 Stranger anxiety – fear of strangers that infants commonly display › Displayed ~ 6 months old.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Infancy and Childhood Social Development. Stranger Anxiety The fear of strangers that infants commonly display, beginning by about 8 months of age.
Advertisements

Social Development in Infancy and Childhood Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development.
Physical & Social Development
Write down what you think is meant by the term Write down what you think is meant by the termATTACHMENT.
Infancy and Childhood Social Development. Maturation Maturation is the physical development of a person. First you roll over, then crawl, then walk, then.
Infancy and Childhood (part 2) Chapter 5, Lecture 4 “Deep and longstanding attachments seldom break quickly. Detaching is a process, not an event.” - David.
Development the changes we go through during our lifetime Physical, social, cognitive, moral.
Infancy through Childhood. A person’s patterns of mood, activity, and emotional responsiveness Shown within the first few months of life Differences can.
Infancy through Childhood. A person’s patterns of mood, activity, and emotional responsiveness Shown within the first few months of life Differences can.
Temperament A person’s characteristic or stable way of responding, both emotionally and physically, to environmental events Seems to be present from birth.
Attachment. Attachment What is attachment? –Attachment is the enduring social-emotional bond that exists between a child and a caregiver Is attachment.
LEARNING GOAL 9.1: ANALYZE A CHILD'S BEHAVIOR TO PREDICT HIS/HER ATTACHMENT STYLE. Attachment Theory.
Bowlby, Harlow, Ainsworth Attachment Theory. There is a deep emotional tie, almost a physical connection with a loved one This is vital throughout life.
Human Development Emotional Stage & Intellectual Stage March 2014.
Development Through the Lifespan. Developmental Psychology: Studies physical, cognitive and social changes through the life span.
Infancy and Childhood. What are our basic needs for development?
Infancy Cognitive Development  “Baby Human – Face Recognition” “Baby Human – Face Recognition” 2 key ideas from birth: Born with more neurons than an.
Infancy & Childhood Social Development
Do-now In your journal, create a timeline of how a baby grows and develops in their first year of life.
Pages and 100.  The fear of strangers that infants commonly display, starting around 8 months.  Shows that he/she is cognitively able to distinguish.
TEMPERAMENT SURVEY Circle #s 6,18,19 & change the score (5=1,4=2,3=3,2=4,1=5) Activity = energy output don’t sit still long; active rather than quiet activities.
Development The changes we go through during our lifetime Physical, Social, Cognitive, Emotional, Moral.
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
Development Social Development Attachment Stranger anxiety & Attachment By nature human beings are social animals –Bonds are formed at birth with care.
Social Development Nature and Nurture –Where does the division begin? Attachment Theory –Cupboard Theory (Freud) –The need for comfort (Bowlby & Harlow)
Social Development. What is Social development? Involves the ways in which infants and children relate to each other.
Harry Harlow Attachment Theory. There is a deep emotional tie and almost a physical connection with a loved one This is vital throughout life John Bowlby,
Development Part II Socioemotional Development
Attachment Bryce DiLeo Krystal Davis Maria Sanchez.
Early Socialization and Parenting Styles. How and Why do we form attachments to others? American Psychologist Harry Harlow tried to answer this question.
Three Causes of Attachment zComfort (Body Contact) - Harlow zFamiliarity - Lorenz zResponsive Parenting - Ainsworth.
Infancy and Childhood Social Development. Stranger Anxiety The fear of strangers that infants commonly display, beginning by about 8 months of age. Children.
Attachment & Parenting Early Social Development Mr. Koch AP Psychology Forest Lake High School.
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY Part 1: Physical Development & Parenting.
Emotional Attachment Attachment is the bond that forms between an infant and their primary caregiver. Important development in the social and emotional.
 Stranger anxiety – fear of strangers that infants commonly display › Displayed ~ 6 months old.
Jeopardy people kids Piaget parentingyomamma Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.
Unit 4: Developmental Psychology
Infancy & Childhood Module 48: Social Development.
AttachmentAttachment. Social development begins the minute you enter the world. Social development is a really funny thing- who you are now socially really.
Human Development The Process of Change that Occurs from Infancy to Death Examines how and why people change and how they remain the same over time Research.
Chapter 7 The First Two Years: Psychosocial Development Copyright © 2014 by Worth Publishers Kathleen Stassen Berger The Developing Person Through the.
CH 3 Section 2. Introduction (page 70) Children think differently from adults in many ways. Children form their own ideas about how the world works. Describe.
Attachment and Social Relationships
Attachment & Parenting Early Social Development
Unit 9: Developmental Psychology
Development in Childhood
Child Development.
MARY AINSWORTH BY-sofia and sayed.
Developmental Psych.
Bowlby, Harlow, Ainsworth
Infancy and Childhood Social Development.
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Childhood Social Development
Communication and Social Behaviour Part 1
Infancy and childhood Social development.
Why does a child develop special attachment to their caregiver?
Happy Monday!  Provide an example of schema, assimilation and accommodation. 2. What is the zone of proximal development? 3. A child screams and cries.
Child Development, 3/e by Robert Feldman
Notes 4-2 (Obj 9-16).
Attachment & Parenting Early Social Development
Myers EXPLORING PSYCHOLOGY (6th Edition in Modules)
Attachment in childhood
Developmental Psychology
Infancy and Childhood Social Development
Social Development.
Infancy and Childhood Social Development.
48.1 – Describe how parent-infant attachment bonds form.
Unit 9: Developmental Psychology
Emotional tie with another person
Presentation transcript:

 Stranger anxiety – fear of strangers that infants commonly display › Displayed ~ 6 months old

 Attachment – an emotional tie with another person; seen in young children by seeking closeness to the caregiver

 Familiarity › Attachment forms during a critical period – period shortly after birth when certain events must take place to facilitate proper development › Imprinting – certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life  Ex. Konrad Lorenz studied what ducks would do if he was the first thing they saw after being born. They followed him around. Lorenz also found that imprinting occurred with various other moving objects.  Movie Trailer – Fly Away Home Movie Trailer – Fly Away Home

 Attachment theorists believe that if proper emotional ties are formed (from birth to one) with caregiver then social and emotional development is more likely to flourish. To do this caregiver needs to be nurturing, trusting and show responsiveness. They believe it’s the most important time of life.  Q. What might happen if you parent a child and respond every time a 3 year old cries, whines and/or says he/she needs something?

 Body Contact – attached to those who satisfy needs › Ex. Harry Harlow bred monkeys and placed them in cages with a baby blanket. The monkeys became attached to the blanket. Harlow then created two artificial mothers – one wire mother with a wooden head and one terrycloth monkey. Monkeys preferred the cloth mother. › Video: YouTube - Harlow's MonkeysYouTube - Harlow's Monkeys › › HarryHarlow strange situation HarryHarlow strange situation

 Ex. Mary Ainsworth – studied attachment by observing mother and infants in the first 6 months. Later she places 1 year olds in a strange situation without their mothers. Mothers seen as sensitive in the first observation, had children with secure attachments, Mothers seen as insensitive had children with insecure attachments.  Video Clip – Strange Situation Video Clip – Strange Situation

Securely Attached infants (had responsive parent) will:  play comfortably in their mother’s presence,  use mom as a homebase  are distressed when mom leaves and seeks contact upon return but not clingy.

Insecurely Attached infants may:  explore less in the mother’s presence  cling to her  be ambivalent about mom having left  be crying uncontrollably  Secure vs Insecure Attachments Strange Situation Secure vs Insecure Attachments Strange Situation

 Secure attachment predicts social competence › Erikson states that children with secure attachment approach life with basic trust – the belief that the world is predictable and trustworthy › Basic trust develops with appropriate responses by caregivers (loving, caring, nurturing) › Life without forming attachments could cause one to fear the world, no basic trust develops. › Harlow’s monkeys, if reared alone were later terrified to be surrounded by adult monkeys.

 Interruption during attachment › Most infants recover if placed in a stable, nurturing environment

 By the age of 12 children have a sense of self  Self concept – a sense of one’s identity and personal worth  By the time children reach school age they begin to describe themselves by their gender and group memberships and compare themselves to other children.  The Rouge Test – Self-recognition (video)Self-recognition (video) › Children recognize themselves with rouge on forehead around 18 mo.

 1. Complete the Parental Authority Questionaire using your mother, father OR guardian.

 Authoritarian - Parents impose rules and expect obedience  Permissive – parents submit desires, make few demands, and use little punishment  Authoritative – Parents are both demanding and responsive (open discussion about the rules and explanation for the rules, discussion about exceptions to the rules)

 In Pairs, go through each of the 21 parenting Styles.  For each one, decide whether you think it represents a:  Authoritarian (place an N)  Permissive (place a P)  Authoritative (place a V)

 Directions: Add up your scores from the following numbers  1,6,10,13,14,17,19 = Permissive /  2,3, 7, 9, 12, 16, 18= Authoritarian, add up the remaining ones = Authoritative.

 Children with the highest self-esteem have authoritative parents › When people are given control over their own life they become motivated and confident › Don’t jump to conclusions that correlation = causation. Other third factors could be causing high social competence (ex. genes, harmonious marriage)