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Chapter 10: Socioemotional Development in Middle and Late Childhood. McGraw-Hill. © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Emotional and Personality Development. During middle and late childhood
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Chapter 10: Socioemotional Development in Middle and Late Childhood McGraw-Hill © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
During middle and late childhood • Defining oneself shifts to using internal characteristics or personality traits • Social comparison of the self increases • Self-perception may not be a reality • High self-esteem & positive self-concept are very important to child’s well-being • One study: efforts to increase student self-esteem did not effect academic performance
Persons with high self-esteem are more likely to have negative or positive outcomes in interactions • Four ways to improve child’s self-esteem: • Identify causes of low self-esteem • Provide emotional support and social approval • Help child achieve (teach skills) • Help child cope (teach to address not avoid) • Children’s social worlds include school: teachers and environment affect child’s self-esteem and effort
Important emotional changes in elementary school years • Increased ability to understand emotions • Understanding that situations can result in more than one emotion • Tendency to attend to events leading to emotional reactions • Greater increases in ability to suppress or hide emotional reactions
Goleman (1995), emotional intelligence has 4 areas: • Developing emotional self-awareness • Managing emotions • Reading emotions • Handling relationships • Children and stress • Older children are better at reframing situations • By age 10, they use many cognitive strategies to cope • Hopelessness and despair harm moral development • Kohlberg advanced Piaget’s view of moral development in children
Kohlberg’s Three Levels and Six Stages of Moral Development Fig. 11.1
Kohlberg: • Used dilemmas to identify moral development • Levels were age-related • Stages occurred in sequence • Before age 9, most children use level 1 • Most adolescents reason at stage 3 • Early adulthood: few use postconventional ways • Research on Kohlberg’s theory: • No 10-year-olds use level 4 • 62% of 36-year-olds used stage 4 • Stage 5 did not appear until age 20–22
Stage 1 70 Stage 2 Stage 3 60 Stage 4 Stage 5 50 40 Mean percentage of moral reasoning at each stage 30 20 10 0 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 Age in years Age and Percentage of Individuals at Each Kohlberg Stage Fig. 11.2
Criticisms of Kohlberg’s theory: • Too much emphasis on thought • Not enough emphasis on moral behavior • Need other means of measuring moral reasoning • Dismissed family and peer relations as influences of moral values • Some cultures influence moral values that conflict with Kohlberg’s • Bandura: people engage in harmful conduct after they justify morality of their actions to themselves
Others criticisms of Kohlberg’s theory: • Children focus on consequences of actions • Recent research: Kohlberg’s results have male bias – females socialized as more care-oriented • Need distinction between moral reasoning and social conventional reasoning • Moral behavior can be negative and antisocial • Altruism is unselfish effort • Prosocial behavior is positive aspect of moral behavior like empathy
Men and women living in highly developed countries see themselves as more similar than those living in less developed countries • Females more resistant to infections; their blood vessels are more elastic • Women have about twice as much body fat • Male hormones promote growth of longer bones to make them taller • Male and female brains are different in development and functioning
250 200 Average national reading score 150 100 50 0 Boys Girls National Reading Scores for Fourth-Grade Boys and Girls Fig. 11.3
Males • Hypothalamus (sexual behavior) and parietal lobe (visuospatial skills) are larger • Do slightly better in math and science • Show less self-regulation • Females • Bands of tissues between brain’s hemispheres (communication) are larger • Areas of brain for emotional expression are larger • Significantly better readers • Have better writing skills
Parent–child interaction time • Much less with children age 5-12 than before age 5 • Even less with parents with little education • Centers on scheduling, discipline and temper control, regulating behaviors • Discipline often easier in middle and late childhood as children mature • Coregulation approach is best
Society and families are changing: • Almost half of all children from a divorced family will have a stepparent within 4 years • Most difficult adjustments for child are in blended family • Adjustment problems include academic problems and low self-esteem – especially for adolescents • Dual-earner families create latchkey children: • Coming home to unsupervised self-care • 5-6 full days a week in summer without parent • At higher risk for delinquency involvement
Latchkey experiences vary by • Parenting styles • Child-care arrangements • Effects of peer pressure • After-school programs are associated with better academic achievement and social adjustment • Five types of out-of-school care: • Before- and after-school programs • Extracurricular school activities • Father care • Nonadult care (older sibling or other)
Why friendship and more time spent with peers is important in middle and late childhood: • Companionship (familiar playmate) • Stimulation (excitement, etc.) • Physical support (time, assistance) • Ego support (feedback, etc.) • Social comparison • Intimacy/self-disclosure, affection • Not all friendships are alike • In childhood, friends are usually similar in age, sex, race, attitudes, aspirations, etc.
Identifying 5 types of peer status • Popular children • Average children • Neglected children (not disliked) • Rejected children (disliked by peers) • Controversial children • Social skills affect being well liked: • Giving out reinforcements • Careful listening • Keeping communication lines open • Showing enthusiasm and concern • Being self-confident, not conceited
Neglected child has low rate of peer interactions • Social cognition is important to peer relationships • Rejected children • Have serious social adjustment problems • Often find that rejection increases antisocial behavior over time • Best predictor of delinquency or dropping out from school may be aggression toward peers • Bullying • Has many forms • Ranges in effects on both victims and bullies
Child victims often tend to • Be lonely and have difficulty making friends • Be seen as “different” • Have overly protective parents • Lose interest in school, have excessive absences • Suffer low self-esteem and depression • Child bullies • Have low grades in school • Come from homes with intrusive, demanding, or unresponsive parents • Tend to use alcohol and/or tobacco
Belittled about religion or race Belittled about looks or speech Males Hit, slapped, or pushed Females Subject of rumors Subject of sexual comments or gestures 0 5 10 15 20 25 Bullying Behavior Among U.S. Youth Percentage experiencing bullying Fig. 11.4
High school • By graduation, student has spent 12,000 hours in classroom • A small society for socialization by rules that define and limit behaviors, feelings, and attitudes • School provides • Direct instruction • Constructivist, exploratory learning • Accountability teaching/learning • Changes homechild to schoolchild • These can be positive and negative based on effects of other factors
Minority and low-SES children • Face more barriers to learning • Live in high-risk neighborhoods with affect on learning • Low-SES parents • Are poorly educated • Do not set high educational goals for children • Are unable to buy educational materials • Most low-SES area schools tend to have • Fewer resources and older buildings • Lower achievement test scores and graduation rates • Fewer students going on to college
Minority students: • Segregation is still a factor in the U.S. • Almost one-third of all African American and Latino students attend schools with minority group populations of 90% or more • Less likely to be in college prep courses • More likely to be in remedial or special education programs • African Americans are twice as likely to be suspended from school than any other group • 90% of U.S. teachers are white • Asian students take more advanced math and science courses than any other group
Student success depends on teachers • Pushing high academic standards • Using creative strategies for learning in ethnically diverse classrooms: • Make a “jigsaw” classroom • Encourage positive personal contacts • Encourage perspective taking • Encourage critical thinking, use emotional intelligence on cultural issues, reduce bias • Make school and community a team • Parents’ attitudes affect student learning
Japan 5 Taiwan 4 U.S. 3 Mean rating 2 1 0 Effort Ability Mothers’ Belief’s About the Factors Responsible for Children’s Math Achievement in Three Countries Fig. 11.5