1 / 31

School Age

School Age. 6-12 years a period of Industry and Cognitive Development. The School Age Child. Begins w/loss of 1 st tooth & ends w/puberty Average gains: Weight: 5 lbs/yr. Height: 1-2”/yr Avg 6yr: 116cm (45”) – 21kg (46#) 12yr: 150cm (59”) – 40kg (88#)

Télécharger la présentation

School Age

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. School Age 6-12 years a period of Industry and Cognitive Development

  2. The School Age Child • Begins w/loss of 1st tooth & ends w/puberty • Average gains: • Weight: 5 lbs/yr. • Height: 1-2”/yr • Avg 6yr: 116cm (45”) – 21kg (46#) • 12yr: 150cm (59”) – 40kg (88#) • Slimmer, steadier, lower center of gravity • Linear growth: will outgrow shoes first, then pants & shirts • Males & females differ little in size

  3. Prepubescence • Prepubescence – end of mid childhood; 2-year period that precedes puberty • Girls begin puberty & reach maturity ~ 1.5-2 yrs earlier than boys • Time of rapid growth; development of secondary sex char.; wt gain • Girls: breast development; pubic hair • Boys: penis and scrotum enlarge; ↑ muscle mass

  4. Growth & Maturation • Sequence is progressive and predictable • Girls • Thelarche (breast development) 8-12.75 yrs (caucasian); 7-11 yrs (African American) • Pubarche (growth of pubic hair) ~2-6 mos later • Menarche ~ 2yrs after breast buds appear • Boy changes occur between 9.5 & 14 yrs • Initially pubic hair appears, then penile and testicular enlargement • Other: voice changes, facial hair, axillary hair • Gynecomastia common but temporary (~2yrs)

  5. Physical Growth Girls: PHV (peak height velocity) ~ age 12 • 6-12 mos before menarche; grow ~ 2” after menarche • PWV ~ 6 months after PHV • Pubertal delay if no breast development by age 13 or no menarche within 2-2.5 yrs of breast development Boys: PHV ~ age14 • Boys ht & wt occur simultaneously; ceases ~ 18-20 yrs • Pubertal delay if no enlargement of testes or scrotal changes by ages 13.5-14 or genital growth not complete 4 yrs. after testicles begin to enlarge • Tanner stages used during physical exams (pp 742-743)

  6. Psychosocial Development • Freud: latency period; tranquility time • Erikson: Sense of industry, stage of accomplishment; failure results in an inferiority complex • Peer approval motivating power • Reinforcements and recognition provide encouragement

  7. Psychosocial Development • Sense of accomplishment involves ability to cooperate, compete, & cope w/others • Learn value of doing things w/others to accomplish goals • Temperament:easy; slow to warm up; difficult may need practice sessions & role play to prepare for events/transitions

  8. Cognitive Development (This is BIG!) • Piaget – Concrete operations • use their thought processes to experience events and actions • Concrete-operational period (7-11 yrs): develop an understanding of relationships between things and ideas • Able to make judgments based on reason; “conceptual thinking” • Can use their memory stores to evaluate and interpret the present

  9. Cognitive Development (cont) • Begin to see things from another’s point of view • Major cognitive tasks: conservation • Numbers 1st, then substance, vol last • Classification skills are BIG – love collections of anything • Learn to tell time and manipulate numbers (add, subtract, divide, multiply) • Biggest skill: Ability to READ

  10. Moral Development (Kohlberg) • Moral Development • Development of conscience & moral standards • Age 6-7: reward & punishment still rules • Older: moves to judging an act by intentions that prompted it rather than just consequences • Begin to see other’s pt of view so are able to understand concept of treating others as they would like to be treated

  11. Language Development • Language Development: complex • Improved grammar & word usage • Enjoy jokes, riddles, puns • Begin to understand metaphors & figurative statements • Begin to evaluate and clarify messages

  12. Social Development • Identify with peers as gain independence from family • More sensitive to social norms and pressures of the peer group • Sex-role learning becomes more important with same sex peers • Having “best friends” a very big deal • Belonging to a group very imp.; group rules can be very rigid

  13. Social Development • Parents still primary influence in shaping their personalities, setting standards for behavior and setting value systems • Still need and want parental control and feel secure knowing there is an authority to implement controls and restrictions • Need firm, secure parental interest and concern, not just a “pal”

  14. Body Image • Acutely aware of their own bodies compared to others • Body integrity important • Concern re: threat or injury to it • Need reassurance about both the uniqueness and sameness of their body • If different, may be excluded from groups • When teased or criticized abt. being different, effect can be life long & lead to feeling inferior

  15. Perceptions of Death • Most realize death is final, universal & inevitable by age 9-10 • Believe they may die but only in distant future; if faced w/death feel loss of control • Fear pain associated with death • May feel guilt and responsibility about someone’s death – need logical, factual explanations

  16. Chronic Illness • If can’t develop sense of achievement as a result → feel inadequate • Involve in own care and decision making • If feel different – may try to hide it • Give factual info in simple terms • Help with school transitions • Need alternative activities • Camps for children w/similar challenges

  17. Self Esteem • How they view their worth in both pos & neg qualities is based on feedback they receive • Adults can make them feel special & successful – shaping self concept • Emphasize strengths & positive aspects of behavior • Teachers, parents, coaches, etc – big influence • Positive self concept leads to feelings of self-respect, self-confidence, happiness

  18. Sexuality • Many experience some sort of sex play out of curiosity prior to adolescence • Usually transitory; this should be taken as an opportunity to talk about sexuality; to provide info; use correct terminology; be concrete • Ideal time for sex ed presented as normal part of growth and development • Provide info on AIDS and dispel myths

  19. Play • Belonging to a club or team is important • Rules can be extreme and made up • Conformity and ritual are part of the play • Team play to attain a goal • Learn about nature of competition • Learn rules, make judgments, plan strategies, learn interdependence • Complex board, card, & computer games • Collections

  20. Discipline • Now able to understand the effects of their actions on others • Reasoning is an effective technique • Problem solving is best and children can be included in the process • Others: withholding privileges, requiring recompense, imposing penalties, contracting

  21. Dishonest Behavior • Lying: all lie sometimes; often d/t role modeled behavior • Cheating: most common 5-6 yr; usually disappear as matures; role model imp. • Stealing: bet. 5-8 yrs sense of property rights is limited; may steal and lie about it or may steal to make up for love or something else they may be lacking

  22. Stress • Other concerns: stress (more than previous generations); exposure to violence; school environment; pressures to excel; being over programed by parents; worries about home problems (more divorce), expected to be more mature, Latchkey Children (see p. 665) • Box 17-1; p. 663 excellent summary re: common stresses for different ages

  23. Health Promotion • Ideal time to take responsibility for their health by end of middle childhood • Self-care in hygiene, nutrition, exercise, recreation, sleep, and safety • Health education can help them learn abt their bodies; how their beh affects their health; helps them make good decisions • Teach them to take active role in relationships with health care providers

  24. Nutrition • Junk food more available – fill up on empty calories • School lunch – parents don’t know what child really eats even if send own lunch • School lunch and breakfast program help meet needs of kids but often are high in fat • Increase in obesity; increase in sedentary activities • Fast food – major contributor to obesity

  25. Sleep and Rest • Amt. is individualized; ~ 9 ½ hrs • Need routine and firm bedtime; should not be used as punishment • Sleepwalking: 1st 3-4 hrs of sleep – no memory; not purposeful; leave alone unless in danger; self limiting • Sleep talking- non purposeful; no harm • Nightmares: less common; chronic-refer

  26. Physical Activity • Fewer resources for PE, playgrounds and after school programs at schools • Only IL requires requires daily PE from K-12 • TV: kids have become less active; 26% 4hrs/day; 67% 2hr/day • Violent TV – increase in aggression, feel desensitized • Video games: critics violence, tension, sleeplessness, others improve eye-hand coord.

  27. Dental Health • First permanent teeth by 6yrs • 3rd permanent molars (wisdom) 18-25 yrs • Up until 2nd grade dexterity to properly brush isn’t there so need supervision • Bedtime brushing esp. important • Flossing done by parents til ~ 8-9 • Malocclusion – may need orthodontic tx • Dental evulsion: replacement or reattachment

  28. Evulsed Tooth • Hold by crown – do NOT touch root area • Rinse if dirty under running water or saline • Reinsert and hold in place – Transport • Replace within 10” if possible • If within 30”, 70% chance of success • If transport tooth, use saliva, milk, or saline (contact lens solution) – NOT WATER!

  29. Injuries • Reflect their developmental stage p. 744 • Risk Taking: Peer pressure begins so risk-taking injuries increase • MVA: most common cause of accidental injury and death • Pedestrian deaths 2.5x more freq w/ peak incidence 5-9yrs • ATV’sresponsible for significant # injuries for children under 16

  30. Injuries (cont) • Bike:500,000 ER visits, 900 deaths annually; deaths caused by head injuries • Skateboards, rollerblades, Ride-on mowers, trampolines, flipping, horseback riding, sledding • School: most injuries on the way to & fro • Guns: firearm deaths <15 yrs, ~12x greater than 25 other industrialized countries

  31. That’s it! Aren’t School age kids some of the coolest?? !!

More Related