Title: Chapter Seven
1Chapter Seven
- The First Two Years
- Psychosocial Development
2Theories About Early Psychosocial Development
- Importance of parents and their contribution to
emotional growth
3Psychoanalytic Theory
- Connects biosocial and psychosocial development
4Freud Oral and Anal Stages
- Oral Stage1st stage, where infant obtains
pleasure through sucking and biting - Anal Stage2nd stage, where anus becomes main
source of gratification, i.e., bowel movements
and the control of them
5Erikson Trust and Autonomy
- 1st StageTrust vs. Mistrust
- basic needs need to be met with consistency,
continuity, and sameness - 2nd StageAutonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
- basic desire to gain self-rule over their own
actions and bodies and to feel ashamed if it
doesnt happen
6Behaviorism
- Infants emotions and personality are molded as
parents reinforce or punish childs spontaneous
behavior - social learning adds to personality formation
- social referencing strengthens learning by
observation
7Cognitive Theory
- Individuals thoughts and values determine
perspective on the world - Working modelset of assumptions used to organize
perceptions and experiences
8Epigenetic Theory
- Each child is born with a genetic predisposition
to develop certain traits that affect emotional
development - Temperamentconstitutionally based individual
differences in emotion, motor, and attentional
reactivity and self-regulation. - Inhibited (cautious)
- Uninhibited (risk taker)
- epigeneticthough temperamental traits not
learned, environment affects their expression
9Research on Temperament Nine Characteristics
- activity level
- rhythmicity
- approach-withdrawal
- adaptability
- intensity of reaction
- threshold of responsiveness
- quality of mood
- distractibility
- attention span
10Temperament and Caregiving
- Inhibited vs. Uninhibited
- responsive care and encouragement can help
inhibited children become less so - Match between parent and child
- goodness of fit
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12Sociocultural Theory
- Emphasizes the many ways social context can have
impact on infant-caregiver relationship - If social context changes, child can change
13Emotional Development in Infancy
- In the first 2 years of emotional development,
infants progress from simple reactions to complex
patterns of social awareness
14The First Year
- Newborns first discernable emotions
- distress
- contentment
- Later emotions (after first weeks)
- Anger (4-8 mos.)
- Fear (9 mos.), expressed clearly by stranger
wariness and separation anxiety
15The Second Year
- Fear and anger typically decrease
- Laughing, crying more discriminating
- New emotions appear
- pride
- shame
- embarrassment
- guilt
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17Self-Awareness
- Foundation for emotional growth
- realization of individual distinctions
- At about 5 months begin developing a sense of
self apart from mother - 15-18 months the Me-self
- rouge experiment
18Pride and Shame
- Self-awareness becomes linked with self-concept
early on - Negative comments more likely to lead to less
pride or shame - Own pride can be more compelling than parental
approval
19The Development of Social Bonds
- Social connections help us understand human
emotions
20Synchrony
- Synchronycoordinated interaction attunement
- Helps infants learn to express own feelings
- Imitation is pivotal
- Infant can begin to connect felt emotion with
parents facial expression - Becomes more elaborate and more frequent with
time - Learning through play
- playful interactions by both partners
- important for both to be responsive
21Attachment
- Enduring emotional connection
- Proximity-seeking behaviors
- Contact-maintaining behaviors
- Development of Attachment
- Indiscriminate sociability (0-6 wks.)
- Discriminating sociability (6 wks. 6 or 7 mos.)
- Attachment (7 mos. 2 yrs.)
- Secure base behavior
- Stranger anxiety
- Separation anxiety
- Goal-corrected partnership (after 2 yrs. of age)
- Understanding of reciprocity, turn-taking
22Secure and Insecure Attachment
- Bowlby and Ainsworth
- Securerelationship of trust and confidence that
provides comfort, assurance, and secure base
23Secure and Insecure Attachment, cont.
- Insecurerelationship that is unpredictable or
unstable - avoidant one person tries to avoid any
connection with another - resistant/ambivalent anxiety and uncertainly
keep one person clinging to another
24 25Measuring Attachment
- Strange Situationlab procedure to measure
attachment observed are - exploration of the toys (caregiver present)
- reaction to caregivers departure
- reaction to caregivers return
- disorganized behaviorneither secure nor insecure
attachmentmarked by inconsistent behavior of
caregiver and infant toward each other
26Insecure Attachment as a Warning Sign
- Stressed mother (although not always an
indicator) - Mother too withdrawn
- Inconsistent behavior of mother (conflicting
messages sent by her) - Insecure attachments repairable
27Social Referencing
- Looking to others for cues
28Referencing Mom
- Look to mother for comfort
- Mothers tone and expression can become guide to
how to react to unfamiliar or ambiguous event
29Referencing Dad
- Fathers play more than mothers
- Infants look to fathers for fun and physical play
- Physically active play with fathers may
contribute to development of social skills and
emotional expression - Physically active play with fathers helps
children master motor skills and develop muscle
control
30Cultural Differences
- Fathers, single mothers, grandparents, and
cultures with other family structures still
provide needed referencing - Fathers involvement
- can benefit later development of child
- raise mothers self-confidence
- and two parents working together are better able
to meet infants needs than either alone
31Infant Day Care
- Almost all infants cared for by people other than
parents part of the time - Specifics vary from culture to culture
- The older the child and the more money the family
has, the more likely possibility of day care
32Infant Day-Care
- Family day care
- Center care
- Day care generally beneficial
- High-quality programs include
- adequate attention to each infant
- encouragement of sensorimotor exploration and
language development - attention to health and safety
- well-trained professional caregivers
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34Infant Day Care, cont.
- Cognitive and biosocial development are more
advanced by day care than at home - Poor day care has detrimental effects
35Conclusions in Theory and Practice
- No single theory stands out as best
interpretation of developments during first 2
years - Do not know the extent to which positive
influence can compensate for negative one
36Conclusions in Theory and Practice, cont.
- Parental attentiveness crucial to synchrony,
attachment, and social referencing. - In dealing with children with problems, need a
practical rather than theoretical approach that
focuses on their specific issues