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Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part I Introduction Chapter One Defining Development Five Characteristics of Development.

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Presentation on theme: "Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part I Introduction Chapter One Defining Development Five Characteristics of Development."— Presentation transcript:

1 Kathleen Stassen Berger Prepared by Madeleine Lacefield Tattoon, M.A. 1 Part I Introduction Chapter One Defining Development Five Characteristics of Development Developmental Study as a Science Cautions from Science

2 2 Beginnings

3 3 Introduction What will happen to the baby just born, or to the schoolchild trying to make a friend, or to the emerging adult wondering how to pay for college, or to the elder contemplating retirement? Why should you care?

4 4 Defining Development The science of human development seeks to understand how and why people—all kinds of people, everywhere—change or remain the same over time. There are 3 crucial elements.

5 5 1. Science developmental study is a science…. –theories –data –analysis –critical thinking –sound methodology

6 6 2. Diversity studying all kinds of people –young and old –rich and poor –every ethnicity, background –sexual orientation

7 7 3. Connections Between Change and Time Changing or remaining the same over time –transformations –consistencies of human life beginning to end –understanding each segment of life

8 8 Dynamic Systems Theory stresses the fluctuations and transitions –the dynamic synthesis of multiple levels of analysis the interaction between people and within each person –parent and child –prenatal and postnatal life –between ages 2 and 102

9 9 Bioecological Systems Urie Bronfenbrenner –a leader in understanding ecological systems approach he believed that developmentalists need to examine all systems surrounding the development of each person –microsysems –exosystems –macrosystems

10 10 The Ecological Model microsysems –a person’s immediate surroundings exosystems –local institutions, such as schools and churches macrosystems –larger social setting, including cultural values, economic polices, and political processes

11 11 Five Characteristics of Development “…developmentalists are acutely aware of the reciprocal connections between one moment in life and another… leading to five principles that are useful for understanding any age of human life…”

12 12 1. Multidirectional changes in direction; development is dynamic, not static –each fraction of a second –years are analyzed, revealing unexpected twist and turns

13 13 Gains and Losses

14 14 The Butterfly Effect –the power of a small change all change may have a large effect every change affects a dynamic system –a tiny event could have an enormous impact, not that is always does opposite can occur… large changes can affect people in contradictory ways (i.e., lottery jackpots)

15 15 2. Multicontextual “…humans develop in dozens of contexts that profoundly affect their development…” –physical surroundings –family patterns Social context –historical –socioeconomic

16 16 The Historical Context –corhort people born within a few years of one another –these people are affected by the same »values »events »technologies »culture

17 17 The Socioeconomic Context –socioeconomic status (SES) “social class” –more than money –occupation –education –place of residence includes advantages and disadvantages Question: does low SES cause damage in infancy or in late adulthood?

18 18

19 19 3. Multicultural “…culture affects each human at every moment… culture is so pervasive, people rarely notice their culture while they are immersed in it…”

20 20 Deciding What to Do Each Moment –culture the patterns of behavior that are passed from one generation to the next groups have their own culture –values –customs –clothes –dwellings –cuisine –assumptions people are influenced by more than one culture

21 21 Ethnicity, Race, and Income –ethnic groups –share certain attributes »ancestral heritage »national origin »religion »culture »language ethnic categories arise from history, sociology, and psychology, not from biology

22 22 Ethnicity, Race, and Income –race –used to categorize groups of people »based on appearance »95% of the genetic differences between one person and another occur within, not between, supposed racial groups race is misleading as a biological category –race = social construction –an idea created by society –perceived racial differences lead to discrimination –affect cognition

23 23 Ethnicity, Race, and Income –social construction SES (socioeconomic status) –a form of income or wealth –overlaps with ethnicity and race –national history and SES affect culture, development

24 24 Issues and Applications “My Name Wasn’t Mary”

25 25 4. Multidisciplinary “…a broad array of disciplines and cross- cutting topics… each person develops simultaneously in body, mind, and spirit…” Development is divided into three domains; –biosocial –cognitive –psychosocial

26 26 The Three Domains

27 27 Mirror Neurons –reflected brain cells –observed actions mirror the intentions, sensations, and emotions of those around –implications of Mirror-Neuron Research possible cultural transmission or social organization

28 28 5. Plasticity denotes two complementary aspects of development –human traits can be molded yet maintaining durability of identity culture and upbringing affect both aspects of plasticity Genes and other biological influences –provides hope and realism hope = changes is possible realism = each developing person must build on what has come before

29 29 Developmental Study as a Science based on objective evidence laden with subjective perceptions making developmental science challenging

30 30 Steps of the Science Method to avoid distortions of unexamined opinions and to control the biases of personal experience 1.ask a question 2.developing a hypothesis 3.test the hypothesis 4.draw conclusions 5.Make the finding available –Replication

31 31 Ways to Test Hypotheses Four methods: 1.Observation 2.The Experiment 3.The Survey 4.The Case Study

32 32 Observation record behavior systematically and objectively –occur in a naturalistic setting –tries to be unobtrusive –can occur in a laboratory or in searches of archival data

33 33 The Experiment used to establish cause –a particular treatment to expose to a specific condition notes whether their behavior changes –independent variable = imposed treatment or special condition –dependent variable = specific behavior being studied »experimental group: is given a particular treatment »control group: does not get the treatment

34 34 The Experiment

35 35 The Survey Information is collected from a large number of people by: –interview –questionnaire –some other means wording and the questions can influence answers

36 36 The Case Study intensive study of one individual or situation –asking about past history –current thinking –future plans can provide unanticipated insight

37 37 Studying Change over Time

38 38 Studying Change over Time Cross-Sectional Research –designed to compare groups of people who differ in age but share other important characteristics (i.e., education, SES, ethnicity)

39 39 Studying Change over Time Longitudinal Research –design in which the same individuals are followed over time and their development is repeatedly assessed

40 40 Studying Change over Time Cross-Sequential Research –designed to first study several groups of different ages and then follow those groups over the years

41 41 Caution from Science developmental scientists also discover changes that are not beneficial –television, divorce, shift work, automobiles.

42 42 Caution from Science Correlation and Causation –can be confusing a correlation indicates the degree of relationship between two variables. –a correlation is positive if both variables tend to increase or decrease together –a correlation is negative if one variables tends to increase when the other decreases –a correlation is zero if no connection is evident

43 43 Caution from Science Quantity and Quality –a second caution concerns how much scientists should rely on data produced quantitative research: provides data that can be expressed with numbers qualitative research contains descriptions of conditions, and participants’ ideas

44 44 Caution from Science Ethics in Research –Caution for all scientists is to ensure that research meets ethical standards “code of ethics” –A set of moral principles that members of a profession or group are expected to follow

45 45 Caution from Science Protection of Research Participants –Researcher must ensure that participation is voluntary, confidential, and harmless

46 46 Caution from Science What should we Study? –Consider the most important ethical concern: “Are scientists studying issues that are crucial to human development?”


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