Title: Socioemotional Dev in Early Childhood
1Socioemotional Dev in Early Childhood
- Lecture 11
- C6035 Human Development
2The Self-Initiative Versus Guilt
- Erikson-psychosocial stage that characterizes
early childhood - Children use perceptual, motor, cognitive,
language skills to make things happen - Governor of initiative is conscience, which
generates feeling of fear of being found out,
while hearing inner voice of self-observation,
self-guidance, self-punishment - Self-Understanding childs cognitive
representation of self, substance content of
childs self-conceptions-rudimentary beginning of
self-understanding beginning with
self-recognition occurring at approximately 18
months
3The Self-Initiative Versus Guilt
- Developmental Timetable of Young Childrens
Emotion Language Understanding - Preschoolers become more adept at talking about
their own and others emotions - Between 2 and 3 years of age, children
considerably increase number of terms they use to
describe emotion - At 4-5- years of age, they begin to understand
that same event can elicit different feelings in
different people
4Helping Children Understand Emotions
- Parents, teachers, other adults can talk with
children to help them cope with their feelings of
distress, sadness, anger, or guilt - Strategies for teachers
- making sure the emotional climate of the
classroom encourages emotional expression - structure the physical environment to help
children learn about feelings - use stories and books with emotion themes
- use an arts center for emotional expression deal
with childrens quarrels and disputes
5Moral Development
- What Is Moral Development
- Moral development concerns rules contentions
about what people should do in their interactions
with other people - Focus is on reasoning children use to justify
their moral decisions
6Piagets View of How Childrens Moral Reasoning
Develops
- Children think in two distinctly different ways
about morality - Heteronomous morality is first stage occurring
approximately 4 to 7 years of age where justice
rules are conceived as unchangeable properties of
world - They also believe in imminent justice, in that if
a rule is broken, punishment will be meted out
immediately
7Piagets View of How Childrens Moral Reasoning
Develops
- Second stage is autonomous morality occurring at
about 10 years of age or older, where the child
becomes aware that rules and laws are created by
people and that one should consider the actors
intentions as well as the consequences.
8Piagets View of How Childrens Moral Reasoning
Develops
- Moral Behavior - is influenced extensively by
situation - Social learning theorists believe that ability to
resist temptation is closely tied to development
of self-control - Cognitive factors are important in childs
development of self-control. - Moral Feelings - Contributing to childs moral
development are positive feelings such as
empathy, which is reacting to anothers feelings
with an emotional response that is similar to
others feelings
9Gender
- What Is Gender?
- Gender identity is sense of being male or female,
which most children acquire by the time they are
3 years old - Gender role is a set of expectations that
prescribe how females or males should think, act
feel
10Gender
- Biological Influences there are human sex
chromosomes which determines our gender - Two main classes of hormones are estrogen, which
influences development of female physical sex
characteristics androgens, which promote
development of male physical features - Social Influences Parents are only one of many
sources through which individual learns gender
roles. Culture, schools, peers, media, other
family members also contribute
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12Gender
- Identification Learning Theory - stems from
Freuds view that preschool child develops sexual
attraction to opposite-sex parent - At 5 or 6 years of age child renounces
attraction because of anxious feelings - Social Learning Theory of Gender - emphasizes
that childrens gender development occurs through
observation imitation of gender behavior
through rewards punishments children
experience for gender-appropriate inappropriate
behavior
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14Gender
- Parental Influences Mothers are consistently
given responsibility for nurturance physical
care - Fathers are more likely to engage in playful
interaction to be given responsibility for
ensuring that boys girls conform to existing
cultural norms. - Peer Influences Researchers believe that boys
teach one another required masculine behavior
enforce it strictly, while girls pass on female
culture congregate mainly with one another - Peer demands for conformity to gender roles
become especially intense during adolescence
15Gender
- School and Teacher Influences In certain ways,
both girls boys might receive an education that
is not fair - Girls learning problems are not identified as
often as boys - Boys are given lions share of attention
- Girls start school testing higher in every
academic subject, yet graduate scoring lower on
SAT exams - Boys are most often at top of their classes
pressure to achieve is more likely to be heaped
on boys that on girls
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17Gender
- Media Influences teaches what is appropriate or
inappropriate for males for females - In 1980s 1990s, television networks became more
sensitive to how males females were portrayed
on television shows, so that now, females are
being portrayed as more competent in
advertisements - Cognitive Developmental Theory belief that
childrens gender typing occurs after they have
developed concept of gender - Once they consistently conceive of themselves as
male or female, children often recognize their
world on basis of gender
18Gender
- Gender Schema Theory a cognitive structure,
network of associations that organizes guides
individuals perceptions in terms of female
male - Persons attention behavior are guided by
internal motivation to conform to gender-based
sociocultural standards stereotypes - Role of Language in Gender Development Gender is
present in language children use and encounter - English language contains sex bias, especially
through the use of he man to refer to everyone
19Families
- Parenting Styles three types of parenting styles
are outlined by Diana Baumrind - Authoritarian restrictive, punitive style where
parents demand child to follow directions,
respect work effort, place firm limits
controls on child, allowing little verbal
exchange - Authoritative encourages children to be
independent, places limits controls but with
extensive verbal give--take - Indulgent parents are highly involved with their
children but place few demands or controls on them
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21Adaptation of Parenting to Developmental Changes
in Child
- Parents also need to adapt their behavior to
child, based on developmental maturity - They cannot treat a 2-year-old the same as a
5-year-old - Children in both of these age groups have
separate needs abilities
22Sibling Relationships
- Childrens sibling relationships include helping,
sharing, teaching, fighting, playing - Children also follow their parents dictates more
than those of their siblings behave more
negatively punitively with their siblings than
with their parents
23Birth Order
- Oldest child is only one who does not have to
share parental love affection with other
siblings. - An infant requires more attention that older
child this means firstborn sibling now gets less
attention than before newborn arrived - Parents have higher expectations for firstborn
children put more pressure on them for
achievement responsibility
24Changing Family in a Changing Society
- Children are growing up in a greater variety of
family structures than ever before - Many mothers spend greatest part of their day
away from their children - The United States has highest percentage of
single-parent families, compared with virtually
all other countries
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26Working Mothers
- Material employment is a part of modern life
- It meets needs that cannot be met by the previous
family ideal of a full-time mother and homemaker - Some believe it is a pattern better suited to
socializing children for the adult roles they
will occupy
27Effects of Divorce on Children
- Most researchers agree that children from
divorced families are more likely to have - academic problems
- less socially responsible
- less competent intimate relationships
- drop out of school
- become sexually active
- take drugs
- associate with antisocial peers
28Should Parents Stay Together for the Sake of
Their Children
- If the stresses disruptions in family
relationships associated with an unhappy,
conflictual marriage eroding well-being of
children are reduced by the move to a divorced,
single-parent family, divorce may be advantageous
29How Much Do Family Processes Matter in Divorced
Families
- Family processes matter a lot
- When divorced parents relationships with each
other is harmonious when they use authoritative
parenting - adjustment of children improves - About one-fourth to one-third of children in
divorced families, compared to 10 percent in
non-divorced families, become disengaged from
their families
30Factors involved in Childs Vulnerability in
Divorced Family
- Among the factors involved in childs risk
vulnerability are - Childs adjustment prior to the divorce
- Childs personality temperament,
- Childs developmental status gender
- Custody situation.
31Non-custodial Parents Role in Lives of Children
in Divorce
- Most non-residential fathers have friendly,
compassionate relationship with their children,
rather than traditional parental relationship - Frequency of contact with non-custodial fathers
childrens adjustment is usually found to be
unrelated, as quality of contact matters more
32Role Socioeconomic Status Plays in Lives of
Children in Divorce
- Custodial mothers experience loss of about
one-fourth to one-half of their pre-divorce
income - Accompanied by increased workloads, high rates of
job instability residential moves to less
desirable neighborhoods.
33Cultural, Ethnic Socioeconomic Variations in
Families
- Although there are cross-cultural variations in
parenting most common pattern is a warm
controlling style that is neither permissive nor
restrictive - Investigators find that childrens healthy social
development is most effectively promoted by love
at least some moderate parental control - Families within different ethnic groups differ in
size, structure, composition, reliance on
kinships networks levels of income education
34Peer Relations
- Peer Relations - As children grow older, peer
relations consume an increasing amount of their
time - Peer Group Functions - Peers are children of
about same age or maturity level who provide
source of information comparison about world
outside family - Good peer relations may be necessary for normal
socioemotional development
35Distinct but Coordinated Worlds of Parent-Child
Peer Relations
- Parent-child relationships can serve as emotional
bases for exploring enjoying peer relations - In one study, children in care settings who had
secure attachment relationships with their
teachers were more gregarious less hostile
toward their peers than were their counterparts
with insecure attachments with their teachers
36Play
- Play extensive amount of peer interaction during
childhood involves play, which is pleasurable
activity that is engaged for its own sake - Plays Function is essential to young childs
health by increasing affiliation with peers,
releasing tension, advancing cognitive
development, increasing exploration, providing
safe heaven in which to engage in potentially
dangerous behavior - Play Therapy allows child to work off
frustrations where therapist can analyze childs
conflicts ways of coping with them
371. Partens Catagories of Play (1932)
- Unoccupied Play child is not engaging in play as
it is commonly understood - Solitary Play child plays alone independently
of others - Onlooker Play child watches other children play
- Parallel Play child plays separately from
others, but with toys like those being used by
others - Associative Play play involves social
interaction with little or no organization - Cooperative Play involves social interaction in
group with sense of identity organized activity
382. Partens Catagories of Play (1932)
- Sensorimotor Play engaged in by infants to
derive pleasure from exercising existing
sensorimotor schemas - Practice Play repetition of behavior when new
skills are being learned or when physical or
mental master coordination of skills are
required for games or sports - Pretense/Symbolic Playwhen child transforms
physical environment into a symbol - Social Playinvolves social interaction with
peers which increases dramatically during
preschool
393. Partens Catagories of Play (1932)
- Constructive Play combines sensorimotor
practice repetition activity with symbolic
representation of ideas - occurs when children
are in self-regulated creation - Games activities engaged in for pleasure which
include rules often competition with one or
more individual - highest incidence of game
playing has been reported in the 10 to 12 year
old range.
40Television
- 20,000 hours of television watched by time
average American adolescent graduates from high
school are greater than number of hours spent in
classroom
41Television's Many Roles
- Television makes children
- passive learners
- teaches them stereotypes
- provides them with violent models of aggression
- presents them with unrealistic views of world
- It also provides
- models of prosocial behavior
- increases their information about world beyond
their immediate environment
42Television Effect on Children's Aggression
Prosocial Behavior
- In one study - amount of violence viewed on TV at
age 8 was significantly related to the
seriousness of criminal acts performed as an
adult - While children need to be taught critical viewing
skills to counter adverse effects of TV violence,
they can also be taught how to behave in
positive, prosocial way
43Television Cognitive Development
- Television is negatively related to childrens
creativity because it primarily is a visual
modality verbal skills are more enhanced by
aural print exposure - Younger viewers often fill in their incomplete
representations of what they are viewing with
stereotypes familiar scripts