The First Two Years: Biosocial Development - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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The First Two Years: Biosocial Development

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The Developing Person Through Childhood and Adolescence by Kathleen Stassen Berger Seventh Edition Chapter 5 The First Two Years: Biosocial Development – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The First Two Years: Biosocial Development


1
The First Two Years Biosocial Development
The Developing Person Through Childhood and
Adolescence by Kathleen Stassen Berger
Seventh Edition
Chapter 5
  • Slides prepared by Kate Byerwalter, Ph.D., Grand
    Rapids Community College

2
Body Changes
  • An average newborn is 7½ lbs, 20 inches.
  • Infants triple their birthweight by 1 year.
  • By age two, they are about ½ their adult height
    (!) and ¼ their adult weight.

3
Body Changes
ALL INES YVETTE LARAYA ERESE
4
Body Changes (cont.)
  • Percentile ranks allow comparisons of an
    individual infant to group norms
  • A sudden drop in percentile rank might indicate a
    developmental problem.
  • Head Sparing in cases of inadequate nutrition,
    the brain keeps growing

5
The Wonderful World of SLEEP
  • Newborns sleep 17 hours a day.

DAVID YOUNG-WOLFF / PHOTOEDIT, INC.
6
Infant Sleep (cont.)
  • Infants gradually adjust to the familys sleep
    schedule.
  • 80 of 1 year olds sleep through the night
  • Sleep cycles are influenced by brain maturation,
    diet, child-rearing practices, and birth order

7
Make It Real Co-Sleeping
  • Some families practice co-sleeping, in which
    the family shares a bed.
  • Why might a family do this? Do you think it could
    benefit or harm an infant?

8
Research on Co-Sleeping
  • CULTURE influences the decision (it is more
    common in Eastern culture)
  • It is not harmful to an infant, under normal
    circumstances (e.g., if adult is not drunk)
  • It may increase dependence on parents

9
Brain Development
  • Brain development during infancy is fascinating
    and rapid.
  • By the age of 2, the brain is 75 its adult
    weight
  • Neural connections in the brain also develop

10
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11
Brain Development (cont.)
  • Regional specialization neurons in certain areas
    of the brain correspond to different tasks
  • Examples language, vision, smell, emotional
    processing, recognizing faces vs. objects, etc.

12
The Developing Cortex
13
Brain Development (cont.)
  • Transient exuberance rapid proliferation of new
    neural connections in infancy
  • As many as 15,000 new connections per neuron and
    100 trillion synapses by age 2!
  • Pruning makes the brain more efficient by
    eliminating underused connections.

14
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15
What influences early brain development?
  • Brain development is influenced by maturation and
    experiences.
  • Experience-expectant brain functions require
    basic common experiences.
  • Example No matter where an infant lives, he or
    she hears sounds and language.

16
What influences early brain development? (cont.)
  • Experience-dependent brain functions depend on
    exposure to particular events.
  • Example The particular sounds and language heard
    (and learned) varies across infants.
  • Example The development of impulse control
    depends on both maturation and practice.

17
Why are neural connections so important?
  • A certain level of neural connections indicate
    healthy brain development.
  • Lack of connections may result from child abuse
    or neglect early in life, and can have lasting
    consequences.
  • Example Infants in orphanages

18
Make it Real Activities
  • Make a list of toys and activities that can
    stimulate healthy brain development in the first
    two years of life.

PHOTODISC
19
Implications for Caregivers
  • Is it possible to overstimulate an infant? YES!
  • The key is to follow the infants lead
  • Self-righting an infants inborn drive to use
    whatever experiences available to develop the
    brain (wow!)

20
Infant Senses
  • All five senses function at birth
  • Vision, hearing, taste, touch, smell
  • Perception (the brains processing of the
    sensation) develops over time.

21
Infant Senses (cont.)
  • Hearing is well developed at birth
  • Infants respond to sudden noises, human voice,
    phonemes of language
  • Vision is the least mature sense at birth
  • Bionocular vision develops around 14 weeks
  • Adult vision (20/20) by one year

22
Infant Senses (cont.)
  • Taste, touch, smell function well at birth

All CINDY CHARLES / PHOTOEDIT, INC.
23
Motor Skills
  • Motor skills develop according to two principles
  • Cephalocaudal growth proceeds from head-to-toe
    (e.g., head lift before sit, stand, walk)
  • Proximal-distal growth proceeds from torso
    outward (e.g., sucking before kicking)

24
Motor Skills (cont.)
  • Reflexes account for the first motor skills.
  • Survival reflexes include sucking, breathing,
    body temperature.
  • Other reflexes include the Babinski, Moro, and
    stepping reflexes.

25
Infant Reflexes
ASTIER / BSIP / SCIENCE SOURCE / PHOTO
RESEARCHERS, INC.
JENNY WOODCOCK REFLECTIONS PHOTOLIBRARY / CORBIS
PETIT FORMAT / PHOTO RESEARCHERS, INC.
26
Make it Real Motor Skills
  • At what age do you think most infants learn to
    walk?
  • What about you?

PHOTODISC
27
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28
Motor Skills (cont.)
  • Gross motor skills involve large muscle
    movements.
  • Examples crawling, sitting, walking
  • Walking typically occurs around 12 months, with
    great variability across infants.
  • Walking requires muscle strength, brain
    maturation, and practice.

29
Motor Skills (cont.)
  • Fine motor skills involve small muscle movements.
  • Examples learning to grasp, shake, pull an
    object, hold a spoon, write, draw, etc.
  • Motor skills are influenced by genes, culture,
    and patterns of infant care.

30
Public Health Measures
  • Infant survival rates have increased
    significantly in the past century, due to better
    nutrition, cleaner water, and immunization.
  • Although not without controversy, immunization
    has been hailed as a major achievement (e.g.,
    significantly reducing polio, small pox, measles).

31
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32
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
  • SIDS is infant death of an unknown cause.
  • Protective factors (although not a guarantee)
    include NO cigarette smoke in house, noise and
    touch during sleep, breast feeding, sleeping on
    back
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