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The First Two Years: Psychosocial Development

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The interaction of infants' emotions and their social context is dynamic ... social smiles are evoked by a human face, normally evident about 6 weeks after birth ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The First Two Years: Psychosocial Development


1
Part II
Chapter Seven
  • The First Two Years Psychosocial Development

Emotional Development Theories About Infant
Psychosocial The Development of Social
Bonds Conclusions in Theory and Practices
2
The First Two Years Psychosocial Development
  • The interaction of infants emotions and their
    social context is dynamic
  • This interplay is seen in a tiny baby smile at an
    engaging face or a toddler flop to the floor,
    kicking and screaming

3
Emotional Development in Infancy
  • Within the first two years, infants progress
    from reactive pain and pleasure to complex
    patterns of social awareness.
  • a period of life with high emotional
    responsiveness

4
Emotional Development in Infancy
  • Specific Emotions
  • infants progress from pleasure and pain
  • social smiles are evoked by a human face,
    normally evident about 6 weeks after birth
  • anger is evident at 6 months

5
Emotional Development in Infancy
  • Specific Emotions
  • fully formed fear in response to some person,
    thing, or situation emerges at about 9 months
  • Stranger Wariness infant no longer smiles at any
    friendly faces, and cries if an unfamiliar person
    moves to close, too quickly
  • Separation Anxiety expressed in tears, dismay,
    or anger when a familiar caregiver leaves

6
Emotional Development in Infancy
  • Specific Emotions
  • separation anxiety is normal at age 1
  • intensifies by age 2, and usually subsides after
    that
  • 1-year-olds fear not just strangers but also
    anything unexpected
  • emotions that emerge in the first month
    strengthen at about age 1

7
Emotional Development in Infancy
  • Self Awareness
  • ... emotional growth that has the infant
    realizing that his or her body, mind,
  • and actions are separate from those
  • of other people
  • self-recognition emerges at about 18 months

8
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Psychoanalytic Theory
  • connects biosocial and psychosocial development
  • emphasizing the need for response maternal care

9
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Freud the first year is the oral stage
  • the mouth is the young infants primary source of
    gratification
  • the second year is the anal stage
  • the infants main pleasure comes from the anus
    sensual pleasure of bowel movement the pleasure
    of controlling

10
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Erikson Trust vs. Mistrust
  • infants learn basic trust if the world is a
    secure place where their basic needs are met
  • Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
  • toddlers either succeed or fail in gaining a
    sense of self-rule over their own actions and
    bodies

11
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Behaviorism
  • emotions and personality are molded as parents
    reinforce or punish the childs spontaneous
    behaviors
  • Infants experience social learning learning by
    observing others

12
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Cognitive Theory
  • holds that thoughts and values determine a
    persons perspectives
  • early experiences are important
  • infants use early relationships to develop a
    working model
  • a set of assumptions that the individual uses to
    organize perceptions and experiences

13
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Epigenetic Theory
  • holds that every human characteristic is strongly
    influenced by each persons unique genotype
    inborn predispositions

14
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Temperament
  • Inborn differences between one person and another
    in emotions, activity, and self-control.
  • Is epigenetic, originating in genes but affected
    by child-rearing practices.

15
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • The Parents Role
  • infant temperament often changes with adult
    guidance
  • interaction between culture influences and
    inherited traits tend to shape behavior
  • parents need to find a goodness of fit
  • goodness of fit is a similarity of temperament
    and values that produces a smooth interaction
    between an individual and his or her social
    context

16
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Sociocultural Theory
  • human development occurs in a cultural
    context.
  • theorists argue culture
  • has a substantial influence on infants
  • has a major impact on infant-caregiver
    relationships, thus the development of the infant

So the is question How much influence does
culture have?
17
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Ethnotheories
  • ethnotheory
  • a theory that underlies the values and practices
    of a culture
  • that becomes apparent through analysis and
    comparison of those practices
  • not usually apparent to the people within the
    culture

18
Theories About Infant Psychosocial Development
  • Proximal Parenting
  • practices that involve close physical contact
    with the childs entire body, such as cradling
    and swinging
  • Distal Parenting
  • practices that focus on the intellect more than
    the body, such as talking with the baby and
    playing with an object

19
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Synchrony
  • is a coordinated interaction between caregiver
    and infant
  • an exchange in which they respond to each other
    with split-second timing

20
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Attachment
  • according to Ainsworth, is an affectional tie
    that an infant forms with the caregivera tie
    that binds them together in space and endured
    over time

21
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Secure Attachment
  • relationships in which an infant obtains both
    comfort and confidence from the presence of his
    or her caregiver
  • Insecure-Avoidant Attachment
  • a pattern in which an infant avoids connection
    with the caregiver, as when the infant seems not
    to care about the caregivers presence,
    departure, or return

22
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Insecure-Resistant/Ambivalent Attachment
  • anxiety and uncertainty are evident, as when an
    infant is very upset at separation from the
    caregiver and both resists and seeks contact on
    reunion
  • Disorganized Attachment
  • marked by an infants inconsistent reactions to
    the caregivers departure and return

23
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Secure and Insecure Attachment

24
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Insecure Attachment and Social Settings
  • infants shift in attachment status between one
    age and another
  • most trouble children may be those who are
    classified as type D (table 7.4)

25
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Social Referencing
  • seeking information about how to react to an
    unfamiliar ambiguous object or event by observing
    someone elses expressions and reactionsthat
    other person becomes a social reference

26
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Referencing Mothers
  • most social referencing occurs with mothers
  • infants heed their mothers wishes, expressed in
    tone and facial expression

27
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Referencing Fathers
  • increases in maternal employment have expanded
    the social references available to infants
  • fathers now spend considerable time with their
    children

28
The Development of Social Bonds
  • Infant Day Care
  • more than ½ of all 1-year-olds in the U.S. are in
    regular scheduled nonmaternal care
  • family day care
  • occurs in another caregivers homeusually the
    caregiver is paid at a lower rate than in center
    care, and usually one person cares for several
    children of various ages
  • center day care
  • a place especially designed for that purpose,
    where several paid providers care for many
    children. Usually the children are grouped by
    age, the day care center is licensed, and
    providers are trained and certified in child
    development
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