Title: Development and Socialization
1Development and Socialization
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3To the Best of Your Knowledge, Where were You
Sleeping as a 2-Year old?
- Own Bedroom (or shared with siblings)
- Own Bed, in Parents Bedroom
- Parents Bed
4Infants Live in Different Cultures Too
- Sleeping arrangements vary across cultures.
- What are some arguments for why it would be good
for infants to be provided with their own room? - What are some arguments for why it would be good
for infants to share the bed with their mothers?
5- Study by Shweder et al. (1995) asked Indian and
American adults to decide how various
combinations of family members could be arranged
in the bedrooms of a house. - In one version, they were told the house had 3
bedrooms, and the family included a mother, a
father, two daughters (aged 14 and 3), and three
sons (aged 15, 11, and 8).
6Cultural Differences in Preferred Sleeping
Arrangements
7- Participants were asked to justify their
decisions, and their justifications revealed some
common underlying moral concerns. - One moral concern emerged for both Indians and
Americans Incest Avoidance. - Other key Indian concerns were Protection of the
Vulnerable, Female Chastity Anxiety, and
Respect for Hierarchy. - Other key American concerns were Sacred Couple,
and Autonomy Ideal.
8Study by Keller (2007).
- Contrasted parenting interactions with
3-month-old infants in five cultural contexts
urban middle-class Germans, urban middle-class
Greeks, urban lower-class Costa Ricans, rural
Indian Gujarati, and rural Cameroonian Nso.
- Researchers made 20 unannounced visits with
mothers and infants over a one week period and
videotaped them for 15 minute intervals. Within
these 15 minute intervals, detailed behaviors
were coded for interspersed 10-second intervals.
9Percent of Time in Bodily Contact with Infant
- All mothers show much bodily contact.
- The Nso mothers were observed carrying the
infants in every observed instance. - Greeks and Germans showed the least amount of
bodily contact.
Nso
German
Greek
Gujarati
Costa Rican
10Percent of Time in Face-to-Face Contact with
Infants
- All mothers made much face-to-face contact.
- Greeks and Germans made considerably more
face-to-face contact than those from other
cultures.
Nso
German
Greek
Gujarati
Costa Rican
11Warmth Shown in Response to Infants Positive
Signals (Z-scores)
- Compared with other mothers, Greek mothers showed
the warmest response to infants positive
signals, and Gujarati mothers showed the least
warm response.
Nso
German
Greek
Gujarati
Costa Rican
12Warmth Shown in Response to Infants Negative
Signals (Z-scores)
- Compared with other mothers, Costa Rican mothers
showed the warmest response to infants negative
signals.
Nso
German
Greek
Gujarati
Costa Rican
13- Early experiences of infants differ dramatically
around the world. Peoples minds develop in
highly different circumstances. - Although longitudinal research has yet to be
conducted to directly link early infant
experiences with adult preferences and behaviors,
it is not unreasonable to expect that these early
experiences are critical to shaping peoples
development. - How might some of these early experiences affect
peoples development?
14Cultural Variation in Childrens Psychology
- Attachment Styles
- Western researchers proposed three kinds of
attachment styles common among parents (esp.
mothers) and children. - Secure Attachments
- Infants have warm relationships with parents, and
are comfortable and explorative in their
presence. Although they get upset to see their
parents leave, and are happy to see them upon
their return, they become comfortable in their
absence.
15- Avoidant Attachments
- Infants have a detached style around their
parents, and are not particularly upset when
their parents are not around. - Anxious-Ambivalent Attachments
- Infants show frequent distress either in the
presence or absence of parent. They oscillate
between wanting the parent to be closer and
pushing them away.
16Cultural Variation in Frequency of Attachment
Styles
17Some Aspects of Culture are Learned in a
Sensitive Window
- In particular, some aspects of language are
learned in a sensitive window. - A sensitive window indicates a biological
preparation for the acquisition of the
information. - Humans have evolved such that they learn a
language in a particular period of life (from
very early, and the sensitivity declines markedly
after puberty).
18Study of Phoneme Discrimination
- Study compared infants from English speaking and
Hindi speaking parents (Werker Tees, 1984). - Task was whether infants could discriminate
between two Hindi phonemes that are
indistinguishable to adult non-Hindi speakers.
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20- Some aspects of language learning (phoneme
perception) start to be acquired in a very early
window. - Some other aspects of language learning, in
particular, accent, are learned poorly after
puberty. - Militaries have made use of this by asking
suspicious people to pronounce shibboleths.
21Hong Kong Immigrants Acquiring Canadian Culture
- We looked at immigrants from Hong Kong to the
lower mainland who had immigrated at varying ages
(Cheung, Chudek, Heine, 2009). - They completed an acculturation scale which
assessed both their identification with Chinese
and with Canadian culture.
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23Age at Immigration Matters Most
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25What might we learn about humans ability to
acquire culture by observing feral children?
26Developmental Transitions
27Developmental Transitions
28Developmental Transitions
- Terrible Twos
- Turbulent Adolescence
29Socialization Through Education
- One of the primary sources of socialization is
the school. - Aside from the specific content that people learn
at school (e.g., learning about facts, and
techniques), how does school shape the ways that
people think?
30Schooling Affords Categorization
- Alexander Luria, a founder of the
Russian-Historical School of cultural psychology,
interviewed Russian peasants with no formal
education. - The participants were given a list of four
objects and they were to identify the one that
didnt belong. - Often participants focused on concrete and
practical aspects of how the objects could be
used together, and did not create any categories.
31- Example question - Hammer, saw, log, hatchet.
Which one doesnt belong? - Theyre all alike. I think all of them have to
be here. See, if youre going to saw, you need a
saw, and if you have to split something you need
a hatchet. So theyre all needed here. - Which of these things could you call by one
word? - Hows that? If you call all three of them a
hammer, that wont be right either.
32- But one fellow picked three things - the hammer,
saw, and hatchet- and said they were alike. - A saw, a hammer, and a hatchet all have to work
together. But the log has to be here too! - Why do you think he picked these three things
and not the log? - Probably hes got a lot of firewood, but if
well be left without firewood, we wont be able
to do anything.
33- Another subject. Hammer, saw, log, hatchet.
Which one doesnt belong? - Its the hammer that doesnt fit! You can
always work with a saw, but a hammer doesnt
always suit the job, theres only a little you
can do with it. - Yet one fellow threw out the log. He said the
hammer, saw, and hatchet were all alike in some
way, but the log is different. - If were getting firewood for the stove, we
could get rid of the hammer, but if its planks
were fixing, we can do without the hatchet.
34- If you had to put these in some kind of order,
could you take the log out of the group? - No, if you get rid of the log, what good would
the others be? - Suppose I put a dog here instead of the log?
- If it was a mad dog, you could beat it with the
hatchet and the hammer and it would die.
35- In 1912, H. H. Goddard assessed the IQ of
incoming immigrants to the US. Most of the
immigrants had no schooling. - Results of his tests 83 of Jews, 80 of
Hungarians, 79 of Italians, and 87 of Russians
were classified as morons - (Goddards term for
IQ scored below 70)
36- In sum, many cognitive skills and habits that we
are often not aware of, emerge as the product
from formal schooling.