Title: Human Growth and Development: Chapter 9
1Human Growth and Development Chapter 9
- Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle
Childhood
2Physical Development
- In contrast to the rapid increase in height and
weight during the first years of life physical
development proceeds at a slowed pace during
middle childhood.
3Nutrition
- Less food is needed during middle childhood
because of the slower growth rate. (high quality
over high quantity) - Avoid junk food, excessive sugars and fats.
- Vegetarian diets are acceptable if iron and zinc
supplements are obtained. - At least 20 fat content is needed to keep growth
rate going. - Excessive fat, however, can lead to obesity.
4Obesity
- Some children accumulate empty calories from
high-sugar and high-fat foods. - Children who are overweight between the ages of
10 and 17 years will probably have a lifetime
problem. - Those who are overweight in their pre-teen and
teen years have a 64 chance of becoming obese
adults.
5Obesity
- Parents should
- Monitor childrens time spent watching
television. - Encourage physical activity all year round.
- Serve plenty of fruits and vegetables.
- Monitor fat intake.
- Make children aware of what theyre eating.
- Dont become obsessed with your childs obesity
(it could be genetic)
6Obesity Continued
- Physical growth is relatively slow until the
period when girls development may spurt. - American girl are reaching puberty faster than
recently thought. - ½ of African-American girls and 15 of White
girls begin to develop sexually by 8 years of age.
7More On Obesity
- Variables that cause fluctuations in the growth
of these children - Genetic influence
- Health
- Nutrition
- Development may well differ among cultures,
subcultures, and ethnic groups
8Physical Changes in Middle Childhood
- Kurt Fischer believes that he has found evidence
of at least 12 brain growth spurts. Two of which
occur during middle childhood. - Adults who are around children during this times
should provide appropriate stimulation that will
make them want to participate in the world to add
new connections and strengthen existing ones.
9Physical Changes in Middle Childhood
- Nature manufactured billions of brain cells more
than will be needed to ensure that the brain will
be ready to from enough connections for all the
needed abilities and skills. - The neurons that dont make the connections
simply die - The fittest of the neurons survive, so
- Keep busy, seek challenges, and stay alert!!
10Physical Changes in Middle Childhood
- Body proportion changes in middle childhood also
- Head size comes more in line with body
- Loss of the baby teeth and the emergence of
permanent teeth change the shape of the lower jaw - Trunk become thinner and longer
- Chest becomes broader and flatter
- Arms and legs begin to stretch, but show little
muscle development - Some children are tremendously active physically
and gradually display a steady improvement in
motor coordination.
11Children Who Are Exceptional
- The notion of exceptionality has changed
dramatically in recent years. - They used to be refused admission to public
schools - Today federal law mandates that children with
special needs should be educated in the
least-restrictive environment as possible to
achieve success. - Inclusion or Mainstreaming is the procedure of
taking a special needs student out of the regular
classroom, home, and family as infrequently as
possible.
12Children Who Are Exceptional
- Children who are exceptional received powerful
support from federal legislation with the passage
of the Education for All Handicapped Children in
1975, and is now known as the Individuals with
Disabilities Act.
13Cognitive Development
14Piaget and Concrete Operations
- Children in Piagets concrete operational period
operate mentally on their environment. - They employ logical thought processes through
concrete materials - They also concentrate on more than one aspect of
a situation which is decentering.
15Accomplishments of the concrete Operational Period
- Conservation appears children can conserve the
main idea - Seriation children can arrange objects by
increasing or decreasing size - Classification enables children to group objects
with some similarities within a larger category - Reversibility enables children to retrace their
thoughts - Numeration children understand the concept of
numbers
16New Ways of Looking at Intelligence
17Gardner and Multiple Intelligence
- Howard Gardner forged a link between thinking and
intelligence with his theory of multiple
intelligence. - Gardner defines intelligence as the ability to
solve problems or fashion products that are of
consequence in a particular culture setting or
community
18Gardners Eight Equal Intelligences
- 1. Linguistic Intelligence language is a
preeminent example of human intelligence - Children change their use of language to a more
flexible, figurative form. - 2. Musical Intelligence the early appearance of
musical ability suggests some kind of biological
preparedness - Most children cease musical development after
school begins. Around nine years of age serious
skill building commences - 3.Logical-mathematical Intelligence evolves from
our contact with the world of objects - Children begin to think abstractly instead of
concretely - 4. Spatial Intelligence important changes in
childrens thinking occurs during these years,
especially with the appearance of conservation
and reversibility - Middle childhood youngsters can now visualize how
objects seem to someone else and can manipulate
objects using their spatial intelligence
19Gardners Eight Equal Intelligences
- 5.Bodily-kinesthetic Intelligence our control of
bodily motions and the ability to handle objects
skillfully are defining features of an
intelligence - 6 7. Interpersonal and Intrapersonal
Intelligences Interpersonal intelligence builds
on an ability to recognize what is distinctive in
others, while intrapersonal intelligence enables
us to understand our own feelings - Autism is a deficit in this intelligence
- 8.Naturalist Intelligence the human ability to
discriminate among living things as well as a
sensitivity to our natural world.
20Sternbergs Triarchic Model of Intelligence
- 1.Components of Intelligence
- Metacomponents-help us to plan, monitor, and
evaluate our problem solving strategies - Performance components -help us to execute the
instructions of the metacomponents - Knowledge-acquisition components -help us to
learn how to solve problems - 2.Experience and Intelligence experience
improves our ability to deal with novel tasks and
to use pertinent information to solve problems - 3.The Context of Intelligence we learn how to do
those practical things that help us to survive in
our society. Skills are not acedemic
21Thinking and Problems Solving
22Children and Thinking Skills
- Children shouldnt just obtain knowledge but
- Apply what they have learned
- Integrate it with other facts
- Ask themselves if they could have done it any
better - Parents should
- Not focus merely on facts, but should stretch
childs thinking by asking questions that require
application, analysis, synthesis, and evaluation.
23A Thinking Skills Taxonomy
- The main purpose of the taxonomy is to provide a
classification of the goals of our educational
system - It consists of three major sections cognitive,
affective, and psychomotor domains - Cognitive is divided into 6 major classes
24Cognitive Taxonomy
- 1.00 Knowledge recall of specific facts
- 2.00 Comprehension understanding what is
communicated - 3.00 Application generalization and use of
abstract info in concrete situations - 4.00 Analysis breakdown of a problem into
subparts and detection of relationships among the
parts - 5.00 Synthesis putting together parts to form a
whole - 6.00 Evaluation using criteria to make judgments
25Using Questions to Improve Thinking Skills
- Good questions cause children to pay attention,
process information, organize their ideas, and
compose an answer - Questions should be clearly and concisely phrased
- Give children enough time to answer
- When children respond parents should clarify,
expand, and synthesize, and never let an
incorrect answer stand
26Problem Solving Strategies
27Characteristics of a Good Problem-Solver
- Four components needed for problem-solving
goals, obstacles, strategies for overcoming
obstacles, and evaluation of results - Children (7-12 years) show marked improvement in
memory - They become more capable of transferring
ever-increasing amounts of info to long-term
memory by strengthening synaptic connections - Childrens speed in processing info increases as
cognitive skills grow
28Improving Childrens Problem-Solving Strategies
- The adaptive strategy choice model of Robert
Seigler says that most children devise a wide
variety of strategies to solve their problems,
and depending on the nature of the problem
theyll select what they think is the most
appropriate strategy
29What Kind of Mistakes do Children Make?
- Failure to observe and use all the relevant facts
of a problem - Failure to adopt systematic, step-by-step
procedures - Failure to perceive vital relationships in the
problem - Frequent use of sloppy techniques in acquiring
and applying vital information
30The DUPE Model
31Dont Let Yourself be Deceived
- D- determine what the nature of the problem is
- U- understand the nature of the problem
- P- plan your solution
- E- evaluate your plan
32Moral Development
33The Path of Moral Development
- 2-3 years begin to learn about right and wrong
from their parents enormously impressed by what
their parents do - 2-6 years developing ability to decide whats
right and wrong telling the truth remains a
tough task - 7-11 years learn about making and following
regulations as well as deriving insights into
those children who break the rules
34Parents and Moral Development
- Children whose mothers treated them reasonably,
but firmly, after transgressions seemed more
sensitive to matters of right and wrong. - Children with older siblings who were friendly
and supportive seemed more morally mature.
35Piagets Explanation
- Up to 4 years children arent concerned with
morality rules are meaningless - At 4 years begin to believe rules are fixed and
unchangeable, they come from authority and are to
be obeyed without question-heteronomous morality
believe in immanent justice anyone who breaks a
rule will be punished immediately - From 7-11 years- realize that individuals
formulate social rules, which can be
changed-autonomous morality think that
punishment should be linked to intent
36Kohlbergs Theory
- Kohlberg employed a modified clinical technique
called the moral dilemma in which a conflict
leads subjects to justify the morality of their
choices - Middle childhood youngsters are typically at
Kohlbergs Preconventional level of morality - As they approach 10 and 12 they begin to edge
into the conventional level of morality where
acts are right because thats the way its
supposed to be - 13 and over are the postconventional level of
maturity and only a small level of adults reach
this level
37Gilligans View on Womens Morality
- Initially, any moral decisions a girl has to make
center on the self - Gradually, a sense of responsibility for others
appears and goodness is equated with
self-sacrifice and concern for others - Finally, women resolve the conflict between
concern for self and concern for others have a
guiding principle of non-violence - Must women exclude themselves and be thought of
as a good women or exclude others and be
thought of as selfish
38Language Development
39Changes in Usage
- An increase in pragmatic sophistication
interaction between language and socialization
devising new ways to use these words
40Issue of Literacy
- 1. Basic Literacy reading, writing, listening,
and speaking - 2. Scientific Literacy knowledge of science,
scientific thinking, math - 3. Visual Literacy ability to decipher,
interpret, express ideas using images, charts,
graphs, and video - 4. Information Literacy ability to find,
evaluate, and use info effectively - 6.Cultural Literacy knowledge and appreciation
of the diversity of peoples and cultures - 7. Global awareness understanding and
recognition of the interrelations of nations,
corporations, and politics around the world
41END OF SLIDE SHOW
- Editing was done by
- Katie Jo Robinson
- Mrs. Mary Lu Andreu