1 / 20

Infant Development

Infant Development. Physical Social-Emotional Cognitive/Literacy & Language. 6 Key Principles of Physical Development. 1. Growth and Development dependent on both biology and environmental influences 2. G & D influenced by cultural and social contexts

mae
Télécharger la présentation

Infant Development

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. Infant Development Physical Social-Emotional Cognitive/Literacy & Language

  2. 6 Key Principles of Physical Development • 1. Growth and Development dependent on both biology and environmental influences • 2. G & D influenced by cultural and social contexts • 3. G & D follows a cephalocaudal and proximodistal direction

  3. 6 Key Principles of Physical Development • 4. Most children follow patterns; however there are individual rates of G &D • 5. Rates of development are NOT uniform among developmental domains • 6. There are sensitive or critical periods during G & D in which a child is more vulnerable to environmental and social-emotional influences

  4. Warning Signs-Infants Physical Development • Poor Head Control • No Social Smile • Feeding and/or Sleeping Problems • Not Attentive to Faces or Toys/Objects • Asymmetric Movement • No Imitation

  5. Some Major Concerns – Infants • SIDS • Failure to Thrive • Shaken Baby Syndrome • Accidents • Aspiration

  6. Social-Emotional Development in Infancy • Freud: Oral Stage – Mother (primary caregiver) the source of food • Erikson: Trust v. Mistrust • Importance of bonding: Attachment Theory • Separation Anxiety – How to respond • Stranger Anxiety

  7. Essential Experiences for Social-Emotional Devel. • Consistent, nurturing, loving care • Attention to needs • Empathetic responses • Playful, enriching, engaging experiences • Appropriate expectations

  8. Know a child’s temperament • Easy – easygoing, even tempered, tolerant of change, playful, adaptable • Difficult – slower to develop routines, more irritable, less adaptable to changes, less easily soothed • Slow-to-warm – mild reactions, resists new situations, moody, slow to react, distant

  9. Keys to Care • Consistency • Predictability • Continuity

  10. Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development • Cognitive Development: the aspect of development involving thinking, problem solving, intelligence, and language • Has dominated the fields of child study, psychology, philosophy and education since the 1920s • Main tenet of his theory: the thinking processes and problem solving abilities of infants and young children are quite different from those of older children

  11. 4 Stages of Cognitive Development • Sensorimotor: birth to 2 years • Preoperational: 2 to 7 years • Concrete operational: 7 to 11 years • Formal operational: 11 + • All children proceed through this sequence • Each stage builds on the previous one • HOWEVER, rates of development may vary according to genetic, cultural, and environmental influences

  12. Sensorimotor: birth to 2 years • Development depends on direct sensory experiences and motor actions • All mental practices are rooted in and a continuation of the earliest reflexive and motor activities • Purposeful motor activities facilitate the infant’s explorations and hence their growing cognition

  13. The Three A’s • Adaptation (learning) involves both Assimilation and Accommodation • Each experience changes the child’s schemata • Assimilation = The process by which a child attempts to fit new ideas and concepts into existing ones • Accommodation = The process by which previous schema is MODIFIED to adapt to a new experience • Adaptation = The process by which one adjusts to changes in the environment

  14. Sensorimotor Stage • Reflexive Stage: Birth – 1 month – Sources of early schemata • Reflexes from birth begin to be modified as a result of new stimuli • Primary Circular reactions: 1-4 months – Focused on bodily responses (e.g. thumb sucking) • Secondary Circular reactions: 4-8 months – Focused on objects in environment (e.g. splashing water) • Tertiary Circular reactions: 12-24 months – Focused on actions repeated with variation, active experimentation (e.g. hitting a variety of things with a stick, such as the table, a drum, daddy)

  15. Object Permanence • Piaget believed a key to cognitive development at this age is OBJECT PERMANENCE - the understanding that objects continue to exist even when they cannot be seen, heard, or touched. • Acquired by infants between 8 and 12 months of age • Critics of Piaget: argue that lack of cognition at thi age is not due to lack of knowledge of object permanence • Argue that object permanence may exist as young as 3 months of age

  16. Language Development • Starts with crying; complex communication system develops • Child- or infant-directed speech, also called, mother-ese, father-ese (adapted, simpler speech patterns) – effectively aid language development • Language Acquisition Device (LAD) – Chomsky • Inate skills that help children hear language and sound patterns, infer word meanings and language rules • Nativist belief – it is instinctual and biological based on the neurological and brain systems in place

  17. Contrary Beliefs about Language Development • Social Interactionist point of view • Biological underpinnings are there, but social interactions with caregivers provide opportunity for imitation, teaching and learning AND the necessary social interactions are key to development • Social-cultural point of view • Social interactions within cultural groups are key to language development • Behaviorist point of view • Language is learned through imitation, reinforcement

  18. Language Development: Birth through 1 year • Children can usually speak a few words by the end of their first year; a few can speak in sentences • Predictable patterns of language development; it is the rate of development that most varies • This has been proven to be regardless of culture or geography • Newborns: crying • 4 weeks: throaty noises • 12 weeks: gurgling, cooing, vowel sounds (ah, ah, ah) • 6 months: consonant-vowel sounds (ba, ma, pa, ka, ga) – echolalia • 8-10 months: Infant created words that represent an object or event – vocables • 1 year: Words or syllables to represent a whole sentence -- holophrases

  19. 5 Keys to Cognition and Language Development • Being born full-term • Fully working senses, particularly hearing and vision • Proper nutrition – key to optimal brain development • Supportive environments – full of sensory stimuli, opportunities for motor development • Ongoing interactions with others

  20. Key Terms – Ch. 5-7 • Synapses • Cephaolcaudal • Proximodistal • Neonate/Neonatal • Cerebral Cortex • Plasticity • Temperament • Assimilation • Adaptation • Accommodation • Sensorimotor Learning • Echolalia • Holophrase • Vocables • Language Acquisition Device • Object Permanence • Child-directed speech

More Related