Title: Human Development
1Human Development
2I. Introduction To Development
- A. Developmental Psychology the branch of
psychology that studies the physical, mental and
social changes throughout the human life cycle.
3- B. The major issues in development
- 1. Nature Vs Nurture The question involves
which has more impact on our development the
traits we inherit or the environment that we live
in - 2. Continuity Vs Stages (discontinuity) Asks
the question is development gradual, or does it
proceed through a sequence of separate stages - 3. Stability Vs Change Do our personality
traits persist or doe we become different as we
age
4II. Prenatal Development
- A. Prenatal Development
- 1. The Germinal Stage
- a. Zygote the fertilized egg it enters a
2-week period of rapid cell division and develops
into an embryo - b. At about 7 days the egg becomes implanted on
the uterine wall. - c. Also during this time period the placenta is
formed. The placenta both provides support for
the developing human and also helps to process
waste material.
5- 2. embryo the developing human organism from
about 2 weeks after conception through the second
month - 3. Fetus the developing human organism from
about 9 weeks through birth
62 Months
4 Months
40 Days
45 Days
7- 4. Teratogen Agents such as chemicals and
viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus
during prenatal development and cause harm - 5. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome physical and
cognitive abnormalities in children caused by a
pregnant womans heavy drinking. Symptoms
include facial mis-proportions
8- 6. Development occurs
- a. cephalocaudal head first then the body
- b. and Proximodistal meaning form the center
outward
9Development of Newborns
- Once upon a time,
- you were like this too
10What is an infant?
- While there is no formal definition of an infant,
a child is considered an infant until the age of
1 or until he/she can walk
11- The Competent Newborn
- 1. Reflex Abilities
- a. Rooting reflex a babys tendency, when
touched on the cheek, to open the mouth turn the
head and search for the nipple - b. Sucking reflex the tendency to suck on an
object placed in the mouth
12- c. Grasping reflex If an object is placed in
the palm or in the foot pad, the baby will try to
grasp it and hold on.
13- d. Moro reflex when startled a baby will first
lash out with its arms and legs and then try to
pull its arms and legs in to make it as small as
possible. - e. Babinski reflex When a babys foot is
stroked he or she will spread the toes.
14- 2. Research on the capabilities of babys
- a. In regard to hearing
- Babies prefer the sound of a human voice,
especially their mother - babies will suck more vigorously on a pacifier
that triggers a recording of their mothers voice - b. In regards to smell
- Babies will turn their heads toward the smell of
their own mother
15- c. In regards to vision?
- A newborn can only see roughly 18 cm away from
them - Babies prefer to look at an object that resembles
a human face - They prefer objects that are between 8 - 12
inches away - which happens to be about the
distance from the breast to the mothers face
16Perceptual Development
- Babies are always perceiving what is in their
world and the world around themselves
17- Gibson and Walk experimented with babies
perceptual ability - They found that children like patterns and faces
the most
18- Younger babies were not afraid.
- Older babies realized the drop off and did not
attempt to crawl across the checkerboard table
19Language Development
- By the time a baby is 2 years old he/she will
know up to 1,500 words - By the age of five have a rather lengthy
vocabulary - Between the ages of 2-5 a child learns, on
average, 10 words per day
20- Is language learned or innate?
- Chomsky vs Skinner
- Chomsky- Just happens- children acquire
untaught words and grammar at a fast rate - Skinner- association, imitation and reinforcement
21Physical Development
- 2 months Raise head 45 degrees
- 4 months Sit with support
- 7 months Pull self into standing position
- 10 months Creep (slowly crawl)
- 12 months Walking
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24- c.
- 3. Research Strategies
- a. Habituation decreasing responsiveness with
repeated stimulation - b. Used with infants to study vision - As
infants gain familiarity with repeated exposure
to a visual stimulus, their interest wanes and
they look away sooner.
25III. Infancy and Childhood
- A. Physical Development
- 1. Brain Development
- a. Maturation biological growth processes that
enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively
uninfluenced by experience
26- b. Maturation and Infant Memory
- i. We have few early memories because we lack
the neural connections to make memories - ii. What we do have
- 3 month olds can remember to use their foot to
move a mobile, but forget after 1 month - 3 year olds were shown an out-of-focus picture.
They can recall the picture better if they were
shown a clear version, 3 months earlier even
though they have no conscious recollection of
ever seeing the picture
27- c. Motor Development
- i. The sequence of motor development is
universal - ii. The timing varies from culture to culture
- There are genetic factors that influence
development as well. Twins begin walking on
about the same day - Motor development is not entirely a process of
maturation, the environment does play a role.
28- B. Cognitive Development
- 1. In General
- a. Prior to Jean Piaget most people believed
that children knew less as opposed to knowing
differently - b. Piaget believed cognitive development
occurred in a series of stages - c. According to Piaget the driving force behind
our development is our struggle to make sense of
and interpret our ever changing environment - d. Schema a concept or framework that
organizes and interprets information
29- Children learn through two complimentary
processes of assimilation accommodation. - e. Assimilation interpreting ones new
experience in terms of ones existing schemas - f. Accommodation adapting ones current
understandings to incorporate new information - 2. Piagets Theory and Current thinking
- a. cognition all the mental activities
associated with thinking, knowing and remembering
30Piagets Stages of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor-
- Birth 2 years
- Behavior consists of simple motor responses to
sensory stimuli. - Use of senses to react to body and surroundings.
31Object Permanence
- What does an infant do if she loses sight of a
toy?
32Object Permanence Cont
- According to Piaget, she forgets that it ever
existed! - Object Permanence defined- a childs realization
that an object exists when he or she cannot see
or touch it. - At 7-12 months- child will search for toy.
33- Egocentrism the fact that infants can not
distinguish between itself and its environment/a
young childs inability to understand another
persons perspective. - Evidence for this theory includes Piagets study
on object permanence. Between the ages of 0 to 5
months an object that was visibly hidden will not
be searched for - Evidence against includes
- the study done by Bower and Wishart in which a
child between 1 and 4 months was reaching for an
object when the room was darkened. Under
infra-red light the baby was observed to continue
reaching for the object. - Also Bower did a study on 1 month olds where an
object was shown then placed behind a screen.
The object was then removed and the screen
lifted. The babies seemed to show surprise
34- The preoperational stage
- The stage from about 2 - 6 or 7 years old during
which a child learns to use language but does not
yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete
logic - Conservation-the principle that properties such
as mass volume and number remain the same despite
changes in the forms of the objects - Use of mental images or symbols to understand
things.
35- Judy DeLoach illustrated the difference between
the sensorimotor and preoperational stages in her
experiment where a toy dog was hidden in a model
room and then in a real room. - 2 1/2 year olds couldnt use model
- 3 year olds could
36- Theory of Mind
- Peoples ideas about their own and others mental
states- about their feelings, perceptions, and
thoughts and the behavior these might predict - Autism impacts the Theory of Mind because
children with autism have difficulty removing
themselves from their own perspective. - In the study by Peterson Siegal the child with
autism cannot separate their knowledge from that
of Sally the doll.
37- Concrete operational stage
- From about ages 6 or 7 to 11 during which
children gain the mental operations that enable
them to think logically about concrete events - Evidence for
- Children can now perform conservation of liquid
experiments because they can compensate for the
changes in height and width and they can mentally
reverse the procedure - Evidence against McGarrigle and Donaldson who
found that children in the preoperational stage
could perform these tasks
38- Formal operational stage
- Beginning around age 12 the stage during which
people begin to think logically about abstract
concepts - Evidence for
- Child can complete tasks without the use of
manipulatives (objects) - Children when given a problem will use deductive
reasoning and logic to solve a problem rather
than trial and error - Evidence against Gladwin pointed out how Piaget
overlooked the impact culture has
39- Reflecting on Piaget
- a. Theoretical Criticism
- i. Age
- Much research has seemingly demonstrated that
children posses many of the cognitive abilities
that Piaget outlined at ages much earlier than he
expected - Often improving upon the method of assessing the
child reveals their cognitive abilities better - In addition, Piaget seemed to have over estimated
peoples formal operational ability some
research has even suggested that only 1/3 of the
population actually reach this stage - ii. Concepts
- Some of the concepts are vague and the stages
often show so much overlap that development is
better described as continuous
40- By focusing on the childs mistakes, Piaget may
have over looked important abilities that
children do possess - Lev Vygotsky
- a. Russian researcher who placed more emphasis
on social interaction - b. Focuses on the role of social interaction and
language on the acquisition of cognitive
abilities. - Children that talk to themselves, helps them to
control behavior and emotions and to master new
skills.
41- d. The Zone of Proximal Development
- A child maybe capable of higher cognitive
functioning with the aid of a more able helper. - For example if you give a young child a puzzle
that is above their level they may struggle to
complete it. However with the adults guidance
they might be able to complete the same puzzle
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43b. Sensorimotor stage i. Defined the stage
from birth to about 2 years of age during which
infants know the world mostly in terms of the
sensory impressions and motor activities
44- vi. Evidence for
- In class inclusion test children can not use sets
and subsets like in the bead experiment - Piaget and Inhelder used the Three Mountain task
to demonstrate egocentrism in children. The
participants could not express the scene from
anothers perspective
45- Conservation experiments use test like moving
water from a fat short beaker to a large beaker
to see if a child understands reversibility - vii. Evidence against
- McGarrigle et al found that when they made the
task more understandable and appropriate children
in the preoperational stage with a mean age of 6
could accomplish this type of class inclusion
test In this case the transformation to the rows
was made by a naughty teddy bear - Hughes demonstrated that 3.5 year olds could
complete the three mountain task if set up
differently. In his demonstration a boy doll had
to hide from two police dolls
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47- Social Development
- Attachment
- a. Attachment an emotional tie with another
person shown in young children by their seeking
closeness to the caregiver and showing distress
on separation - b. Psychologist are concerned with how
attachments form, if there is a critical period
in which they must form and what happens if these
attachments do not form.
48- How does attachment form
- a. Pre-attachment phase 0-3 months infant
shows a preference for humans over objects - b. Indiscriminate phase 3-7 months infant
can distinguish between people and allows
strangers to handle it. - c. Discriminate phase 7-9 months Infant
develops specific attachments to certain people
and shows distress upon separation from them.
May show a fear of strangers - d. Multiple Attachment Phase 9 months and
beyond Increasingly independent and forms other
bonds beyond the initial strong attachments.
49- 3. Forms of Attachment
- a. Type A Avoidant or detached approximately
20 of sample, infant ignores mother, not
impacted by her leaving or arriving. - b. Type B Securely Attached 70 of sample
plays while mother is present, distressed when
mother leaves, and relieved when she returns - c. Type C Anxious-resistant 10 of sample
distressed by mother leaving but not comforted by
her return
50- 4. Stranger Anxiety aka Separation Anxiety
- a. The fear of strangers that infants commonly
display at about 8 months of age - b. Purpose it is the ability to evaluate
people as unfamiliar and possibly threatening and
therefore helps protect babies
51- 5. The Harlow Study
- In Harlows famous study he put a caregiver (wire
monkey with food) and a comfort giver (wire
monkey covered with fur) in the cage - He found that the monkeys became more attached to
the fur monkey rather than the nutrition mother.
When in stressful situations the monkeys returned
to the fur mother. - The findings illustrated the importance of body
contact in attachment and relate to humans in
that they too require this attachment to feel safe
52- 6. Familiarity
- a. Critical Periods a period shortly after
birth when an organisms exposure to certain
stimuli or experiences produces proper
development - b. Imprinting the process by which certain
animals form attachments during the critical
period
What would ducklings do if I were the first
moving creature they saw?
Konrad Lorenz
53Everywhere that Konrad went, the ducks were sure
to go.
54- The Lorenz Studies
- He studied ducks and geese by changing the first
object they came into contact with after they
were hatched - these included himself and even
objects like balls - The application of his studies to humans is
questioned especially in the area of how
important it is to humans and if there is even a
critical period in which this contact must be
established
55- Responsive Parenting
- a. Mary Ainsworth and others believed that
responsive parenting would lead to secure
attachment. - b. One possible explanation of this phenomenon
is that it is learned from the mother - Rats pups raised by attentive adoptive mothers
are more likely to be attentive to their own pups
56- c. Studies on responsive parenting
- Mary Ainsworths study placed young children
into strange situations and then measured their
response - those children who were more securely attached
did not react with the distress that the
insecurely attached children did
- Monkeys raised by artificial mothers were
terror-stricken when placed in strange situations
without their surrogate mothers
57- Deprivation of Attachment Children raised in
institutions such as orphanages often are unable
to make connections later in life due to the lack
of relationships as a child - Disruption of Attachment Infants removed from
their foster mothers experience difficulties at
first - but by age 10 there is no visible effects
58- When raised in isolation Harry Harlows monkeys
- i. cowered in fear or lashed out aggressively
when later placed with other monkeys - ii. many were unable to mate
- iii. those artificially impregnated were either
neglectful or abusive parents - This relates to criminal behavior in that
- i. many people who abuse children were also
abused themselves - ii. 6/7 death role inmates were horribly abused
as children
59- Does Day Care Affect Attachment?
- a. In a study by Sandra Scarr, results indicate
that in the case of high quality day care
programs there appears to be no problems - kids
are very sturdy - b. Ideal day care programs warm supportive
interactions with adults in a safe, healthy, and
stimulating environment - an environment in which
any child can frequently talk with a familiar
adult caregiver - c. Studies on infant day care
- i. Belsky and Zigler found that children who
attended over 20 hrs/week of early day care were
less secure as 1 yr olds and more likely to be
disobedient - ii. two separate studies showed that children
who were in quality programs prior to 6 months of
age were more outgoing, popular, and academically
successful
60- Self Concept
- 1. Self concept a sense of ones identity and
personal worth - 2. According to Darwin Self-concept emerges when
a child recognizes himself in the mirror - 3. This idea was tested by dabbing a dot of
rouge on a childs nose - at around 15-18 months
the child will touch his own nose thus showing
they recognize the face in the mirror is their own
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64- Contact comfort in primates the innate pleasure
derived from close physical contact.
65- ii. The Van den Boom study
- 100- 6-9 month old temperamentally difficult
children randomly assigned to one of two
conditions - one groups mothers were given special training
on responsive parenting the others received no
training - The result showed that at age 1, 68 of the
babies in the experimental condition had become
securely attached. - E. Child Rearing Practices
- 1. Authoritarian parenting style imposes rules
and expects obedience - 2. Permissive style makes few demands and uses
little if any punishment
66Parental Authority Questionaire
- Column 1 add up 1 6 10 13 14 1719 21
24 28 - Column2 add up 2 3 7 9 12 16 18 25 26
29 - Column 3 add up 4 5 8 11 15 20 22 23
27 30
67Results of Authoritative Parenting Style
68- 3. Authoritative parenting style parents are
both demanding and responsive - they exert
control not only by setting rules and enforcing
them but also by explaining the reasons and
especially with older children, encouraging open
discussion and allowing exceptions when making
the rules - 4. Baumrinds studies on parenting style
- a. Shows that children whose parents use an
authoritative style have the highest self esteem,
self reliance and social competence
69- b. These findings maybe flawed because
- i. Correlation does not causation
- ii. Could the childs temperament change the way
the parent parents - 5. Further studies on parenting style
- a. One study examined two types of parenting
techniques - Power assertion a method of child rearing in
which the parent uses punishment and other
aversive techniques to control the childs
behavior - Induction a method of child rearing in which
the parent appeals to the childs own abilities,
sense of responsibility and feeling for others to
control the childs behavior. - b. Results showed that the children who were
punished were more likely to be aggressive and
unruly later on in life.
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71Bellringer
- You are a student aide for the AP English
Literature teacher. Your friend is in danger of
failing the class. If they fail they will loose
their scholarship to college. They ask you to
steal the next test for them. Write down AS MANY
reasons (justifications) you can think of as to
why you choose to do it or not do it.
72Adolescence
73Storm Stress
- A. Adolescence the transition period from
childhood to adulthood, extending from puberty to
independence - B. Physical Development
- 1. Puberty the period of sexual maturation,
during which a person becomes capable of
reproducing
74- During adolescence, unused neural networks are
eliminated - What we dont use, we lose.
- The growth of myelin continues, which allows
better communication with other brain
75- C. Cognitive Development
- 1. During adolescence a period of developing
reasoning power emerges. - This relates to Piagets last stage of
cognitive development - the Formal Operational
stage where the person is able to reason
logically about abstract ideas
76- 2. During adolescence a period of developing
moral growth also emerges - a. Piaget believed that moral reasoning grew as
cognitive abilities developed - b. Building on this idea Lawrence Kohlberg
developed a theory of stages of moral reasoning - c. He studied this idea by presenting moral
dilemmas to his subjects and then asking them to
explain why they responded in the way they did.
77- d. Stages of Moral Development
- i. Pre-conventional level
- stage 1. Characterized by the avoidance of
punishment - stage 2. Characterized by the desire to have the
exchange of favors - ii. Conventional level
- stage 3. Characterized by living up to the
expectations of others - stage 4. Characterized by doing ones duty
- iii. Post-conventional level
- stage 5. characterized by the understanding that
values and rules are relative but generally need
to be upheld - stage 6. Universal ethical principles
78- 3. Moral Action
- a. One of the best predictors of a persons
actions is what his friends do. - b. We can teach children moral reasoning through
discussion and action. - 4. Critique of moral reasoning
- a. Kohlbergs stages has been criticized as
being to Euro centric. His system values the
individual more whereas certain cultures are more
collective.b. Carol Gilligan has argued that
Kohlbergs model was biased towards males - i. In her theory men show a morality of
justice based on equality whereas women show a
morality of care based on the idea that none
should be hurt - ii. She developed three stages of moral
development for women Care for ones own
survival, Care for others, and Care for integrity
of self and others)
79The Story of Heinz
- In Europe, a woman was near death from a special
kind of cancer. There was one drug that the
doctors thought might save her. It was a form of
radium that a druggist in the same town had
recently discovered. The drug was expensive to
make, but the druggist was charging ten times
what the drug cost him to make. The sick woman's
husband, Heinz, went to everyone he knew to
borrow the money, but he could only get together
about 1,000 which is half of what it cost. He
told the druggist that his wife was dying and
asked him to sell it cheaper or let him pay
later. But the druggist said "No, I discovered
the drug and I'm going to make money from it.
Later that night, Heinz broke into the drug store
and took the drug.
80What he was looking for
- Kohlberg did not care about the yes or no answer
about stealing the drug, but rather the
explanation behind the answer
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83- 2. Primary Sex Characteristics the body
structures (ovaries, testes, and external
genitalia) that make sexual reproduction possible - 3. Secondary Sex Characteristics non
reproductive sexual characteristics, such as
female breasts and hips, male voice quality, and
body hair - 4. Menarche the first menstrual period
84- D. Social Development
- 1. Erik Erikson a developmental psychologist
of the psychodynamic perspective - his theory
states that we develop socially in stages - 2. Contends that each stage of life has its own
psychosocial task, a crisis that needs resolution
85- 3. Stages of Psychosocial Development before
Puberty - a. Infancy Age 0 through 1
- i. known as the Trust Vs. Mistrust stage.
- ii. Task if needs are met infants develop a
sense of basic trust - b. Toddlerhood 1 - 2 years
- i. Known as Autonomy Vs. Shame and doubt
- ii. Task learn to exercise will and do things
for themselves or they will doubt their own
abilities - c. Preschooler 3 -5 years
- i. Known as Initiative Vs. guilt
- ii. Task learn to initiate tasks and carry out
plans, or they feel guilty about efforts to be
independent - d. Elementary School 6 - Puberty
- i. Known as Competence Vs. Inferiority
- ii. Task children learn the pleasure of
applying themselves to tasks, or they feel
inferior
86- 4. Stages After Puberty
- a. Adolescence teen years into early 20s
- i. Known as Identity Vs. Role Confusion
- ii. Task Teenagers work at refining a sense of
self by testing roles and then integrating them
to form a single identity, or they become
confused about who they are - iii. Identity ones sense of self according
to Erikson, the adolescents task is to solidify
a sense of self by testing and integrating
various roles - b. Young Adulthood Age 20s - Early 40s
- i. Known as Intimacy Vs. Isolation
- ii. Task Young adults struggle to form close
relationships and to gain the capacity for
intimate love, or they feel socially isolated
87- iii. Gender and Social Connectedness
- According to Carol Gilligan males are more
individualist - they use communication to offer
solutions to problems whereas females are more
relationship oriented - Giulianos research found that males are more
willing to hazard guesses to questions rather
than admit they just dont know. She coined this
the male answer syndrome - iv. Intimacy the ability to form close,
loving relationships a primary development
88VI. Adulthood
- A. Physical Changes
- 1. Menopause the time of natural cessation of
menstruation - 2. Physical Changes in later life
- a. Life Expectancy as a whole we now live longer
than ever before. Women live longer than males - b. Sensory abilities diminish with age. For
example visual acuity diminishes, reaction time
slows down, muscle strength diminishes, as well
as many other areas.
89- c. Dementia and Alzheimer's
- i. Alzheimers a progressive and irreversible
brain disorder characterized by gradual
deterioration of memory, reasoning, language, and
finally physical functioning - Research on estrogen therapy and Alzheimers
shows that women who took estrogen supplements
for at least 10 years were 40 less likely to
suffer from Alzheimers - 3. Cognitive Changes
- a. Aging and Memory
- i. According to researchers Schonfield and
Robertson recall memory declines with age, but no
measurable decline in recognition tasks has been
demonstrated - ii. Information with out a clear meaning or
purpose ( nonsense syllables) and timed events
(like remembering medication
90- b. Aging and Intelligence
- i. Cross-sectional studies are studies in which
people of different ages are compared with one
another - ii. These type of studies show that intelligence
declines with age - iii. a longitudinal study is research in which
the same people are restudied and re-tested over
long periods of time - iv. These type of studies show that intelligence
remains stable until very late in life - A cohort sequential study combines cross
sectional and longitudinal. Corrects for the
cohort effect - The cohort effect occurs because people raised
in similar times might exhibit similar qualities. - v. Crystallized intelligence Ones accumulated
knowledge and verbal skills - which tend to
increase with age - vi. Fluid intelligence Ones ability to reason
speedily and abstractly - tends to decrease
during late adulthood
91- 4. Social Changes
- a. Middle Adulthood 40s - 60s
- i. Known as Generativity Vs. Stagnation
- ii. Task the middle-aged discover a sense of
contributing to the world, usually through family
and work. If they do not develop this sense the
will feel a lack of purpose - b. Late Adulthood 60s and Up
- i. Stage Integrity Vs. Despair
- ii. Task A sense of satisfaction with the life
that has been led or a sense of failure and
despair at opportunities lost - c. Social clock the culturally preferred
timing of social events such as marriage,
parenthood and retirement
92Death Dying
- Development is lifelong.
- Death is the final challenge
93- B. Death and Dying
- 1. Kubler-Ross Stages of Death
- a. Denial resistance to the initial discovery
by seeking other opinions or refusal to accept
death will occur - b. Anger and resentment often directed at
others out of resentment, frustration and
feelings of injustice (Why me?) - c. Bargaining for more time with God, fate or
medical professionals to change the situation - d. Depression when the inevitability of death
is realized. Grieving or depression may occur
for all that will be lost - e. Acceptance giving up to death, becoming
more resolved withdrawn and emotionally drained
94- 2. Ramsay and DeGroots stages of grief
- a. Shock the initial reaction
- b. Disorganization inability to plan
- c. Denial behaving as if the deceased is still
alive - d. Depression despair
- e. Guilt for thoughts or behavior towards the
dead. - f. Anxiety about inability to cope with the
changes - g. Aggression resulting from anger and
frustration - h. Resolution increasing acceptance of death
- i. Reintegration reorganization and adjustment
95- 3. Evaluation
- a. Much of the evidence comes from observational
studies - b. Various responses to death based on culture
- i. Expression of grief varies Japanese
stoicism to Muslim wailing - ii. Duration varies from Navajo 4 day period to
Orthodox Jew period of 1 year
96- Do not go gentle into that good night,
- Old age should burn and rave at close of day
- Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
- Dylan Thomas
97Being Old
- 1. Tape the Popsicle sticks to your fingers so
that they DO NOT stick out over the ends. - 2. Tape the plastic wrap baggie to your head.
- 3. The helpers job is very important. They
must maintain the safety of their patient.
98- Once the person has become elderly they must
perform the following tasks in no particular
order. - get a world civ. book and read the quote on page
485 - tie a shoe
- button a jacket or shirt
- get a drink
- negotiate the stairwell
- write your name
- Once you have completed these tasks switch roles.
- Clean up your mess!
- Last, write two paragraphs discussing what it
was like to be old in class and what it may
feel like in reality.
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101- Once you have completed these tasks switch roles.
- After both of you have completed these tasks.
You should clean up your mess and start your
homework. - The assignment is to write two separate journal
entries about your experiences today.
102- Each journal entry should be about a page in
length. - One journal entry will talk about what it was
like to be old in class and what it may feel
like in reality. - The second entry should talk about what it was
like to have to help someone today and what it
may be like in reality.
103iii. Attitudes vary from fear of the dead by the
Hopi to worshiping of the dead by practitioners
of Japanese Shinto
104Prompt 10
- What is the most difficult part of being a
teenager in society today?
105Bell-ringer 4
- What do you think will be the best part of being
an adult out on your own? - What will be the worst?
- Do you think kids your age are in too big of a
hurry to grow-up? Why or why not?
106Prompt 12
- Write 5 multiple choice test questions on human
development. Also create one essay question.
107Possible Essay Questions
- One of the great psychological questions is
whether development occurs in stages or is
continuous. Discuss the moral, social and
cognitive development of children in the first 5
years of life.
108- 1. Did you get spanked as a child?
- 2. Will you use spanking with your child?
- 3. Is it an appropriate punishment for
- A. talking back
- B. disobeying a request
- C. getting in trouble at school
- D. bad grades
- 4. How old is the oldest a child should be
spanked - 5. Is slapping in the face okay?