Title: Child Development
1We Learn a Great Deal From the Classics
- Erik Erikson Jean Piaget
- (Stages of Psychosocial Development) (Model of
Cognitive Development) - Lawrence Kohlberg
- (Stages of Moral Development)
2Erik Erikson Stages of Psychosocial Development
3Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- Psychological drives and unconscious are
important - But social and environmental influences are just
as important - Each person goes through 8 stages with positive
or negative outcomes
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5Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- What is a 1 year old like?
- Trust vs Mistrust (1st year)
- Is trusting in the world
- If environment satisfies a person's needs he/she
will feel secure and trust people. If not,
insecure not trust others
6Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- What is a 1-3 year old like?
- Autonomy vs Doubt (1 - 3 years)
- Child attempting to become more independent
- Takes pride in doing things controlling things
- Toilet training is important
- Unable to control these functions by end of this
stage doubt or shame - If accomplished, feel capable and independent
7Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- What is a 3 5 year old like?
- Initiative vs Guilt (3 - 5 years)
- Learning self control
- Child becoming curious and wanting to explore
world - If parents do not allow child to explore
- Lack of initiative to learn and explore the world
- When they do try and fail, they feel guilty for
not being capable and living up to the standards
of others
8Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- What is a 6 11 year old like?
- Industry vs Inferiority (6 - 11 years)
- Excited and motivated about life
- Making new friends and trying to accomplish new
tasks - If they have trouble making friends they will
feel inferior - Need to feel confident that they can accomplish
things on their own - Feel industrious about themselves in the future
9Eriksons Stages of Psychosocial Development
- What are adolescents like?
- Identity vs Role Confusion (adolescents)
- Forming an identity and trying to answer "who am
I - If does not feel accepted by peers or no feelings
of accomplishments - Be confused about identity and role in life
10Jean Piaget Model of Cognitive Development
11Piaget the Model of Cognitive Development
- Prize scholar wonderful writer age 10
published article on an albino sparrow at the
park - He said younger children are not dumber than
adolescents they just think differently - Piaget had 3 kids they were all studied
extensively
12 13Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentSensorimot
or (Infancy)
- Infant is entirely tied to the present
- Responds to whatever stimuli available
- Does not remember one encounter to the next
- Gradually changes over 18-24 months
14Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentPreoperati
onal Thought (Childhood)
- Ages 2 7
- Mastery of symbols, especially language
- Uses mental images, imagination, symbolic logic
- Cannot conserve (thinks same amount of candy in
different jars is the same) - Has trouble with reversible thinking
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16Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentPreoperati
onal Thought (Childhood)
- Preconceptual (Ages 2 4)
- Develops concepts that are not complete or
logical - Reason is dominated by perception
- Inability to consider more than one aspect of a
situation - Egocentric social communication
17Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentPreoperati
onal Thought (Childhood)
- Intuitive (Ages 4 7)
- Intuitive rather than logical solutions
- Many ADHD DX during this time
- Considers more than one aspect of a situation
18Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentConcrete
Operations (Middle Childhood)
- Age 7 11
- Uses logic to make sense of things
relationships - Has ability to conserve (knows its the same
amount of candy in different jars) - Develops understanding of numbers groups
series - Concrete rather than abstract thinking
- Reversibility to thought (flat clay can be
reshaped as a ball) - Develops empathy for anothers position
- Greater capacity for attention, concentration,
memory
19Piagets Model of Cognitive DevelopmentFormal
Operations (Adolescence)
- Age 11 15
- Capable of abstract thought
- Has ability to deal with the hypothetical
- Can generalize thought, make inferences, use
deductive reasoning - Capable of flexibility creativity
- Develops higher levels of empathy idealism
20Lawrence Kohlberg Stages of Moral Development
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