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Developmental Psychology. Romantic Love & Attachment, Parenting Styles, Egocentrism, and Cultural Diversity and Development. By Nicole Banting , Samaia Paler, Simran Asere. ROMANTIC LOVE ♥. Romantic Love and attachment .
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Developmental Psychology Romantic Love & Attachment, Parenting Styles, Egocentrism, and Cultural Diversity and Development By Nicole Banting, Samaia Paler, SimranAsere
Romantic Love and attachment • The attachment of infants towards their parents may have an effect on their adult romantic relationships • Remember that the correlation between infant attachment and romantic love style do NOT suggest causation
Avoidant Infants adults • Have trouble trusting others • Avoid intimacy • Rarely report finding “true love”
Anxious/ambivalent infants adults • Tend to be possessive • Emotionally demanding towards their partners • Fear their intense love will not be returned
Securely attached infants adults • Closer to others • Find others more trustworthy • Most desired partner • Foster long-term relationships
4 Different Parenting Styles(Baumrind’s Research) • 1. Permissive-Neglectful (cw) • 2. Permissive- Indulgent (cW) • 3. Authoritarian (Cw) • 4. Authoritative (CW)
Permissive-Neglectful • “I don’t care about you—or what you do.” • Low control, low warmth • Parents are not demanding and show rejection • Results: • poor social skills • little self-control
Permissive-Indulgent • “I care about you—and you are free to do whatever you want.” • Low control, high warmth • Parents do not discipline enough, yet are caring and connected with their child • Results: • immature • disrespectful • out of control
Authoritarian • “I don’t care what you want. Just do it my way, or else!” • High control, low warmth • Parents are strict but don’t care about their child • Results: • easily upset • moody • aggressive • fails to learn communications skills
Authoritative • “I really care about you, but there are rules and you need to be responsible.” • High control, high warmth • Parents set firm limits on their child, and are emotionally supportive and caring at the same time • Results: • self-reliant • content • self-controlled • goal oriented • high achieving • friendly • emotionally well adjusted • socially competent
Child Temperament • Chosen styles depend on child’s temperament and reactions to parental efforts Example: The Authoritative style is chosen for a child that is already mature and competent
Child Expectations • Chosen styles depend on the child’s expectations of how their parent should behave • Example: • Korean parents show strong control but they are perceived as a sign of love VS • Strong control in America would be perceived as rejection
Parental Warmth • The degree of warmth parents feel VS the degree of rejection parents feel Example: Neglectful parents correlate with hostile, aggressive children
Father vs Mother Parenting • The father’s role in child care used to be largely ignored • Children do best with authoritative dads • Fathers are just as responsive, nurturing, and competent as mothers
What is egocentric thinking? • Thinking only of yourself without considering the rights, needs, or point of view of others • Ex. Childhood egocentrism – a little boy unwilling to share his toys • Adolescent egocentrism – a teenager refuses to go to school because of the zit on her face
Standards in egocentric thinking • Innate Egocentrism • Innate Sociocentrism • Innate Wish-fulfillment • Innate Self- Validation • Innate Selfishness
Innate egocentrism “It’s true because I believe it!” • Assuming personal beliefs are true without questioning the basis of those beliefs
Innate Sociocentrism “It’s true because we believe it!” • Assuming beliefs within groups are true without questioning it
Innate Wish-Fulfillment “Its true because I want to believe it!” • Believing whatever supports your beliefs and puts you in a positive light without considering the evidence
Innate Self-Validation “It’s true because I have always believed it!” • Desire to maintain long-held beliefs without examining if those beliefs are justified
Innate Selfishness “It’s true because it’s in my selfish interest to believe it!” • Clinging to beliefs that give you personal advantages even if there is no evidence for those beliefs
1. Culture may be the most important determinant of development • You can tell how most likely a child will develop by their culture • Children who grow up in a more individualistic culture like North America will be more rebellious and competitive • In a more collectivist culture like Africa they are more likely to be respectful and cooperative
2. Human development cannot be studied outside its sociocultural context • Different places have different views on authoritative figures • Researchers in child development believe that children should only be studied within their developmental niche • Developmental niche has three components: • The physical/social contexts in the child’s life • The culture and educational practices • The psychological characteristics of parents
3. Each culture’s ethnotheories are important determinants of behaviour • Each culture has a set of ideas and beliefs (ethnotheories) • Ex. Specific cultures have different beliefs on how a child should be trained
4. Culture is largely invisible to its participants • Culture consists of ideals, values, and assumptions that guide specific behaviours