Title: Is A Little Learning Such A Dangerous Thing?
1Is A Little LearningSuch ADangerous Thing?
Sharing A Vision Conference Springfield, IL 1
October 2003
2The University of Chicago
Bennett L. Leventhal, M.D. Irving B. Harris
Professor of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry Professor of Psychiatry and
Pediatrics Director, Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry Director, The Sonia Shankman
Orthogenic School Laboratory of Developmental
Neurosciences
3Is A Little LearningSuch ADangerous Thing?
4A little of what is being learned?
- A little who is learning?
5What is the basic goal of early learning?
- To enhance developmental outcomes
6Nature and Nurture
- Interdependent concepts (examples)
- Nonhuman primate studies
- Effects of abuse on human infants
- effect of nurture on nature
- Effects of autistic disorder on maternal-infant
interaction - effect of nature on nurture
- Additive or Synergistic when genetic parents
raise child
7Basic Premise
- All considerations
- of all events in childhood
- (or in adulthood, for that matter),
- be they
- physiologic, psychological or experiential
- must take place
- in a
- developmental context
8Why Consider Development?
9What is Development?
- Longitudinal?
- Cross-Sectional?
10Development is a Process
- Individual and groups of characteristics and
variables acting individually and together.
11Phases/Stages
- Characterized by most prominent signs of rapid
development within a given developmental line
during a given time - Length of phase determined more by completion of
a related set of changes within a developmental
line than by number of months or years - Should not be generally assumed that
developmental tasks which are not most prominent
are not developing or being used
12Critical period
- Development of a function takes place during a
restricted time period relative to gestation - If appropriate stimulation is not present at that
time, development will be affected - Example - Hubel and Wiesel - monocular
deprivation of kittens during critical period of
visual system development (environmental input
and NMDA receptor dependent)
13Sensitive period
- Times during which loss of appropriate
environmental stimulation may have adverse
consequences, but which may be overridden by
stimulation outside of a narrow window - Example - abused or neglected children, who
develop relatively normally after rehabilitation
of parents' substance abuse, or after placement
in a nurturing, structured adoptive home
14Normality (necessary concept)
- There is no normal race, gender, or sexual
preference - Normality must be defined in the context of each
person's personal and cultural context - For example, in Physical Diagnosis you won't be
diagnosing your male patients as avaginal - Concept around which one should constantly refine
one's clinical judgment as a physician
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16Examples of normal as average not being healthy
- Although most children in Israel or the
Palestinian territories may have experienced
violence, it does not make it a healthy experience
17Is Successful Development
18What is Successful Development?
- The optimal use of individual and environmental
factors to reach the highest possible level of
adaptive functioning
19Individual Characteristics
- Genetics
- Appearance
- Size
- Attractive/Dysmorphic
- Intelligence
- Social Skills
- Personality
- Temperament
20Developmental Lines
21Development - Longitudinal
- Developmental Lines
- Physical/Gross Fine Motor
- Cognitive
- Language
- Psychosexual
- Interpersonal/psychosocial
- Affective
- Moral
- Spiritual
22Longitudinal Models
- Social
- Freud
- Mahler Separation-Individuation
- Erikson - Psychosocial
- Piaget - Cognitive
- Language
- Motor
- Kohut Object Relations
- Kohlberg Moral
- Others
23Social Stages of Development
- 0-12 months - Infancy
- 12 36 months - Toddler
- 36 60 months - Preschool
- 7 12 years - School Age
- 12 18 years - Adolescence
- 18 ?25 years Young Adulthood
- 25 ?65 years - Adulthood
- 65 years - Older Adulthood
24Language
- 6 months Coos, smiles, reaches
- 12 months - First words
- 18 months - Increasing words
- 24 months 2-3 word sentences
- 36 months - 3 word phrases
- 8 years - Knows person, place, time
25Gross Motor
- Roll over at 4 mo.
- 4 months roll over
- 6 months - Sit unassisted
- 12-15 months - Walk unassisted
- 30 months - run
- 36 months - Stairs one step/foot, Ride tricycle
- 6-7 years - Ride bicycle
26Fine Motor
- 4 weeks hands fisted
- 6 months - Grasps cube
- 18 months - Tower of 3 cubes
- 3 years - Draws circle
- 4 years - Draws square
27Development - Cross-sectional
- Observation of human development at a given time
- Domains are interdependent
- Quality of integration of domains is important
- The "whole" child or adult is subject of study
- Pro and con See forest well, but trees not as
clear
28Cross-Sectional Development
29Prenatal Development
- Almost all neurons born before 11 weeks
gestation - Almost all cell migration complete by 16 weeks
gestation - Drug exposures, most commonly alcohol and
nicotine lead to later behavioral problems
(dose-related)
30Prenatal Development
- Nutrition important during prenatal development
- Full-term or near-full term developmental failure
is mostly due to hypoxia and related to CNS
bleeding when birth excessively premature - However, outcomes progressively improving with
advances in neonatal care
31Post-natal Development
- When does it really begin?
- At delivery?
- In utero, near delivery?
32Post-natal Development
- Physiological homeostasis is main goal
- Key first step is feeding, which requires
adequate muscle tone for sucking
33Post-natal Development
- First 2 months social life largely bilateral
- Parental functioning is important
- Goodness of fit
- Support systems
- Time after birth is a sensitive period for
developing attachment between caregivers and the
infant
34Post-natal Development
- Bonding vs Attachment
- Bonding
- Lorenz
- like imprinting
- a critical period
- Attachment
- Bilateral
- Complex behavioral interaction
- Begins at birth
352-4 months
- 2 month social smile is very overdue for
first-time parents up all night with frequently
crying infants - Parents begin to more reliably read subtle cues
and patterns of child (e.g. communication of
hunger vs. needing a diaper change - 4 months - rolling over increases the risk for
falls - Interest in objects in environment
- Color
- movement
364-6 Months
- Rolling over at 4 months to sitting up unassisted
at 6 months - Child develops more three dimensional view of
their world but mobility limited - By 6 months, children are relatively social
without much fear of strangers
376-9 Months
- Emergence of normative separation anxiety and
stranger wariness - Children become more mobile although not usually
walking - Creeping
- Crawling
- Pulling up and standing
- For most children sleep and eating schedules are
relatively organized
389-12 Months
- Exciting time with development of single words
starting with dada (then mama) and with many
other single words by 12 months - Development of walking from assisted to
unassisted typically by 12 months - Increasing need for child-proofing (although this
should occur prenatally)
3912-18 Months
- Generally a time in which child is in love with
the world enjoying new mobility and its freedom - Object permanence by 12 months
- Joint attention by 12 months (will follow a point
by a parent to attend to something other than the
parent and child, just because of interest to the
parent)
4018-36 Month-olds
- 18-36 months - anal period (psychosexual),
autonomy vs. shame and doubt (psychosocial),
separation-individuation - reorganization of nervous system (pruning in
primary sensory cortex)
4118-36 Months
- Terrible twos
- Parental response important
- Child struggles to be soothed by parent without
feeling smothered - Voracious appetite for learning and trying new
things - Language
- 2-3 word phrases -gtshort sentences
4218-36 Months
- Ambivalent struggle over autonomy, because child
still needs parent - Parent has to set limits where necessary (esp.
safety issues) - Parent has to help child find a way out of
unsolvable conflicts (provide child with
easy-to-understand choices) - Parent has to be secure enough not to have to try
to win the power struggles
4336-48 Months
- Emergence of focus on more complex relationships
and enjoyment of developing skills without
focusing on autonomy - Begin to directly play with other children but
play is often parallel - Language plays a role in play
- Can speak in full thoughts sentences
- Many, but not all children enter nursery school
- Independence associated with bowel control end
of traditional anal period
44Four year-olds
- Has mastered toileting, although accidents not
uncommon, especially through the night - Rapid increase in social interest and competence
- Nursery school (common, but not compulsory)
- Conflicts over autonomy are not most prominent
conflict, but persist as a concern - Fundamentals of spoken language mastered can
tell a story and share feelings but still
concrete
45Four year-olds
- Conflicts over autonomy are not most prominent
conflict, but persist as a concern
46Four year-olds
- Identify self by gender
- Gender roles become stereotypic
- Internal forces
- child feels how they behave is who they are
- insecurity leads to conformity
- External forces
47Four year-old
- Learning basic rules of right and wrong
- Mastery of aggressive impulses often more
difficult for boys than girls - ? due to less well developed social competence in
boys (cant separate out nature from nurture
here) vs. preference for aggressive behavior
48Four year-old
- Triadic relationships are emergent domain
- (present before, but diadic relationships often
dominate scene earlier) - Competition more prominent
- Often competition with same sex parent and less
conflictual relationships with opposite sex parent
49Five year-old
- Kindergarten
- Pre-academic skills
- early reading
- writing currently enhanced by inventive
spelling - idea is to encourage expression
without constraint of spelling rules and details
for which child not ready - early reading, mostly by sight identification
50Five-year old - Academic
- early math skills - especially geometric and
functional - Counting and alphabet usually solid
- Early adding, but subtraction not typical
51Five year-old
- social skills further developing
- most children can contain their violence in
classroom at this point - disorders of activity and violence such as ADHD
and conduct disorder often first diagnosed
52Five year-old
- Continence typical, even at bedtime
- Failure to establish continence first diagnosed
- Enuresis - daytime or more commonly nocturnal
wetting - usually spontaneously remits by adolescence
- Encopresis - daytime or nighttime defecation
- if regular symptomatic of constipation or
emotional conflicts, particularly re autonomy
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54Interactional Models
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56Interactional Models - Example
- Rutter's study (England) of effects of
coeducational schooling on girls with early
puberty - adverse effect of coeducation only for low
socioeconomic status (SES) girls (increased risk
for delinquency (conduct disorder)
57Interactional Model - Example
- Low birthweight (prematurity) and SES
- 1500 - 2500 g range, low birthweight leads to
decreased cognitive capacity only in low SES
group - below 1500 g SES less important than birthweight
for cognitive outcome - lt 1500 g maternal risk behavior for prematurity
at higher rates in low SES groups
58MediatorsandModifiers
59Socioeconomic Status (SES)
- A generalizable risk factor
- Not to be equated with African-American,
Asian-American, Appalachian, Liverpoolian - Each society differs in generalizable effects of
race, gender, sexual preference on SES - There are NO generalizable effects of race, part
of world, part of country, gender, sexual
preference on any of the developmental lines
listed above or on risk for psychopathology which
are independent of SES effects
60Strengths
61Strengths/Resilience
- Too often we overlook strengths when considering
health or overlook context when considering
extent of stressors - Many children grow up healthy even under
traumatic experiences - Chronic trauma usually more problematic than
acute trauma, largely due to the absence of care
correlated with chronic trauma
62Is Impairment an indicator of Developmental
Failure?Inadequate Strengths or Resilience?
63Can We Create Strength?
64Principles of Mental Healthin Early Childhood
- Centrality of early parent-child relationship
- Development as transactional process
- Intergenerational influences
- Development in context
- Multiple pathways
- Adaptation
65Socioemotional Milestones in Young Children
- Social reciprocity ( 3-6 mos.)
- Attachment ( 6-12 mos.)
- Exploration/mastery (12-18 mos.)
- Individuation (18-30 mos.)
- Self-control (30-54 mos.)
- Cooperative play (30-54 mos.)
- Empathy (30-54 mos.)
66Infant Characteristics
- State regulation
- Soothability
- Predictability
- Temperament
- Robustness
- Interest in Exploration
- Social Responsiveness
67Infant Risk Factors
- Difficult temperament
- Low birthweight
- Prenatal exposure to substances
- Gender
- Developmental delay
- Physical health problems
68Parenting
69Parenting
- Biological
- Social
- Child-rearing
70Parenting
- Preparation
- Biology
- Maturity
- Modeling
- Formal Education
71Parenting
- Planning
- Unplanned
- Planned
- Partnerships
- Alone
- Mother-father
- Other models
72Parenting Risk Factors
- Young age at first birth
- History of maltreatment/deprivation
- Maternal depression
- domestic violence/marital discord
- multiple, closely spaced births
- social isolation
- poverty
73Parenting
- Goodness of Fit
- Individual characteristics of each parent
- Parent-to-parent
- Parents to child
- Parents to extended family
- Child to extended family
- Parents to community
- Child to Community
74Dyadic Processes
- Reciprocity
- Emotional engagement
- Synchrony
- Goodness of fit
- attachment
75Parent-Child Contributions to Relationship
Processes
- PARENT
- Emotional availability
- Sensitivity
- Predictability
- Flexibility
- Psychological resources
- CHILD
- Social responsiveness
- Readability
- Regularity
- Adaptability
- Developmental functioning
76Responsive Parenting
- Read cues accurately
- Interpret appropriately
- Respond contingently
- Awareness/responsiveness to childs changing
developmental needs - Attunement to childs emotional state
- Packaging stimulation
77Responsive Parenting with Toddlers and
Preschoolers
- Emotional availability
- Autonomy support
- Joint negotiation
- Consistent limit-setting
- Flexibility
- Labelling of emotions
- Fostering verbal problem-solving
78Discipline
- Authoritarian
- vs
- Authoritative
79How Young Children Learn To Control Their Behavior
- Developmental advances
- Structure and routine
- Parental guidance and modeling
- Experience of manageable challenge and mastery
- Experience of social problem-solving and
negotiation of conflict
80Child Risk Factors for Developing Behavior
Problems
- Genetic
- Prenatal substance exposure
- cognitive and language delays
- Temperament reactive, low adaptability, social
wariness, fussy/irritable
81Family Contributors to Young Childrens Behavior
Problems
- Exposure to violence
- Low parental supervision/monitoring
- Inconsistent, ineffective discipline
- Unresponsive Parenting
- Absence of proactive adult input in learning to
manage feelings, tolerate frustration and persist
82Supporting Healthy Emotional Development in Young
Children
- Providing safe, secure, consistent environments
- Fostering exploration and curiousity
- Building trusting relationships
- Nurturing families
- Helping children know their place
- Engendering hope
- Fostering development of adaptive skills
83Interventions for Young Children
- Behavioral
- Psychotherapeutic
- Psychopharmacologic
- AND
- Educational
84A few lessons before closing
85Provide an appropriate structure
- Activity should be qualitatively and
qualitatively appropriate
86Provide rules
- Not too many
- Make them simple and reasonable
87Somethings are hard to teach
- They still must be taught so that the child at
least has an accurate understanding of the facts
88Talk is cheap
- But, it is better than not talking at all and
conversing is even better
89Be developmentally sensitive
- Too much too soon can be as problematic as too
little too late
90Might is not always right
- But, it is still important to understand
differences in adult and child roles and how that
impacts learning
91Personal resources do make a difference
- Despite our wishes to the contrary we all have
limits
92We all get angry and frustrated, at least once in
a while
- Managing frustration is at least as important as
managing stress
93Experience does make a difference
- Not all experiences are good but there are
usually ways to make them have some positive value
94Fostering successful development is never easy
- The absence of frustration and failure means that
you either - Did not try hard enough
- Or
- You are a liar
95Dont ever under estimate the power of modeling
- Both Positive and Negative
96Timing isnt everything
- But, time well spent is pretty important
97Honesty is best policy
- Always tell the truth but being brutally frank is
not necessary
98Good behavior in the absence of complete
comprehension can be good
- And, it may even be adaptive
99What you see is not always what you get
- Blind reliance on or exposure to the media can be
dangerous
100Biology is not necessarily destiny
- Some biological factors can be modified by
experience
101The competent, consistent and developmentally
appropriate control of the child is never wrong!
- And, contrary to popular opinion, it neither
limits development nor inhibits creativity
102Dreaming is good
- It is better to have a dream dashed then to have
never dreamed at all
103Is A Little LearningSuch ADangerous Thing?
104I hoped you learned a little
105I hope that
- You did not feel endangered
AND
You are not dangerous