Title: Ch. 4 Infancy and Childhood
1Ch. 4Infancy and Childhood
- What is the impact of physical maturation on
infants memory capabilities and motor skills? - Within the brain, nerve cells form before birth.
After birth, the neural networks that enable us
to walk, talk, and remember have a wild growth
spurt. Maturation, the biological growth
processes that enable orderly changes in
behavior, sets the basic course of development
and experience adjusts it.
2Continued
- The lack of neural connections in infancy
explains our inability to remember events prior
to our third birthday. - The average age of earliest conscious memory is
3.5 years. - Experiments do, however, show that infants can
retain learning over time.
3But waittheres more!
- As the infants muscles and nervous system
mature, ever more complicated skills emerge. - Sitting, standing, and walking develop in a
predictable sequence, although the actual timing
is a function of individual maturation rate. - Genes play a major role, too. Identical twins
typically begin sitting up and walking on nearly
the same day. - Experience has a limited effect for other
physical skills as well, including those that
enable bowel and bladder control.
4What is Piagets view of how the mind develops,
and what is his stage theory of cognitive
development? What is current thinking regarding
cognitive stages? 1. Cognition refers to all
the mental activities associated with thinking,
knowing, and remembering. 2. Jean Piaget
maintained that the mind of the child is not a
miniature model of the adults. 3. He
theorized that the mind develops by forming
schemas (a cognitive concept that helps organize
and interpret information) that help us
assimilate our experiences and that must
occasionally be altered to accommodate new
information.
5Continued
- In this way, the child progresses from the
sensorimotor stage of the infant to the more
complex stages of thinking. - By about 8 months, an infant exhibits object
permanence, an awareness that things still exist
even when they are out of sight.
6Piaget believed
- that preschool children are egocentric (the
inability of the child to take anothers point of
view) and unable to perform simple, logical
operations (the preoperational stage). - However, he thought that at about age 6 or 7,
children become capable of performing concrete
operations, for example, those required to
comprehend the principle of conservation (see
page 146).
7He also believed
- By age 12, reasoning expands from the purely
concrete to encompass abstract thinking, called
by Piaget formal operational thinking. - Recent research shows that young children are
more capable and their development more
continuous than Piaget believed. - The cognitive abilities that emerge at each stage
have begun developing in a rudimentary form in
the previous stage. Todays researchers also see
formal logic as a smaller part of cognition than
Piaget did.
8Researchers have found
- that although still egocentric, preschoolers
begin forming a theory of mind and they realize
that others may hold false beliefs. - Autism, a disorder characterized by deficient
communication and social interaction, is marked
by an impaired theory of mind.
9The Russian psychologist, Lev Vygotsky
- also found that by age 7, children stop thinking
aloud and instead rely on internal speech, which
makes them more capable of verbal thinking and of
using it to work out solutions to problems.