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History, Theory, and Research Strategies. Chapter 1. What is Developmental Science?. Developmental science – field of study devoted to understanding constancy and change throughout the lifespan Great diversity exists among investigators who study development, but all have 1 major goal…
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History, Theory, and Research Strategies Chapter 1
What is Developmental Science? • Developmental science – field of study devoted to understanding constancy and change throughout the lifespan • Great diversity exists among investigators who study development, but all have 1 major goal… • Major goal: to identify those factors that influence consistencies and transformations in people from conception to death
The Field of Human Development is… • Scientific – conduct empirical research • Applied – meaning practical use • Interdisciplinary – meaning that people from many different fields contribute to the study of human development
Theories of Development • Theory – orderly, integrated set of statements that describes, explains, and predicts behavior • Example: theory of infant-caregiver attachment would: • 1) describe the behaviors of babies 6-8 months old as they seek the affection and comfort of a familiar adult • 2) explain how and why infants develop this strong desire to bond with a caregiver • 3) predict the consequences of this emotional bond for future relationships • Theories are important for 2 reasons: • Provide organizing frameworks for our observations • Theories verified by research provide a sound basis for how to improve welfare of individuals
3 Basic Issues in Development • Continuous or discontinuous? • One course of development or many? • Nature or nurture?
Continuous or Discontinuous? • Continuous – a process of gradually augmenting the same types of skills that were there to begin with • Discontinuous – a process in which new ways of understanding and responding to the world emerge a specific times • Stages – qualitative changes in thinking, feeling, and behaving that characterize specific periods of development
Is there one course of development or many? • Stage theorists assume that people everywhere follow the same sequence of development • But… field of human development is becoming increasingly aware that different contexts matter • Contexts – unique combinations of personal and environmental circumstances that can result in different paths of change • Example: • Personal: a shy person who fears social encounters develops in very different contexts from people who are more outgoing and readily seek out other people • Environmental: people who grow up in a third world village society have different experiences in their families than people who grow up in an American city
Relative Influence of Nature and Nurture • Are genetic or environmental factors more important? • Nature – inborn biological givens • The information we inherit from our parents at the moment of conception • Nurture – the complex forces of the physical and social world that influence our biological makeup and psychological experiences before and after birth • Example: do children learn language rapidly because they are genetically predisposed to do so or because their parents teach them from an early age?
Relative Influence of Nature and Nurture (cont.) • A theory’s position on the roles of nature vs. nurture affect how it explains individual differences • Nature/heredity • Stability – that individuals who are high or low in a characteristic (i.e., verbal ability or anxiety) will stay that way throughout their life • Nurture/environment • Plasticity – that change is possible and even likely if new experiences support it
Development as a Dynamic System • More and more, researchers are regarding development as a dynamic system • Perpetually ongoing process • Conception to Death • 3 Influences on development • Biological • Psychological • Social
The Lifespan Perspective • Leading dynamic systems approach • 4 major assumptions: development is… • Lifelong • Multidimensional and multidirectional • Highly plastic • Affected my multiple, interacting forces • Within each age period change occurs in 3 broad domains • Physical • Cognitive • Emotional/social
Lifespan Assumption 1 • Development is Lifelong • Every age period can have equally powerful effects on future change • No single period has a “supreme” impact on the life course
Lifespan Assumption 2 • Development is Multidimensional and multidirectional • Multidimensional: development is affected by a blend of biological, psychological, and social forces • Multidirectional in 2 ways • development is not limited to improved performance. Every period consists of growth and decline • Change is also multidirectional within each domain of development (physical, cognitive, and emotional/social)
Lifespan Assumption 3 • Development is Plastic or Flexible • Adaptations and changes can occur at all ages • Aging is not an eventual “shipwreck” • Different opportunities can yield different outcomes
Lifespan Assumption 4 • Development is influenced by multiple, interacting forces • Biological, historical, social, and cultural • These multiple influences work together • Combine in unique ways in each individual life course
3 Types of Influences • Age-graded influences – events that are strongly related to age and therefore are fairly predictable in when they occur and how long they last • Example: most people begin walking shortly after their 1st birthday • History-graded influences – influences on development unique to a particular historical era (ex. epidemics, wars, periods of economic prosperity or depression) • Example: my great-grandmother was raised during a time of great economic depression and because of this she stockpiled goods in her home. Today she would be described in modern terms as a “hoarder” • Nonnormative influences – irregular events that only happen to one person or a few people and do not follow a predictable timetable • Example: an inspiring childhood teacher or meeting your life-partner on a random blind-date
Scientific Beginnings • Scientific study of human development dates back to the late 19th and early 20th centuries • Charles Darwin – 19th century theory of evolution • Studying natural selection and survival of the fittest lead other scientists to speculate about the evolution and development of humans • Thus, the scientific study of human development was born… no pun intended
The Normative Period • G. Stanley Hall – early 20th century - founder of the child study movement • Intensive efforts to describe all aspects of development launched the normative approach • Normative approach – measures of behavior are taken on large numbers of individuals, and age-related averages are computed to represent typical development
Mid-20th Century Theories • Mid-20th Century – study of human development expanded into a legitimate discipline and several theories and perspectives emerged • The psychoanalytic perspective • Behaviorism and social learning theory • Piaget’s cognitive-developmental theory
The Psychoanalytic Perspective • 1930s and 1940s driven by attempts to treat psychological problems: How and why do people become the way they are? • Psychoanalytic perspective answer: people move through a series of stages in which they confront conflicts between biological drives and social expectations. • How these conflicts are resolved determines the person’s ability to learn, to get along with others, and to cope with anxiety • 2 main theorists • Sigmund Freud – psychosexual theory • Erik Erikson – psychosocial theory
Psychoanalytic Perspective: Freud • Psychosexual theory – emphasizes that how parents manage their child’s sexual and aggressive drives in the 1st few years of life is crucial for healthy personality development
Psychoanalytic Perspective: Freud • Psychosexual stages – During childhood sexual impulses shift their focus from the oral to the anal to the genital regions of the body • If parents strike an appropriate balance, then the child will grow into a well-adjusted adult
Psychoanalytic Perspective: Erikson • Psychosocial theory – emphasized that the ego makes a positive contribution to development, acquiring attitudes and skills at each stage that make the individual an active, contributing member of society • Basic psychological conflict between positive and negative occurs at each stage in development • How the conflict between positive and negative is resolved at each stage determines if healthy or maladaptive outcomes occur
Psychoanalytic Perspective: Erikson • 1st 5 stages parallel Freud, but Erikson added 3 more adult stages • Normal development must be understood in relation to each culture’s life situation • Child rearing can be understood only in relation to the competencies valued and needed by an individual’s society
Psychoanalytic Perspective: Strengths and weaknesses • Strengths • Emphasis on the individual’s unique life history • Inspired research on many aspects of emotional and social development (infant-caregiver attachment, aggression, sibling relationships, child-rearing practices, morality, gender roles, and adolescent identity) • Weaknesses • No longer in the mainstream of human development research • Too focused on the clinical approach, failed to consider other methods • Psychosexual stages and ego functioning are so vague that they are difficult or impossible to test empirically
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory • Behaviorism – only directly observable events are appropriate to study • Completely disregards anything that cant be directly observed (like Freud’s id, ego, and superego) • John Watson – founder of behaviorism, backlash against psychoanalysis • Goal: to create an objective science of psychology, disregard unseen inner workings of the mind
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory • Classical conditioning – Showed that a reflex (an involuntary reaction) could be caused to occur in response to a formerly unrelated stimulus • Dog Study:
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory • Watson wanted to see if classical conditioning could be applied to children’s behavior • “Little Albert” study • Conditioned a baby to fear a white rat by paring it with a loud noise • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FMnhyGozLyE • Concluded that environment is the supreme force in development • Adults can mold children’s behavior by controlling stimulus-response associations • Viewed development as a continuous process, consisting of gradual increase with age in the number and strength of these associations
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory • Operant conditioning theory (B.F. Skinner) • The frequency of a behavior can be increased or decreased • Increased: follow the behavior with a reward called a reinforcer (food, praise, friendly smile) • Decreased: follow the behavior with punishment (disapproval or withdrawal of privileges)
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory • Albert Bandura – most influential social learning theorist • Social learning theory – emphasizes modeling, AKA imitation or observational learning, as a powerful source of development • Example: baby claps her hands after seeing her mother do so • Diverse factors effect children’s motivation to imitate • Their own history of reinforcement or punishment for the behavior • The promise of future reinforcement or punishment • Even vicarious reinforcement or punishment (observing the model being reinforced or punished) • Today, social learning theory stresses the importance of cognition, or thinking
Behaviorism & Social Learning Theory: Strengths and Weaknesses • Strengths • Behavior modification - procedures that combine conditioning and modeling to eliminate undesirable behaviors and increase desirable responses • Example: eliminating bad habits such as smoking and nail biting • Weaknesses • Many theorists believe behaviorism and social learning theory have too narrow of a focus on environmental influences • Criticized for underestimating people’s contributions to their own development
Piaget’s Cognitive-Developmental Theory • Jean Piaget – most influential researcher on child development • Did not believe that children’s learning depends on reinforcers • Cognitive-developmental theory – children actively construct knowledge as they manipulate and explore their world • Based on biological concept of adaptation • Just as structures of the body are adapted to fit with the environment, structures of the mind also develop to better fit with, or represent, the external world
Piaget’s Cognitive-Developmental Theory • Infancy & early childhood: children’s understanding is different from adults’ • Example: young babies do not realize that an object hidden from view (like a favorite toy) continues to exist • Preschool: thinking is full of faulty logic • Example: children younger than 7 years commonly say that the amount of a liquid changes when it is poured into a different-shaped container • Eventually revise incorrect ideas via ongoing efforts to achieve equilibrium, or balance, between internal structures and information they encounter in their everyday worlds
Piaget’s Cognitive-Developmental Theory • 4 broad stages occur as the brain develops and experiences expand • Sensorimotor stage (birth-2 years) – cognitive development begins with the baby’s use of the senses and movements to explore the world • Preoperational stage (2-7 years) – action patterns evolve into symbolic but illogical thinking • Concrete operational stage (7-11 years) – cognition is transformed into more organized, logical reasoning • Formal operational stage (11 years-on) – thought becomes an abstract, systematic reasoning system
Piaget’s Cognitive-Developmental Theory: Strengths and Weaknesses • Strengths • Children are active learners whose minds consist of rich structures of knowledge • Stages sparked research on children’s conceptions of themselves, other people, and human relationships • Encouraged development of discovery learning programs which emphasize direct contact with the environment • Weaknesses • Underestimated the competence of infants and preschoolers • Stages pay insufficient attention to social and cultural influences on development • Cognitive changes do not stop occurring in adolescence
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Information Processing • Information processing – views the human mind as a computer • A symbol-manipulating system through which information flows • Information is presented to the senses during input, information is actively coded, transformed, and organized, then emerges as output, a behavioral response • Regard people as actively making sense of their own thinking • Continuous change – thought processes are regarded as similar at all ages but present to a lesser or greater extent
Uses flowcharts to map the precise steps individuals use to solve problems and complete tasks • Example: 5-year-old solving a bridge building problem • Use the blocks to build a bridge a cross a “river” painted on the floor too wide for any single block to span • Child discovers how to counterweight and balance the bridge
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Information Processing • Strengths • Commitment to rigorous research methods • Provided precise accounts of how people tackle many cognitive tasks • Weaknesses • Better at analyzing thinking into components than putting them back together into a comprehensive theory • Virtually ignores aspects of cognition that are not linear and logical • Such as imagination and creativity
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience • Developmental cognitive neuroscience – studies the relationship between changes in the brain and cognitive processing and behavior patterns • Uses brain-imaging techniques to analyze relationships between brain functioning, cognitive capacities, and behavior • Gain knowledge regarding: • The types of experiences that support or undermine brain development at various ages • The brain bases of many learning and behavior disorders • Example: ADHD has been linked to dysfunction in brain regions such as the prefrontal cortex
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Ethology • Ethology – concerned with the adaptive, or survival, value of behavior and its evolutionary history • Critical period – a limited time span during which the individual is biologically prepared to acquire certain adaptive behaviors but needs the support of an appropriately stimulating environment • Example: if children are deprived of adequate food or physical and social stimulation during their early years, will intelligence be impaired?
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Ethology • Sensitive period – time that is optimal for certain capacities to emerge and in which the individual is especially responsive to environmental influence • Boundaries are less well-defined than those of the critical period • Development can occur later, but it is harder to induce
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Evolutionary Developmental Psychology • Evolutionary developmental psychology – seeks to understand the adaptive value of specieswide cognitive, emotional, and social competencies as those competencies change with age • Clarify origins and development of behaviors • Example: life-threatening risk taking in adolescents and male-to-male violence may have been adaptive in our ancestors • But today, our lifestyles are so radically different that these behaviors are no longer adaptive
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory • Sociocultural theory – focuses on how culture is transmitted on to the next generation • values, beliefs, customs, and skills of a social group • Social interaction – necessary for children to acquire the ways of thinking and behaving that make up a community’s culture • Views cognitive development as a socially mediated process • Children depend on assistance from adults and more expert peers to tackle new challenges
Recent Theoretical Perspectives: Ecological Systems Theory • Ecological systems theory – views the person as developing within a complex system of relationships affected by multiple levels of the surrounding environment • Views the environment as a series of nested structures • Microsystem – innermost level, activities and interaction patterns in immediate surroundings (immediate family, school) • Mesosystem – second level, connections between microsystems • Exosystem – third level, social settings that do not contain the person but affect experiences in immediate settings (neighbors, extended family, board of directors in the workplace) • Macrosystem – outermost level, cultural values, laws, customs, and resources
Studying Development • Hypothesis – prediction about behavior drawn from a theory • Research methods • Basic approach to gathering information • Systematic observations, self-reports, clinical or case studies, ethnographies • Research designs • Overall plans for research studies • Permit the best possible test of the investigator’s hypothesis
Common Research Methods: Systematic Observation • Naturalistic observation • In the “field” or natural environment where behavior happens • Example: observing children in their homes or schools • Structured observation • Laboratory situation set up to evoke the desired behavior • All participants have an equal chance to display behavior • Used when the behavior of interest is very difficult or impossible to observe in the “field”