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Theoretical Perspectives. HPD 4C Working with School Age Children and Adolescents - Mrs. Filinov. How many legs????????. Old Woman or Young Girl. What do you see: Boat or…..?. Face or …………..?. What is this?. Can you see the cup or the faces?. Find the duck. Looking for the man?.
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Theoretical Perspectives HPD 4C Working with School Age Children and Adolescents - Mrs. Filinov
What is Theoretical Perspective • A theoretical perspective is a non-explanatory general framework. • It is meant to define a point of view within a discipline, which may include basic assumptions that draw attention to aspects of a phenomenon. • A theory is a proposed relationship between two or more concepts, often cause and effect. • theories are just a educated guess as to how and why a situation might occur
Can you read this? • This is bcuseae the huammnmniddeos not raederveylteter by istlef, but the word as a wlohe. Amzanig, huh?
Expectations • B1.1 explain human development throughout the lifespan according to structuralist theoretical perspectives (e.g., the stage theories of Sigmund Freud, Erik Erikson, Jean Piaget) • B1.2 explain human development throughout the lifespan according to information-processing and learning theoretical perspectives (e.g., the theories of Ivan Pavlov, B. F. Skinner, John B. Watson, Albert Bandura) • B1.3 explain human development throughout the lifespan according to systemic and humanistic theoretical perspectives (e.g., the theories of UrieBronfenbrenner, Abraham Maslow, Carl Rogers, Bonnie Burstow, Barbara Rogoff)
Psychodynamic Perspective • Focuses on the inner person • Behavior is motivated by inner forces, memories and conflicts that are generally beyond people's awareness and control. • Sigmund Freud • Became convinced that patients difficulties were due to mental rather than physical problems. • Proposed that distress is due to problems that dated back to childhood. • Erik Erikson • Suggests that developmental change occurs throughout our lives in eight distinct stages. • The stages emerge in fixed pattern and they are similar for all people.
The Behavioral Perspective • Considering the outer person. • Suggests that the keys to understanding development are observable behavior and outside stimuli in the environment. • John B. Watson - classical and operant conditioning • Psychology can never be as objective as chemistry or biology. Consciousness is not that easy. • “I can take a child and make him into anything, a beggar, a doctor, a thief.” • B.F. Skinner • Believed that all behavior is a result of rewards and punishments in the past. • Ivan Pavlov • showed automatic/involuntary behavior in learned responses to specific stimuli in the environment. • Created “Classical Conditioning.” • Albert Bandura – social cognitive learning theorists • Behavior is learned through observation and imitation
The Cognitive Perspective • Examining the roots of understanding • Focuses on the process that allow people to know, understand and think about the world. • Jean Piaget’s - Cognitive theory • Studies children’s cognitive development. • Studies how we attend, perceive, think, remember, solve problems and arrive at beliefs. • Lev Vygotsky’s- Sociocultural theory • Proposes that full understanding of development is impossible without taking into account the culture in which children develop.
The Humanistic Perspective • Concentrates on the unique qualities of human beings • People have the natural tendency to make decisions about their lives and control their behavior. • Barbara Rogoff • focuses on the social and collaborative nature of learning and the different forms of guidance that an adult provides a child • Carl Rogers • Former minister; believed all people strive for perfection; some interrupted by a bad environment. • Abraham Maslow - Hierarchy of Needs • People’s struggle is to be the best they possibly can, known as self-actualization.
The Evolutionary Perspective • Believes that behavior is strongly influenced by biology, is tied to evolution and is characterized by critical and sensitive periods. • Charles Darwin • Studied the evolution of finches and expands his study to include humans. • Konrad Lorenz • His work concentrates on human behavioral genetics
Sociocultural Perspective • Emphasizes the system of support • Seeks to explain individual knowledge, development, and competencies in terms of guidance, support and structure provided by society. • UrieBronfenbrenner • According to U. Bronfenbrenner each person is affected by interactions among a number of overlapping ecosystems.