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. Nature to nurture controversyMaturation:any relatively permanent change as the result of internal prompted processes, without regard to environment or personal experience.. Piaget and Vygotsky. Jean PiagetDevelopment depends onorganizationadaptationassimilationaccommodation. . StagesSenso
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1. 1501 Life-span development Means of study longitudinal/cross-sectional
Development occurs toward differentiation
few to many
simple to complex
general to specialized
homogeneous to diverse
2. Nature to nurture controversy
Maturation:
any relatively permanent change as the result of internal prompted processes, without regard to environment or personal experience.
3. Piaget and Vygotsky Jean Piaget
Development depends on
organization
adaptation
assimilation
accommodation
4. Stages
Sensorimotor
spans from birth to 2 years of age
the focus is on concrete actions
development of object permanence
the beginning development of symbolic play
5. Cont stages
Preoperational
spans 2 to 7 years of age
the focus is on the missing abilities
egocentrism
centration
irreversibility
Concrete operational
spans 7 to 11 years of age
focus on decentration, reversibility, seriation
6. Cont stages
Formal operational
spans 12 years and up
focuses on
abstract thinking
systematic thinking
logical and reflective thinking
Evaluate Piaget
7. The theory of Leo Vygotsky Social influence is more important than biological influences.
Cognitive development occurs through internalization, whereby individuals absorb knowledge from their social context.
8. Cont. theory of Vygotsky Develop intelligence within a zone of proximal development (ZPD), the range of ability between a child’s developed, observable level of ability and the child’s full level, potentially hidden.
In summary, Piaget emphasized maturation(nature), while Vygotsky emphasized learning (nurture).
9. Physical Development Pre-natal development
3 stages
germinal
embryonic
fetal
Teratogens
10. Cont. physical development Newborn Development
The newborn prefers
to look at human faces
listen to the human voice
the most fully developed sense is touch
motor reflexes: automatic behavior necessary for survival
cephlocaudal (head to toe) See milestones in chart, pg. 313.
11. Emotional development Attachment
Not insananeous
Begins around 6 to 8 months
Peaks at 14 to 18 months
Tapers and is usually resolved around 30 months.
12. 3 Theories of attachment
Reinforcement theory
Harry and Margaret Harlow
Biological
John Bowlby
Social
Mary Ainsworth’s strange situation
13. 3 types of personality
secure attachment
ambivalent attachment
avoidant attachment
Strength of attachment effects emotional development. Secure attachment results in obedient, persistent, curious, independent children.
14. Childhood Socioemotional Development
Erikson
Trust vs. Mistrust
Birth to 1 year of age
Dependent for biological needs
Autonomy vs Shame/doubt
1 to 3 years of age
Toilet training and other regulating behavior.
15. Initiative vs Guilt
3 to 6 years of age
social function within the family
Industry vs Inferiority
6 to puberty
social function outside the family
Identity vs role confusion
adolescence
try to figure out who they are
16. Intimacy vs isolation
young adult
develop loving intimate relationships
Generativity vs stagnation
middle adult
work and prepare for the next generation
Integrity vs despair
late adulthood
reflection on life
17. Gender development 2-3 no gender constancy
4-5 gender identity
Gender socialization
learn gender norms of culture
Gender schema
knowledge, beliefs, expectations about gender roles.
18. Interpersonal relationships Follows ability to consider another’s point of view.
19. Adolescence Development Physical development
Puberty
Cognitive development
Inductive reasoning
Observing specifics and making hypotheses
Deductive reasoning
Taking general principles and applying to specific instances.
20. Personal fable
Destined to fame or fortune
Invincibility fallacy
Not subject to the same risks as everyone else.
21. Socioemotional development
Identity crisis
Imaginary audience
They feel they are the constant object of the thoughts, judgments, and observations of other people.
22. Moral Development by L. Kohlberg
Preconventional
Acts are right/wrong because they are punished/rewarded
Conventional
Rules are necessary for social order
Postconventional
Personal code of ethics
For most, depend on situation and will regress when necessary.
23. Cont. Moral development
Carol Gilligan
Justice vs compassion.
24. Adult Development Cognitive development
Slower processes
IQ remains stable through adulthood with a slight decline after 60 years of age and a more rapid decline a few years before death primarily due to health problems.
Even though the thinking processes may slow, the decline is balanced by stabilization and even advancement of well-practiced mental functioning.
25. Important milestones
Social clock
Long-term relationships/marriage
Validating marriage:
Compromise and calmly resolve conflict
Conflict-avoiding marriage:
agree to disagree and avoid conflict
Volatile marriages
frequent conflicts
26. What destroys a marriage
Attacking a partner’s character, rather than behavior
Being defensive
Failing to respond to the needs of the partner
27. Career/stages
Exploration: search for a career
Establishment: begins to be identified with a particular career
Mid-career: established in career
Late-career: fully established and may even be a mentor.
28. Mid-life crisis
Retirement
29. Language Development 0-6 month: crying
Motherese
6-10 month: phonemes
10-13 month: morphomes
13-18 month: 3-50 words
overextention
18-2y begin to put 2-3 words together -
telegraphic
18m-6y: 8000-14000 words
overregularization