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Major theories of Child development

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Title: Major theories of Child development


1
Theories of Child Development
Jean Piaget Lev VygotskyAbraham Maslow
B.F. Skinner Erik Erickson
Howard Gardner
2
Why Study Child Parenting Development Theories?
  • Theories help people
  • Organize their ideas about raising children.
  • Understand influences on parenting.
  • Discover more than one way to interact with
    children.
  • Analyze the benefits and consequences of using
    more than one theory.

3
Why Study the Selected Theories?
  • The selected theories
  • Have been popular and influential.
  • Represent different approaches to parent-child
    interaction.
  • Offer help in the real world of daily
    child-rearing.
  • Make good common sense.

4
Child Development
  • Definition
  • Change in the child that occurs over time.
    Changes follow an orderly pattern that moves
    toward greater complexity and enhances survival.
  • Periods of development
  • Prenatal period from conception to birth
  • Infancy and toddlerhood birth to 2 years
  • Early childhood 2-6 years old
  • Middle childhood 6-12 years old
  • Adolescence 12-19 years old

5
Domains of Development
  • Development is described in three domains, but
    growth
  • in one domain influences the other domains.
  • Physical Domain
  • body size, body proportions, appearance, brain
    development, motor development, perception
    capacities, physical health.
  • Cognitive Domain
  • thought processes and intellectual abilities
    including attention, memory, problem solving,
    imagination, creativity, academic and everyday
    knowledge, metacognition, and language.
  • Social/Emotional Domain
  • self-knowledge (self-esteem, metacognition,
    sexual identity, ethnic identity), moral
    reasoning, understanding and expression of
    emotions, self-regulation, temperament,
    understanding others, interpersonal skills, and
    friendships.

6
6th - 15th centuriesMedieval period
  • Preformationism children seen as little adults.
  • Childhood is not a unique phase.
  • Children were cared for until they could begin
    caring for themselves, around 7 years old.
  • Children treated as adults (e.g. their clothing,
  • worked at adult jobs, could be
  • married, were made into
  • kings, were imprisoned or
  • hanged as adults.)

7
16th CenturyReformation period
  • Puritan religion influenced how children were
    viewed.
  • Children were born evil, and must be civilized.
  • A goal emerged to raise children effectively.
  • Special books were designed for children.

8
17th Century Age of Enlightenment
  • John Locke believed in tabula rasa
  • Children develop in response to nurturing.
  • Forerunner of behaviorism

www.cooperativeindividualism.org/ locke-john.jpg
9
18th CenturyAge of Reason
  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  • children were noble savages, born with an innate
    sense of morality the timing of growth should
    not be interfered with.
  • Rousseau used the idea of stages of development.
  • Forerunner of maturationist beliefs

10
19th CenturyIndustrial Revolution
  • Charles Darwin
  • theories of natural selection and survival of the
    fittest
  • Darwin made parallels between human prenatal
    growth and other animals.
  • Forerunner of ethology

11
20th Century
  • Theories about children's development expanded
    around the world.
  • Childhood was seen as worthy of special
    attention.
  • Laws were passed to protect children,

12
Psychoanalytical Theories
  • Beliefs focus on the formation of personality.
    According to this approach, children move through
    various stages, confronting conflicts between
    biological drives and social expectations.

13
Sigmund Freud
  • Psychosexual Theory
  • Was based on his therapy with troubled adults.
  • He emphasized that a child's personality is
    formed by the ways which his parents managed his
    sexual and aggressive drives.

14
  • Psychoanalytic Theories
  • Freuds Psychosexual Theory
  • Personality has 3 parts
  • There are 5 stages of psychosexual development
  • Oedipus complex allows child to identify with
    same-sex parent
  • Fixation is an unresolved
  • conflict during a stage of
  • development

15
Freudian Stages
6 yrs to puberty
Birth to 1½ yrs
1½ to 3 yrs
Puberty onward
3 to 6 years
Phallic Stage Childs pleasure focuses on
genitals
Latency Stage Child represses sexual
interest and develops social and intellectual sk
ills
Anal Stage Childs pleasure focuses on
anus
Genital Stage A time of sexual reawakening
source of sexual pleasure becomes
someone outside of the family
Oral Stage Infants pleasure centers on
mouth
Figure 2.1
16
Erik Erikson
  • Psychosocial Theory
  • Expanded on Freud's theories.
  • Believed that development is life-long.
  • Emphasized that at each stage, the child acquires
    attitudes and skills resulting from the
    successful negotiation of the psychological
    conflict.

17
Psychosocial Theory of Human Development Erik
Erikson
Life is a series of stages. Each individual must
pass through each stage. The way in which a
person handles each of these stages affects the
persons identity and self-concept. These
psychosocial stages are
  • Trust vs. mistrust (birth to 1 year)
  • Autonomy vs. shame doubt (2 to 3 years)
  • Initiative vs. guilt (4 to 5 years)
  • Industry vs. inferiority (6 to 11 years)
  • Identity vs. role confusion (12 to 18 years)
  • Intimacy vs. isolation (young adulthood)
  • Generativity vs. stagnation (middle adulthood)
  • Integrity vs. despair (older adulthood)

18
Eriksons Psychosocial Theory of Human
Development
Ego Integrity vs. Despair
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Intimacy vs. Isolation
Identity vs. Role Confusion
Industry vs. Inferiority
Initiative vs. Guilt
Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt
Trust vs. Mistrust
19
Critique of Erik Erikson
  • Supporters of this Eriksonian theory, suggest
    that those best equipped to resolve the crisis of
    early adulthood are those who have most
    successfully resolved the crisis of adolescence.
  • On the other hand, Erikson's theory may be
    questioned as to whether his stages must be
    regarded as sequential, and only occurring within
    the age ranges he suggests. There is debate as to
    whether people only search for identity during
    the adolescent years or if one stage needs to
    happen before other stages can be completed.

20
Cognitive Theories
  • Beliefs that describe how children learn

21
Jean Piaget - 1896-1980
The behavior of children and the development of
their thinking can only be explained by the
interaction of nature (intrinsic development) and
nurture (extrinsic environmental factors).
Goal of cognitive development Biological
survival Cognitive development as biological
adaptation Adaptation of mental constructs from
experiences Learner as the little
scientist Knowledge originates from the
environment Assimilation accommodation lead
to equilibrium Cognitive development involves
active selection, interpretation, and
construction of knowledge
22
Cognitive Development Theory
  • Two processes are essential for development
  • Assimilation
  • Learning to understand events or objects, based
    on existing structure.
  • Accommodation
  • Expanding understanding,
  • based on new information.

Jean Piaget (1896-1980)
23
Piaget
  • Children pass through specific stages as they
    develop their Cognitive Development skills
  • Sensorimotor birth - 2 years infants develop
    their intellect
  • Preoperational 2-7 years children begin to
    think symbolically and imaginatively
  • Concrete operational 7-12 years children
    learn to think logically
  • Formal operational 12 years adulthood
    adults develop critical thinking skills

24
Lev Vygotsky - 1896-1934
The cultures in which children are raised and the
ways in which they interact with people influence
their intellectual development. From their
cultural environments, children learn values,
beliefs, skills, and traditions that they will
eventually pass on to their own children.
Through cooperative play, children learn to
behave according to the rules of their cultures.
Learning is an active process. Learning is
constructed.
  • Main points
  • Development is primarily driven by language,
    social context and adult guidance.

25
What is Zone of Proximal Development?
  • It is a range of tasks that a child cannot yet
    do alone but can accomplish when assisted by a
    more skilled partner.
  • There is a zone of proximal development for each
    task. When learners are in the zone, they can
    benefit from the teachers assistance.
  • Learners develop at different rates so they may
    differ in their ability to benefit from
    instructions.

26
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27
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28
What is Scaffolding
  • Assistance that allows students to complete tasks
    that they are not able to complete independently.
  • Effective scaffolding is responsive to students
    needs. In classroom, teachers provide
    scaffolding by
  • Breaking content into manageable pieces
  • Modeling skills
  • Provide practice and examples with prompts
  • Letting go when students are ready

29
Biological Theories
  • Belief that heredity and innate biological
    processes govern growth

30
Maturationists G. Stanley Hall and Arnold Gesell
  • Believed there is a predetermined biological
    timetable.
  • Hall and Gesell were proponents of the normative
    approach to child study using age-related
    averages of children's growth and behaviors to
    define what is normal.

31
Ethology
  • Examines how behavior is determined by a species'
    need for survival.
  • Has its roots in Charles Darwin's research.
  • Describes a "critical period" or "sensitive
    period, for learning

32
Konrad Lorenz
  • Ethologist, known for his research on imprinting.

33
Attachment Theory
  • John Bowlby applied ethological principles to his
    theory of attachment.
  • Attachment between an infant and her caregiver
    can insure the infants survival.

34
Behavioral and Social Learning Theories
  • Beliefs that describe the importance of the
    environment and nurturing in the growth of a child

35
John Watson
  • Early 20th century, "Father of American
    Behaviorist theory.
  • Based his work on Pavlov's experiments on the
    digestive system of dogs.
  • Researched classical conditioning
  • Children are passive beings who can be molded by
    controlling the stimulus-response associations.

36
B. F. Skinner
  • Proposed that children "operate" on their
    environment, operational conditioning.
  • Believed that learning could be broken down into
    smaller tasks, and that offering immediate
    rewards for accomplishments would stimulate
    further learning.

37
Theory of Behaviorism- B.F Skinner others
Based on Lockes tabula rasa (clean slate)
idea, Skinner theorized that a child is an empty
organism --- that is, an empty vessel ---
waiting to be filled through learning
experiences. Any behavior can be changed
through the use of positive and negative
reinforcement. Behaviorism is based on
cause-and-effect relationships.
38
Classical Conditioning
Pavlov's Dogs
39
Major elements of behaviorism include
  • Positive and negative reinforcement
  • Use of stimulus and response
  • Modeling
  • Conditioning.

B.F. Skinner
Albert Bandura
Ivan Pavlov
40
Skinner Box
Operant Conditioning
41
Social Learning Theory
  • Albert Bandura
  • Stressed how
  • children learn
  • by observation
  • and imitation.
  • Believed that
  • children gradually become more selective in what
    they imitate.

42
Banduras Modeling/Imitation
Child observes someone admired
Child imitates behavior that seems rewarded
43
Systems Theory
  • The belief that development can't be explained by
    a single concept, but rather by a complex system.

44
Urie Bronfenbrenner
  • Ecological Systems Theory
  • The varied systems of the environment and the
    interrelationships among the systems shape a
    child's development.
  • Both the environment and biology influence the
    child's development.
  • The environment affects the child and the child
    influences the environment.

45
Bronfenbrenners Ecological Model
  • The microsystem - activities and interactions in
    the child's immediate surroundings parents,
    school, friends, etc.
  • The mesosystem - relationships among the entities
    involved in the child's microsystem parents'
    interactions with teachers, a school's
    interactions with the daycare provider
  • The exosystem - social institutions which affect
    children indirectly the parents' work settings
    and policies, extended family networks, mass
    media, community resources
  • The macrosystem - broader cultural values, laws
    and governmental resources
  • The chronosystem - changes which occur during a
    child's life, both personally, like the birth of
    a sibling and culturally, like the Iraqi war.

46
Theory of Multiple Intelligence Howard Gardner
47
Howard Gardners theory
Howard Gardner defines intelligence as "the
capacity to solve problems or to fashion products
that are valued in one or more cultural setting"
(Gardner Hatch, 1989). Using biological as well
as cultural research, he formulated a list of
seven intelligences. This new outlook on
intelligence differs greatly from the traditional
view that usually recognizes only two
intelligences, verbal and mathematical.
48
Who is Howard Gardner?
  • Howard Gardner is a psychologist and Professor at
    Harvard University's Graduate School of
    Education.
  • Based on his study of many people, Gardner
    developed the theory of multiple intelligences.
  • Gardner defines intelligence as ability to solve
    problems or to create products which are valued
    in one or more cultural settings.
  • According to Gardner, 8 different types of
    intelligence are displayed by humans.

49
Gardners Intelligences
50
Logical-Mathematical Intelligence
  • consists of the ability to
  • detect patterns
  • reason deductively
  • think logically
  • This intelligence is most often associated with
    scientific and mathematical thinking.
  • Famous examples Albert Einstein, John Dewey.

51
Linguistic Intelligence
  • involves having a mastery of language
  • This intelligence includes the ability to
    effectively manipulate language to express
    oneself rhetorically or poetically.
  • It also allows one to use language as a means to
    remember information.
  • Famous examples Charles Dickens, Abraham
    Lincoln, T.S. Eliot, Sir Winston Churchill.

52
Spatial Intelligence
  • gives one the ability to manipulate and create
    mental images in order to solve problems.
  • This intelligence is not limited to visual
    domains--Gardner notes that spatial intelligence
    is also formed in blind children.
  • Famous examples Picasso, Frank Lloyd Wright

53
Musical Intelligence
  • encompasses the capability to recognize and
    compose musical pitches, tones, and rhythms.
  • (Auditory functions are required for a person to
    develop this intelligence in relation to pitch
    and tone, but these functions would not be needed
    for the knowledge of rhythm.)
  • Famous examples Mozart, Leonard Bernstein, Ray
    Charles.

54
Bodily-Kinesthetic Intelligence
  • is the ability to use one's mental abilities to
    coordinate one's own bodily movements.
  • This intelligence challenges the popular belief
    that mental and physical activity are unrelated.
  • The ability to use your body skillfully to solve
    problems, create products or present ideas and
    emotions.
  • An ability obviously displayed for athletic
    pursuits, dancing, acting, artistically, or in
    building and construction.
  • You can include surgeons in this category but
    many people who are physically talented"good
    with their hands"don't recognize that this form
    of intelligence is of equal value to the other
    intelligences.
  • Famous examples Charlie Chaplin, Michael Jordan.

55
Interpersonal Intelligence
  • The ability to work effectively with others
  • to relate to other people
  • display empathy and understanding
  • notice their motivations and goals.
  • This is a vital human intelligence displayed by
    good teachers, facilitators, therapists,
    politicians, religious leaders and sales people.
  • Famous examples Gandhi, Ronald Reagan, Mother
    Teresa, Oprah Winfrey.

56
Intrapersonal Intelligence
  • The ability for self-analysis and reflectionto
    be able to
  • quietly contemplate and assess one's
    accomplishments
  • review one's behavior and innermost feelings
  • make plans and set goals
  • know oneself
  • Philosophers, counselors, and many peak
    performers in all fields of endeavor have this
    form of intelligence.
  • Famous examples Freud, Eleanor Roosevelt, Plato.

57
Naturalist intelligence
  • designates the human ability to discriminate
    among living things (plants, animals) as well as
    sensitivity to other features of the natural
    world (clouds, rock configurations).
  • to make distinctions in the natural world and to
    use this ability productivelyfor example in
    hunting, farming, or biological science.
  • Farmers, botanists, conservationists, biologists,
    environmentalists would all display aspects of
    the intelligence.
  • Famous examples Charles Darwin, Rachel Carson.

58
Can we be more than one?
  • Yes!
  • Although the intelligences are anatomically
    separated from each other, Gardner claims that
    the eight intelligences very rarely operate
    independently.
  • Rather, the intelligences are used concurrently
    and typically complement each other as
    individuals develop skills or solve problems.
  • For example, a dancer can excel in his art only
    if he/she has 
  • strong musical intelligence to understand the
    rhythm and variations of the music 
  • bodily-kinesthetic intelligence to provide him
    with the agility and coordination to complete the
    movements successfully
  • interpersonal intelligence to understand how he
    can inspire or emotionally move his audience
    through his movements

59
Maslows Theory
  • Maslows theory maintains that a person does not
    feel a higher need until the needs of the current
    level have been satisfied. Maslow's basic needs
    are as follows

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61
Physiological Needs
Basic Human Needs
  • Food
  • Air
  • Water
  • Clothing
  • Sex

62
Safety Needs
Safety and Security
  • Protection
  • Stability
  • Pain Avoidance
  • Routine/Order

63
Social Needs
Love and Belonging
  • Affection
  • Acceptance
  • Inclusion

64
Esteem Needs
Esteem
  • Self-Respect
  • Self-Esteem
  • Respected by Others

65
Self-Actualization
  • Achieve full potential
  • Fulfillment

66
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