Title: Developmental Psychology
1Developmental Psychology
9
2Developmental Psychology
Developmental Psychology
- Focuses on development across life span a field
of psychology that focuses on development across
the life span. - Development
- More-or-less predictable changes in behavior
associated with increasing age - Nature or nurture?
- Nature behavior unfolds like a plant over time
- Nurture behavior is molded by experiences
3Developmental Psychology
Nature view
4Developmental Psychology
What do they see?
5Basic Processes of Development
Developmental Psychology
- Maturation
- Biological process of systematic physical growth
- Experience plays a role in specific contexts
- McGraws study of toilet training twins
- Children change dramatically from birth to
adulthood
6Developmental Psychology
Importance of maturational readiness in McGraws
study of toilet training twin boys
7Early Experiences and Critical Periods
Developmental Psychology
- Imprinting (Lorenz)
- Inborn tendency or instinct
- Sensitive period critical period
- Early social deprivation
- Harlows monkeys, social isolation, and
continuing detrimental effects - Controversy over effects on children
- Some abnormal effects may be irreversible
8Variations in Development
Developmental Psychology
- Normal for children to be variable in their
development - Discontinuities in development are the rule
- Parents make important decisions about raising
children that impacts on development - Raising deaf child
- Impact of technology and medicine
9Stage Theories of Development
Developmental Psychology
- Stages series of abrupt changes from one period
to another - All children must pass through in same order
- Many advocate unfolds over time
- More qualitative than quantitative (such as child
mastering physical properties of object) - Decentered thought allows
conservation problem solutions
10Piagets Developmental Theory
Developmental Psychology
- Identified 4 stages of cognitive development
- Sensorimotor stage infant experiences world in
sensory information and motor activities - Preoperational stage children sometimes think
illogically by adult standards - Concrete operational stage increased abilities
- Formal operational stage use of full adult logic
11Developmental Psychology
Piagets cognitive development theory
Birth to 2 yrs Sensorimotor Uses senses and motor skills, items known by use Object permanence
2 - 7 yrs Pre-operational Symbolic thinking, language used egocentric thinking, imagination/ experience grow, child de-centers
7 - 11 yrs Concrete operational Logic applied, objective/rational interpretations conservation, numbers, ideas, classifications
11 yrs on Formal operational Thinks abstractly, hypothetical ideas ethics, politics, social/moral issues explored
12Kohlbergs Theory
Developmental Psychology
- Moral development
- Three level, six stage theory
- Premoral level child has no sense of morality
as adults understand it - Childs moral view based on what others think
until highest level of development creates
independent thinking
13Kohlbergs Theory
Developmental Psychology
- Moral development
- Gilligan critical of Kohlbergs research results
had her own theory - Morality as Individual Survival
- Morality as Self-Sacrifice
- Morality as Equality
14Developmental Psychology
Kohlbergs theory of moral development
Level I Preconventional moral reasoning Stage 1 might makes right Punishment/obedience orientation self-interest
Level I Preconventional moral reasoning Stage 2 look out for number one Instrumental/relativist orientation quid pro quo
Level II Conventional moral reasoning Stage 3 good girl, nice boy Proper behavior for the social approval
Level II Conventional moral reasoning Stage 4 law and order Proper behavior of the dutiful citizen, obey laws
Level III Postconventional moral reasoning Stage 5 social contract Mutual benefit to all, obey societys rules
Level III Postconventional moral reasoning Stage 6 universal ethical principles Defend right/wrong, not just majority, all life is sacred (reflective)
15Development Across the Life Span
Developmental Psychology
- Eriksons Psychosocial Theory
- Focuses on the individuals developing
relationships with others in social world - Eight stages - development continues over life
span - Crisis at each stage of development
16Developmental Psychology
Eriksons psychosocial theory
17Development Across the Life Span
Developmental Psychology
- Average ages at which changes in development take
place portray pattern of age-related changes - Neonatal Period
- Infancy
- Early childhood
- Middle childhood
- Adolescence
- adulthood
18Development in Infancy and Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Neonatal period
- First two weeks of life
- Marks transition from womb to independence
- Reflexively grasps anything placed in hand
- Rooting reflex
19Development in Infancy and Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Infancy
- Age 2 weeks until 2 years
- Time of rapid physical, perceptual, cognitive,
linguistic, social, and emotional growth - During sensorimotor stage infants stare at
interesting visual stimuli - Preference for human faces
20Development in Infancy and Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Infancy
- Physical development
- Cognitive development
- Object permanence
- Telegraphic speech
- Rovee-Colliers studies of memory
21Developmental Psychology
Rovee-Colliers studies tested the memory of
young infants
22Development in Infancy and Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Infancy emotional and social development
- Visual cliff and depth perception
- Attachment
- Strong attachments formed between infants and
caregivers - Separation anxiety
- Fear of strangers
23Developmental Psychology
Gibson and Walks visual cliff tested infant
depth perception
24Early Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Growth less explosive and rapid than during
infancy - Lasts 2 to 7 years of age
- Cognitive development
- Children in preoperational stage show egocentric
thought - Animism
- Transductive reasoning
25Early Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Emotional and social development
- Most notable changes in peer relationships and
types of play - Solitary play
- Parallel play
- Cooperative play
26Developmental Psychology
Early Childhood
Cooperative play
Parallel play
Solitary play
27Middle Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Lasts from 7 to 11 years of age
- Characterized by slow physical growth
- Important cognitive changes occur
- Conservation and reversibility
- Child decenters allows conservation problems to
be solved learns some matter changes shape but
not volume
28Middle Childhood
Developmental Psychology
- Emotional and social development
- Child enters with close ties to parents
- Peer relationships become increasingly important
- Friendships more important, last longer
- Cliques or groups formed, mostly same sex
- Terms boyfriend and girlfriend have little
meaning at this stage
29Adolescent Development
Developmental Psychology
- Adolescence
- Physical changes of puberty
- Adolescent growth spurt
- Heightened sexual and romantic interest
- Peers become more important than parents
- Cognitively capable of abstract reasoning
- Ponders abstract issues like justice or equality
- No clear cut end to adolescence in society
30Adolescent Development
Developmental Psychology
- Physical development
- Puberty becomes production of sex hormones
- Primary sex characteristics appear
- Females menarche menstruation, ovulation
- Secondary sex characteristics appear
- Females breasts, pubic hair, wider hips
- Males testes and penis growth, facial and pubic
hair, broadened shoulders
31Adolescence
Developmental Psychology
- Cognitive development
- Formal operations stage entered
- Ability to use abstract concepts
- Shift to stage varies among individuals some
never reach this stage, others reach it in early
adulthood - Piagets classic experiment with weights
32Developmental Psychology
Piagets Balance Test - task make the weight
times the distance equal on both sides of center
7-yr-old
4-yr-old
5 kg
A
B
5 kg
5 kg
10-yr-old
14-yr-old
C
D
5 kg
10 kg
2 kg
8 kg
33Adolescence
Developmental Psychology
- Adolescent egocentrism
- Imaginary audience everyone is watching
- Personal fable belief that s/he is unique
- Hypocrisy okay for one to do it but not another
- Pseudostupidity use of oversimplified logic
- Social development
- Time of drifting or breaking away from family
34Adolescence
Developmental Psychology
- Emotional development
- G. Stanley Hall time of storm and stress
- Most adolescents are happy, well-adjusted
- Areas of problems
- Parent-child conflicts
- Mood changes - self-conscious, awkward, lonely,
ignored - Risky behavior - aggression, unprotected sex,
suicide, use of substances or alcohol
35Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Young adulthood through older adulthood
- Developmental changes continue throughout
adulthood not a single phase of life - Taking on adult responsibilities in work and
social relationships - Challenges love, work, play continue changing
36Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Physical development
- Growth and strength in early adulthood, then slow
process of decline afterwards - Speed and endurance
- Vision and ability to see in weak lighting
- Hearing and detection of tones
- Taste intact until later in life men tend to
lose hearing and taste earlier than women - Decline affected by health and lifestyles
37Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Cognitive development
- Continues throughout adulthood some abilities
improve while others decline - Fluid intelligence peaks in 20s, declines
therafter - Crystallized intelligence improves until 30s
then declines slowly afterwards - Overall, individual rates vary depending on
lifestyle and health
38Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Emotional and social development
- Many aspects of personality are fairly stable
over time, and changes are predictable - On average, adults become
- less anxious and emotional, socially outgoing,
and creative - People become more dependable, agreeable, and
accepting of lifes hardships - Gender differences lessen over time
39Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Emotional and social development
- Much disagreement about when and how changes
occur during aging differences between stages
of infant/child development and adult development - Not all adults go through every stage
- Order of stages can vary for individuals
- Timing of stages not controlled by biological
maturation
40Stages of Adult Life
Developmental Psychology
- Early adulthood
- Erikson
- Intimacy versus isolation (17 to 45 years)
- Levinson - Early adulthood has three stages
- Entry into early adulthood (17-28)
- Age 30 transition (28-33)
- Culmination of early adulthood (to age 40)
- Challenges of career, marriage, and parenthood
41Middle Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Erikson
- Generativity versus stagnation (40-65 years)
- Taking stock of what one has, who s/he is
- Some are happy, some are disappointed
- Generativity reaching out, not self-centered
42Middle Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Levinson four brief stages
- Midlife transition (early 40s)
- Entry to middle adulthood stage (45 to 50)
- Age 50 transition
- Culmination of middle adulthood
- Climactic
- Female sexual ability to reproduce declines
- Not all adult development timed by social clock
rather than biological clock
43Later Adulthood
Developmental Psychology
- Erikson (age 65 and onward)
- Integrity versus despair
- Looks back over life as a whole satisfying
existence or merely staying alive - Levinson devotes little to later years
- Life expectancy dramatically increased as have
conceptions of old age - many have healthy years after retirement
- Second careers and activism launched
44Evaluating Stage Theories
Developmental Psychology
- Gender differences more focus on men
- Cultural differences and historical change
- Few cultural comparison studies done
- Inconsistent evidence
- Questions about idea of stage theories
- Mid-course correction, not mid-life crises
- Predicted changes do not occur at ages indicated
45Causes of Aging
Developmental Psychology
- Biological human body deteriorates
- Psychological
- Happy or unhappy aging
- Social activity and slowed intellectual decline
or disengagement and isolation - Maintain healthy or unhealthy lifestyle
- Optimism linked to happier, healthier, longer life
46Death and Dying The Final Stage
Developmental Psychology
- Kübler-Ross five stages
- Denial
- Anger
- Bargaining
- Depression
- Acceptance
47Application of Psychology Parenting
Developmental Psychology
- Parents play a key role in childrens lives
- Parenting and infant attachment
- Parenting and discipline style
- Effect in childrearing Two-way street
- Common discipline mistakes
- Lax parenting, verbosity, overreactivity, and
reinforcement of inappropriate behavior - Sociocultural factors in parenting
- Myth of the perfect parent
- Day care, divorce, and parenting
48 Baumrind Three Parenting Styles
Style Authoritarian Permissive Authoritative
Warmth low high high
Discipline strict rare moderate
Expected Maturity high low moderate
Communication parent-child high low high
Communication child-parent low high high
49The End
Developmental Psychology
9