1 / 42

Development:

Development:. Development. Developmental psychology the branch of psychology that studies the patterns of growth and change occurring throughout life. Nature and Nurture: The Enduring Developmental Issue. Environment the influence of experience to which a child is exposed Heredity

merrill
Télécharger la présentation

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. Development:

  2. Development • Developmental psychology • the branch of psychology that studies the patterns of growth and change occurring throughout life

  3. Nature and Nurture: The Enduring Developmental Issue • Environment • the influence of experience to which a child is exposed • Heredity • those influences based on genetic makeup of an individual that affect growth and development throughout life • Nature-Nurture Issue • the issue of the degree to which environment and heredity influence behavior

  4. Specific Research Strategies • Cross-sectional research • people of different ages are compared at the same point in time • Longitudinal research • investigates behavior as subjects age • Cross-sequential research • examine different age groups over several points in time

  5. The Start of Life: Conception and Beyond • The Basics of genetics: • Chromosomes • contain the basic hereditary information • Genes • the parts of the chromosomes through which genetic information is transmitted • DNA

  6. The Earliest Stages of Development • Germinal Period • Zygote • the new cell formed by the product of fertilization • Embryonic Period • Embryo • a developed zygote that has a heart, a brain, and other organs

  7. The Earliest Stages of Development • Critical Period • the first of several stages in prenatal development in which specific kinds of growth must occur if the individual is to develop normally • Fetal Period • fetus • a developing child, from eight weeks after conception until birth

  8. The Earliest Stages of Development • Age of Viability • the point at which the fetus can survive if born prematurely

  9. Genetic Influences on the Fetus • Phenylketonuria (PKU) • cannot produce a required enzyme • Sickle-cell anemia • abnormal shape of red blood cells • Tay-Sachs disease • body’s inability to break down fat • Down’s Syndrome • extra chromosome

  10. Prenatal Environmental Influences • Mother’s nutrition and emotional state • Illness of mother • Mother’s use of drugs • Birth complications

  11. Physical and Social Development • Neonate • Reflexes • unlearned, involuntary response that occur automatically in the presence of certain stimuli • rooting reflex • sucking reflex • gag reflex • startle reflex • Babinski reflex

  12. Growth After Birth

  13. Development of Social Behavior • Attachment • the positive emotional bond that develops between a child and a particular individual • Measuring attachment • the Ainsworth strange situation • The father’s role

  14. Parenting Styles and Social Development • Authoritarian parents • are rigid and punitive and value unquestioned obedience from their children • Permissive parents • give their children lax or inconsistent direction and, although warm, require little of them • Authoritative parents • are firm, set clear limits, reason with their children, and explain thinks to them

  15. Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development • Psychosocial development • development of individuals’ interactions and understanding of each other and of their knowledge and understanding of themselves as members of society

  16. Adolescence: Becoming an Adult • Adolescence • the developmental stage between childhood and adulthood • Puberty • the period at which maturation of the sexual organs occurs, begins at about age 11 or 12 for girls and 13 or 14 for boys

  17. Moral and Cognitive Development • Kohlberg’s theory of moral development • Preconventional morality • rewards and punishments • Conventional morality • moral problems as members of a society • Post conventional morality • moral principle broader that any particular society

  18. Moral and Cognitive Development • Moral Development in Women • Gillian’s Stages of Moral Development • Stage 1 • orientation toward individual survival • Stage 2 • goodness as self-sacrifice • Stage 3 • morality of nonviolence

  19. Adolescent Suicide

  20. Early and Middle-Adulthood • The peak of health - 18 to 25 • Quantitative changes after 25 • Menopause • the point at which women stop menstruating and are no longer fertile

  21. Social Development • Midlife transition • beginning around the age of 40, a period during which we come to the realization that life is finite • Midlife crisis • the realization that we have not accomplished in life what we had hoped to, leading to negative feelings

  22. Marriage, Children, and Divorce • 60 percent of all first marriages end in divorce • In 1990, 28 percent of all family households had one parent, compared with 13 percent in 1970 • racial and ethnic groups have been particularly hard-hit by divorce

  23. Marriage, Children, and Divorce

  24. The Later Years of Life

  25. The Later Years of Life • Physical changes in late adulthood • Genetic preprogramming theories of aging • theories that suggest there is a built-in time limit to the reproduction of human cells, and that after a certain time they are no longer able to divide

  26. The Later Years of Life • Physical changes in late adulthood • Wear-and-tear theories of aging • theories that suggest that the mechanical functions of the body simply stop working efficiently • waste by-products of energy production eventually accumulate, and mistakes are made when cells reporoduce

  27. The Later Years of Life • Cognitive changes • slower reaction time versus declining intelligence • effects of physical health and motivation on intelligence • declining fluid intelligence • improving crystallized intelligence

  28. The Later Years of Life

  29. The Later Years of Life • Memory changes in old age • episodic memory versus semantic and implicit memory • senility • a broad, imprecise term typically applied to older adults who experience progressive deterioration of mental abilities • Alzheimer’s disease

  30. The Social World of Late Adulthood • Disengagement theory of aging • aging is a gradual withdrawal from the world on physical, psychological, and social levels • Activity theory of aging • the elderly who are most successful are those who maintain the interests and activities they had during middle age

  31. Adjusting to Death • Denial • Anger • Bargaining • Depression • Acceptance

  32. Erikson’s Theory of Psychosocial Development • Trust-versus-mistrust stage • birth to 18 months • Autonomy-versus-shame-and-doubt stage • ages 18 months to 3 years • Initiative-versus-guilt stage • ages 3 to 6 years • Industry-versus-inferiority stage • ages 6 to 12 years

  33. Cognitive Development • Cognitive development • the process by which a child’s understanding of the world changes as a function of age and experience

  34. Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development • Sensorimotor stage: Birth to 2 years • child has little competence in representing the environment using images, language, or other symbols • Object permanence • the awareness that objects- and people- continue to exist even if they are out of sight

  35. Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development • Preoperational Stage: 2 to 7 years • language development • egocentric thought • child views the world entirely from his or her own perspective • principle of conservation • the knowledge that quantity is unrelated to the arrangement and physical appearance of objects

  36. Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development • Concrete operational stage: 7 to 12 years • logical thought and a loss of egocentrism • Formal operational stage: 12 years to adulthood • abstract thought

  37. Information-Processing Approaches • Information-processing • the way in which people take in, use, and store information • Metacognition • an awareness and understanding of one’s own cognitive processes

  38. Vygotsky’s View of Cognitive Development • Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) • the level at which a child can almost, but not fully, comprehend or perform a task on his or her own

More Related