Title: Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood
1Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle
Childhood
- Chapter 9
- Robert S. Feldman
2See How We Grow!
- Slow but steady
- Height changes
- Weight changes
- Only time in lifespan when on average girls
taller than boys - Variation in heights up to 6 inches not unusual
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3Cultural Patterns of Growth
- Sufficient or insufficient __________
- Disease
- Genetic inheritance
- Familial stress
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4Artificial Hormones
- Currently taken by thousands of children with
insufficient natural growth hormones - Costly
- Some side effects
- Long-term studies of usage not available
Points to consider
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5Consequences of Inadequate Nutrition
- Undernutrition is implicated in _________
__________of all child deaths worldwide - Undernourished children
- Lowered resistance to infection
- More likely to die from common childhood ailments
and respiratory infections - Frequent illness that impacts growth
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6Benefits of Adequate Nutrition
- Relationship to social and emotional functioning
- More peer involvement
- More positive emotions
- Less anxiety
- More eagerness to explore new environments
- More persistent in frustrating situations
- Generally higher energy levels
- (See Guatemalan study, Barrett Frank, 1987)
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7Obesity
- Most common causes
-
-
-
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- Only in rare cases is being overweight caused by
a medical condition such as a hormonal problem
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8Do boys and girls differ in motor skills?
- Gender differences in gross motor skills became
increasingly pronounced during middle childhood, - Boys outperform girls
- Little or no difference when equal participation
in exercise/activities - Influenced by societal expectations
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9Fine Motor Development
- Necessary for wide range of school-related tasks
- Influenced by increase in amount of myelin
?speeds up electrical impulses between neurons
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10Health and School-agers
- Middle childhood is period of robust health
- ______________________have produced considerably
lower incidence of life-threatening illnesses - More than 90 percent of children in middle
childhood have at least one serious medical
condition but most are short term illnesses
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11Asthma
- 15 million US children
- Periodic attacks of wheezing, coughing, shortness
of breath - Theories about increase
- Increased air pollution
- More accurate diagnosis
- Exposure to asthma triggers
- Poverty
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12Identifying the Problem
- Psychological disorders in children overlooked
for years - Incidence
- Symptoms inconsistent from those of adults
- Antidepressant drugs used for treatment have
never been approved by governmental regulators
for use with children
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13Drugs As Treatment
- FOR
- Depression and other psychological disorders
treated successfully using drug - More traditional nondrug therapies that largely
employ verbal methods simply are ineffective
- AGAINST
- Long-term effectiveness of antidepressants with
children not known - Use of antidepressants on developing brains and
long-term consequences more generally not known - Correct dosages for children of given ages or
sizes not known
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14Children with Special Needs
- Visual impairments
- Auditory impairments
- Speech impairments
- Learning disabilities
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15Do you see what I see?
- Difficulties in seeing
- Blindness (20/200 after correction)
- Partial sightedness (20/70 after correction)
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16Say what?
- Loss of hearing or some aspect of hearing
- Affects ___ percent of school-age children
- Varies across number of dimensions
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17Children who do not hear
- Children with speech-language impairment have an
impairment of their speech and/or language
structures and functions - Parts of the body used in speaking and
understanding - the brain, nerves, mouth and
throat - may be damaged or not developing or
working properly - Level of speech-language impairment can range
from mild to severe - Impairment may be obvious before school or not
show itself until the child has difficulty
learning at school
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18I am talking to YOU!
- Definition of ______________________
- Impairment of speech articulation, voice,
fluency, or the impairment or deviant development
of language comprehension and/or expression - Impairment of use of spoken or other symbol
system that adversely affects educational
performance
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19Stuttering
- Substantial disruption in _____________
______________ of speech - Most common speech impairment 20 percent of all
children go through stage - No clear-cut answers to the causes of stuttering
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20Learning Disabilities Discrepancies Between
Achievement and Capacity to Learn
- Difficulties in acquisition and use of listening,
speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or
mathematical abilities - 2.8 million children in US
- Dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia
- ADD/ADHD
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21The Basic Definition in Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
- Learning disability umbrella term
- IN GENERAL
- disorder is found in one or more of basic
psychological processes involved in understanding
or using language, spoken or written - disorder may manifest itself in imperfect ability
to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or
do mathematical calculations
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22Developmental Reading Disability
- Dylexia affects 2 to 8 percent of elementary
school children - Reading difficulties
- Inability to separate sounds in words
- Problems sounding out words
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23Developmental Writing Disabilities
- Writing involves several brain areas and
functions (____________) - Brain networks for vocabulary, grammar, hand
movement, and memory must all be in good working
order - Developmental writing disorder may result from
problems in any of these areas
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24Developmental Arithmetic Disability
- Arithmetic involves recognizing numbers and
symbols, memorizing facts, aligning numbers, and
understanding abstract concepts like place value
and fractions - Any of these may be difficult for children with
developmental arithmetic disorders, also called
______________
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25What are the most common signs of ADHD?
- Persistent difficulty in finishing tasks,
following instructions, and organizing work - Inability to watch an entire television program
- Frequent interruption of others or excessive
talking - Tendency to jump into a task before hearing all
the instructions. - Difficulty in waiting or remaining seated
- Fidgeting, squirming
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26Diagnostic Criteria
- Behaviors must
- Be excessive, long-term, and pervasive
- Appear before age 7, and continue for at least 6
months - Create a real handicap in at least two areas of a
person's life, such as school, home, work, or
social settings - Different than "normal" distractibility or
overstressed lifestyle prevalent in our society
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27ADHD Treatment Controversy
- Ritalin or Dexadrine reduce activity levels in
hyperactive children and are routinely prescribe - Effective in increasing attention span and
compliance BUT side effects considerable and
long-term health consequences unclear - Help scholastic performance in short run BUT
long-term evidence for continuing improvement is
mixed
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28Are there other treatments for ADD/ADHD?
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29What are advances and limitations, in thinking
during childhood?
- Approaches
- Piaget
- Information-processing
- Vygotsky
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30Intellectual Development Piaget
- Concrete operational stage
- 7 and 12 years
- Characterized by active and appropriate use of
logic - Logical operations applied to concrete problems
- Conservation problems reversibility time and
speed, decentering
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31How slow can you go?
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32How does preoperational thought emerge?
- Shift from preoperational thought to concrete
operational thought does not happen overnight - Children shift back and forth between
preoperational and concrete operational thinking - Once concrete operational thinking is fully
engaged, children show several cognitive advances
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33Piaget Was RightPiaget Was Wrong
- Right
- Virtuoso observer of children
- Powerful theoretical, educational implications
- Wrong
- Underestimate of childrens capabilities, in part
because of the limited nature of mini-experiments
conducted - Misjudged age at which childrens cognitive
abilities emerge - Neglected cross-cultural differences
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34Information Processing
- Increasing ability to handle information
- Memory improvement
- Short-term memory capacity improvement
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35Thinking about Memory _____________________
- Understanding about processes that underlie
memory - Improves during school age years
- Helps children use control strategies (conscious,
intentional tactics to improve functioning)
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36Vygotskys Approach
- Cognitive advances occur through exposure to
information within _________ ________________
(ZPD) - Influential in development of classroom practices
- Cooperative learning
- Reciprocal teaching
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37Mastering the Mechanics of Language in Middle
Childhood
- Vocabulary continues to increase
- Mastery of grammar improves
- Understanding of syntax grows
- Certain phonemes remain troublesome
- Decoding difficulties when dependent on
intonation - More competence in pragmatics
- Increase in meta-linguistic awareness
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38Metalinguistic Awareness
- One of most significant developments in middle
childhood is childrens increasing understanding
of their own use of language - By age 5 or 6,
- Understand language is governed by set of rules
- By age 7 or 8,
- Realize that miscommunication be due to factors
attributable not only to themselves, but to
person communicating with them
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39How does language promote self-control?
- Helps school-age children control and regulate
behavior - ________ used to help regulate behavior
- Effectiveness of self-control grows as linguistic
capabilities increased
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40Immigrants in the United States
- Are monolingual speakers of their native language
- Develop bilingualism as they acquire English
- Establish English-speaking households
- Raise their children as English-speaking
monolinguals (Pease-Alveraz, 1993)
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41Long-term Bilingualism
- According to survey data, even Spanish, a
language thought to be particularly enduring in
the United States, seldom lasts beyond the second
or third generation (Pease-Alveraz, 1993) - Why do you think this occurs?
42Cognitive Advantages of Bilingualism
- Greater cognitive flexibility
- Higher ________________-
- Greater meta-linguistic awareness
- Potential improved _________________
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43Schooling Around the World and Across Genders
Who Gets Educated?
- Primary school education ?universal right and
legal requirement? - Children in developing countries may have less
access - Females in these countries receive less formal
education than males
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44Reading Learning to Decode Meaning Behind Words
- No other task that is more fundamental to
schooling than learning to read - Reading involves significant number of skills
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45Educational Trends in the Next Millennium
- U.S. schools are experiencing return to
educational fundamentals embodied in traditional
three Rs - Elementary school classrooms today stress
individual accountability, both for teachers and
students
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46Are We Pushing Too Hard?
- From Research to Practice
- No Child Left Behind Act
- Outcomes
- Frequent testing becoming commonplace
- Student scores related to federal funding
- Reading instruction sometimes replaces recess and
other activities - Increase in amount of homework
- Some children burn out
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47But is extra homework worth the cost?
- Time spent on homework is associated with greater
academic achievement in secondary school - Relationship gets less strong for the lower
grades below grade 5, the relationship
disappears - For older children more homework is not
necessarily better - Some research indicates that benefits of homework
may reach plateau beyond which additional time
spent on homework produces no further benefits
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48Cultural Assimilation or Pluralistic Society?
- Cultural assimilation model
- Pluralistic society model
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49Intelligence Benchmarks
- Binets Test
- Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition
(SB5) - Wechsler Intelligence Scale for ChildrenFourth
Edition (WISC-IV) - Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, 2nd
Edition (KABC-II)
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50Alternative Conceptions of Intelligence
- Spearmans g
- Catell fluid and crystallize intelligence
- Gardner 8 intelligences
- Vygotsky dynamic assessment
- Sternberg triarchic theory of intelligence
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51Group Differences in IQ
- Previous experiences of test-takers may have a
substantial effect on their ability to answer
questions - Cultural background and experience have the
potential to affect intelligence test scores
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52Racial Differences in IQ
- Nature or Nurture?
- Mean score of African Americans tends to be about
15 IQ points lower than the mean score of
whitesalthough the measured difference varies a
great deal depending on the particular IQ test
employed - Evidence points to nurture
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53Below Intelligence Norms
- Mental Retardation
- Public Law 94-142, the Education for All
Handicapped Children Act - Least restrictive environment
- Mainstreaming
- Full inclusion
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54Benefits of Mainstreaming
- Ensure that all persons, regardless of ability or
disability, have access to full range of
educational opportunities, and fair share of
lifes rewards
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55How is mental retardation identified?
- American Association on Mental Retardation
definition - Familial retardation
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-
- Levels
- Mild
- Moderate
- Severe
- Profound
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56Above Intelligence Norms
- Gifted
- Federal government guideline (P.L. 97-35 Sec 582)
- Research suggests that highly intelligent people
tend to be outgoing, well adjusted, and popular
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57Educating Gifted and Talented Children
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