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Major Developmental Theorists

Major Developmental Theorists. DEP2004. Major Theorists. Sigmund Freud – Psychosexual Stages Erik Erickson – Psychosocial Stages Ivan Pavlov – Classical Conditioning B. F. Skinner – Operant Conditioning Albert Bandura – Social Learning Lev Vygotsky – Social Learning/Cognitive

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Major Developmental Theorists

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  1. Major Developmental Theorists DEP2004

  2. Major Theorists • Sigmund Freud – Psychosexual Stages • Erik Erickson – Psychosocial Stages • Ivan Pavlov – Classical Conditioning • B. F. Skinner – Operant Conditioning • Albert Bandura – Social Learning • Lev Vygotsky – Social Learning/Cognitive • Jean Piaget – Cognitive Development • UrieBronfenbrenner – Ecological Systems • Elisabeth Kubler-Ross - 5 Stages of Grief

  3. Freud’s Psychosexual Stages of Development

  4. Oral Stage Birth to 18 months • Oral fixation • Oral personality

  5. Anal Stage 18 months to three years • Anal Retentive • Anal Expulsive

  6. Phallic Stage Three to Six years • Oedipus Complex • Electra Complex

  7. Latency Stage Six to Puberty • Repression of sexual desires • Same sex peers

  8. Genital Stage Puberty on • Reawakening sexual urges • Attention returns to opposite sex peers

  9. Id, Ego, Super Ego

  10. Eric EricksonEight-Stage Theory of Psycho-Social Development

  11. Behaviorism • studies observable behavior • also called learning theory • Conditioning - processes by which responses become linked to particular stimuli and learning takes place.

  12. Classical Conditioning - Ivan Pavlov • Classical – what happens before behavior/response • Stimulus – Conditioned, Unconditioned • Must be paired, occur closely, repeated • Response – Unconditioned, Conditioned (learned) • Extinction

  13. Operant Conditioning - B. F. Skinner • Reinforcement – pleasurable consequence – encourages behavior • Positive reinforcement • Negative reinforcement • Schedule of reinforcement • Fixed or variable ratio, fixed or variable interval • Punishment – unpleasurable consequence – discourages/eliminates behavior

  14. Theories of Human Development

  15. Social Learning Theory • Social Learning Theory posits: • Humans learn from one another • Observation • Imitation • Modeling • Reciprocal Determinism

  16. Social Learning Theory • Albert Bandura • Emphasizes the influence other people have over a person’s behavior • Modeling - people learn by observing other people then copying them. • Self-efficacy – how effective people think they are

  17. Necessary Conditions for Effective Modeling • Attention • Retention • Reproduction • Motivation

  18. Cognitive Theory • Thoughts and expectations profoundly affect action. • Focuses on changes in how people think over time. • Lev Vygotsky • Jean Piaget

  19. Cognitive Theory - Lev Vygotsky • Guided participation • Zone of proximal development

  20. Zone of Proximal Development

  21. Jean Piaget - Stages of Cognitive Development

  22. Theories of Human Development

  23. Theories of Human Development Systems Theory • Change in one part of a person, family, or society affects every aspect of development Ecological systems approach- UrieBronfenbrenner (1917–2005) • The person should be considered in all the contexts and interactions that constitute a life.

  24. Ecological Systems Theory Five Components of Bronfenbrenner’s System • microsystems- person’s immediate surroundings • exosystems - local institutions • macrosystems- larger social setting • chronosystem - literally, “time system” • Mesosystem - connections among the other systems

  25. Elisabeth Kubler-Ross5 Stages of Grief

  26. Denial Anger Bargaining Depression Acceptance

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