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Title: SR6e Chapter 2


1
CHAPTER 2 THEORIES OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
2
Theories of Human Development
  • Theory Ideas proposed to describe/explain
    certain phenomena
  • Organizes facts/observations
  • Guides collection of new data
  • Should be internally consistent
  • Falsifiable Hypothesis can be tested and proven
    wrong
  • Supported by data

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Other Assumptions About Human Nature
  • Nature/Nurture Heredity or environment most
    influential?
  • Goodness/Badness Underlying good or evil
  • Active/Passive Development Self determination or
    by others
  • Continuity/Discontinuity Stages or gradual
    change
  • Quantitative/Qualitative Changes Degree or
    transformation
  • Universal or Context Specific Development

5
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
  • From Freuds theory Proposes that childhood
    sexuality and unconscious motivations influence
    personality
  • Techniques used in treating psychological
    disorders by seeking to expose and interpret
    unconscious tensions

6
Personality Structure
  • Freuds idea of the minds structure
  • Preconscious mind

7
Freud Psychoanalytic Theory
  • Instincts and unconscious motivation
  • Id, Ego, and Superego formed from psychic energy
    (Libido)
  • Id Instinctual nature of humans (anger and sex).
    Operates on the pleasure principle
  • Ego rational and objective (reality principle)
  • Superego internalized moral standards
  • A dynamic personality system
  • Regular conflicts between the three parts

8
Freuds Psychosexual Development
  • Child moves through five stages
  • Stages result from conflict between Id Superego
  • Conflict creates anxiety
  • Ego defends against anxiety with defense
    mechanisms
  • Early experiences have long-term effects on
    personality

9
Personality Development
  • Psychosexual Stages
  • the childhood stages of development during which
    the ids pleasure-seeking energies focus on
    distinct erogenous zones
  • Oedipus Complex
  • a boys sexual desires toward his mother and
    feelings of jealousy and hatred for the rival
    father
  • Electra Complex
  • a girls sexual desires for a penis, aimed at her
    father and feelings of jealousy and hatred for
    the rival mother

10
Strengths and Weaknesses of Freuds Theory
  • Strengths
  • Awareness of unconscious motivation
  • Emphasized important early experience
  • Weaknesses
  • Ambiguous, inconsistent, not testable
  • Not supported by research

11
Erik Erikson
  • Most influential neo-Freudian
  • Some differences with Freud
  • Less emphasis on sexual urges
  • More emphasis on rational ego
  • More positive, adaptive view of human nature
  • Development continues through adulthood

12
Eriksons Stages Approximate Ages
  • Trust vs. Mistrust Importance of responsive
    caregiver (1st year)
  • Autonomy vs. Shame Doubt (1 to 3)
  • Initiative vs. Guilt Preschool (4 to 5)
  • Industry vs. Inferiority School-age children
  • Identity vs. Role Confusion Adolescence
  • Intimacy vs. Isolation Young adult
  • Generativity vs. Stagnation Middle age
  • Integrity vs. Despair Old Age

13
Strengths and Weaknesses of Erikson
  • Strengths
  • Focus on identity crisis of adolescence still
    most relevant
  • Emphasis on rational and adaptive nature
  • Interaction of biological social influences
  • Weaknesses
  • Sometimes vague and difficult to test
  • Does not explain how development comes about

14
Behaviorism
  • Pavlov, Watson, Skinner
  • Behaviorism Conclusions should be based on
    observable behavior. Psychological aspects of
    development are determined by the environment.
    According to the behaviorists Everything is
    learned!!!!
  • Tabula Rasa - Environmental view

15
Classical Conditioning
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • Discovered classical condition by serendipity.

16
Learning Theories Classical ConditioningA type
of learning in which an organism learns to
connect or associate stimuli. A neutral stimulus
becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus and
acquires the capacity to elicit a similar
response.
  • Association Learning
  • NS Does not elicit a response
  • UCS Built-in, unlearned stimulus
  • UCR Automatic, unlearned response
  • CS Stimulus causes learned response
  • CR Learned response

17
Classical ConditioningPavlovs Original
Experiemnt

17
18
  • Little Albert The three phases of classical
    conditioning

19
Learning Theories Operant ConditioningSkinner
  • Probability of behavior based on environmental
    consequences
  • Operant Behavior - operates (acts) on environment
  • produces consequences
  • Consequences (rewards and punishments) are
    contingent on the organisms behavior.
  • Reinforcement (reward) increases the probability
    that a behavior will occur.
  • Punishment decreases the probability that a
    behavior will occur.

20
Types of Reinforcement
  • Positive reinforcement giving something that
    the person wants that increases the behavior
  • Examples
  • Praise
  • Teacher attention
  • Rewards
  • Negative reinforcement taking away something
    that the person does not want that increases the
    behavior
  • Cough medicine
  • Child stops whining when parent picks the child
    up
  • Nagging

21
Types of Punishment
  • Positive Punishment (type I or Presentation
    punishment) giving something that the person
    does not want that decreases the behavior
  • Detention
  • Extra work
  • Chores
  • Yelling
  • Negative Punishment (type II or Removal
    punishment) taking away something
  • that the person wants that decreases the
  • behavior
  • Loss of recess
  • Loss of favorite toy/activity

22
  • Possible consequences of whining behavior.
  • Moosie comes into the TV room and sees his father
    talking and joking with his sister. Lulu, as the
    two watch a football game. Soon Moosie begins to
    whine, louder and louder, that he wants them to
    turn off the television so he can play Nintendo
    games. If you were Moosies father, how would
    you react? Here are four possible consequences
    of Moosies behavior. Consider both the type of
    consequences whether it is a pleasant or
    aversive stimulus and whether it is
    administered (added to) or withdrawn. Notice
    that reinforcers strengthen whining behavior, or
    make it more likely in the future, whereas
    punishers weaken it.

23
Bandura Social Cognitive Theory
  • Formerly called social learning theory
  • Humans think, anticipate, believe, etc.
  • Cognitive Emphasis Observational learning
  • BoBo doll studies
  • Model praised or punished
  • Child learned to imitate rewarded model
  • Children learn vicariously.

24
Learning Theory Strengths Weaknesses
  • Strengths
  • Precise and testable theory
  • Carefully controlled experiments
  • Practical applications across lifespan
  • Weaknesses
  • Inadequate account of lifespan changes
  • Ignored genetic and maturational processes

25
The Ecology of Human Development
  • Bronfenbrenner Bioecological Model
  • How nature and nurture interact to produce
    development
  • Five environmental systems
  • Microsystem family
  • Mesosystem school
  • Exosystem society
  • Macrosystem culture
  • Chronosystem time

26
Fig. 1.2, p. 7
27
Contextual/Systems Theories
  • Gottlieb Evolutionary/Epigenetic Systems
  • Genes, neural activity, behavior, and environment
    mutually influential
  • Normal genes and normal early experiences most
    helpful

28
Gottlieb Developmental Psychobiology
  • Interaction Biological environmental
    influences
  • Individual programmed through evolution
  • Current behavior results from past adaptation
  • Ethology Behavior adaptive to specific
    environments
  • Species-specific behavior of animals humans

29
Gottlieb Epigenesis
  • Instinctual behavior may or may not occur
  • Depends on early physical and social environments
  • Genes alone dont influence behavior
  • A system of interactions
  • People develop in changing contexts
  • Historical
  • Cultural

30
Fig. 2.5, p. 53
31
Strengths and Weaknesses
  • Strengths
  • Stresses the interaction of nature and nurture
  • Weaknesses
  • Only partially formulated and tested
  • No coherent developmental theory

32
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