41STUDYING DEVELOPMENT
- Research
- First, a prediction about behavior (hypothesis)
- Then an overall plan (research design)
- Specific activities (research methods)
- Participants
- Understanding of research strategies is important
for separating dependable information from
misleading results.
42The Scientific Method
43The Scientific Method (1) Provide a Rationale.
44The Scientific Method (2) Conduct the Study.
45The Scientific Method (3) Analyze the Data.
46The Scientific Method (4) Communicate the
Research Findings.
47The Scientific Method (5) Replicate the Study.
48The Scientific Method
49Common Research Methods and Designs
- Systematic observation
- Observed in their environment
- Self-Reports
- Clinical/Case Study
- One case in-depth
- Ethnography
- Correlation
- Relationship
- Experiment
- Cause and effect
- Sample
- Developmental
- Longitudinal
- Cross-sectional
50Systematic Observation
- Naturalistic observation
- Observe behavior in the natural environment.
- Advantage Behavior is real and not contrived.
- Disadvantage Presence of an unfamiliar
individual may cause people to act in unnatural
ways. - Structured observation
- Used in laboratory setting when a researcher sets
up a situation that cues a particular behavior to
be observed
51Naturalistic Observation
- Observation in natural settings
- No cause-effect relationship
52Self-Reports
- Questions about people's perceptions, thoughts,
feelings, and past experiences - Clinical interview
- Unstructured exploration of participants'
thoughts through conversation - Structured interview
- Every participant is asked the same questions in
the same way.
53Clinical, or Case Study, Method
- Goal is to gather complete picture of an
individual through interviews, observation, and
test scores - Yields case narratives rich in descriptive detail
and insights into the many factors affecting
development. - Drawbacks
- Data collected unsystematically and subjectively,
permitting researcher's theoretical preferences
to bias their observations and interpretations - Cannot assume conclusions apply to anyone other
than the person studied
54Studying Culture
- Ethnography
- Uncovering the cultural meanings of behaviors by
becoming as familiar as possible with their way
of life - Participant observation
- Ethnographers try to minimize their influence on
the culture being studied by becoming part of it,
but at times their presence does alter the
situation.
55GENERAL RESEARCH DESIGNS
- Correlational Design
- Researcher gathers statistical information on
already existing groups of individuals without
changing their experiences. - May show a relationship but not necessarily
cause-and-effect. - Correlation coefficient
- A number from 1.00 to -1.00 that indicates how
two variables are related - Zero correlation indicates no association.
- A value near 1.00 or -1.00 denotes a strong
relationship. - Positive sign () means that as one variable
increases, the other also increases. - Negative sign (-) indicates that as one variable
increases, the other decreases.
56Correlational Research Gay Gene?
Chance that other sibling is homosexual in the
same family
- Random 4
- Identical Twins 50
- Fraternal Twins 22
- Adopted, in the 10same family
57Correlational Research Gay Gene?Chance that
other sibling is homosexual in the same family
50
22
10
4
58Experimental Design
- Hypothesis
- Independent Variable
- Dependent Variable
- Cause and effect
- Control
59Experimental Design
- Permits us to infer cause-and-effect behavioral
relationships - An independent variable is manipulated by an
experimenter to cause changes in the other
variable being measured - The dependent variable should be affected by the
independent variable.
60Structure of an Experiment
- Experimental Group
- pretest
- treatment
- posttest
- Change?
- Control Group
- pretest
- posttest
- Change?
61Field and Natural Experiments
- Modifications of experimental design to gather
data on behaviors that occur more naturally
outside the laboratory setting - Field experiments
- Researchers randomly assign participants to
different treatments in natural settings. - Natural experiments
- Investigators research pre-existing treatments.
62Designs for Studying Development
- Longitudinal design
- A group of participants is studied repeatedly at
different ages. - Identifies common developmental patterns and
individual differences - Permits examination of relationships between
early and later behaviors
63Problems in Longitudinal Research
- Over time, participants may drop out of the
research. - Participants may behave unnaturally from repeated
exposure to test situation. - Cultural-historical changes can cause cohort
effects. - Influences on one group that may make research
results inapplicable to other groups
64Cross-Sectional Design
- Different-aged groups are studied at the same
point in time. Group differences are assumed the
result of developmental changes. - Problems in conducting cross-sectional research
- Individual changes in development cannot be
detected. - Group differences may be due to cultural or
historical influences and not age-related.
65Longitudinal-Sequential Design
- Combines the longitudinal and cross-sectional
methods by studying two or more age groups over
time.
Figure 1.6
66Longitudinal-Sequential Design (cont.)
- Detects cohort effects by comparing same-age
results for participants who were born in
different years - Possible to do both longitudinal and
cross-sectional comparisons with this design
67ETHICS IN LIFESPAN RESEARCH
- Ethical guidelines are needed for research with
people so as not to exploit them. - Informed consent
- Special interpretation when participants cannot
fully appreciate the research goals and
activities (children or cognitively impaired) - Debriefing
- Full account and justification of activities
after the research is over, when deception and
concealment are used