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A Cultural Approach to Child Development

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1 A Cultural Approach to Child Development
Chapter 1 A Cultural Approach to Child Development Copyright © 2017, 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved

2 Learning Objectives (1 of 4)
1.1 Describe how the human population has changed over the past 10,000 years and explain why the United States is following a different demographic path from other developed countries. 1.2 Define the term socioeconomic status (SES) and explain why SES, gender, and ethnicity are important aspects of child development within countries. 1.3 Trace the evolutionary origins of the human species and summarize the features of the first human cultures. 1.4 Apply information about human evolution to how child development takes place today.

3 Learning Objectives (2 of 4)
1.5 Summarize Freud’s psychosexual theory and Erikson’s psychosocial theory of child development and describe the main limitations of each. 1.6 Describe behaviorism, including the role of conditioning and the variation known as social learning theory. 1.7 Summarize the constructivists theories of Piaget and Vygotsky.

4 Learning Objectives (3 of 4)
1.8 Describe the elements of the information- processing model of cognitive functioning. 1.9 Define the five systems of Bronfenbrenner’s ecological framework Describe the main components of the ecocultural theory of Weisner and explain how it differs from stage theories Outline the cultural-developmental model that will be the structure of this book and describe the new life stage of emerging adulthood.

5 Learning Objectives (4 of 4)
1.12 Recall the five steps of the scientific method and the meanings and functions of hypotheses, sampling, and procedure in scientific research Describe some ethical standards for child development research Summarize the main methods used in research on child development Describe the major types of research designs used in child development research.

6 Child Development Today and Its Origins

7 Introduction to Child Development
Child Development– the way people grow and change from conception through emerging adulthood Biological, cognitive, psychological, and social functioning Culture – the total pattern of a group’s customs, beliefs, art, and technology, transmitted through language

8 Population Growth and the Demographic Divide (1 of 4)
Total fertility rate – in a population, the number of births per woman Developed countries – most affluent countries in the world 18% of total world population Developing countries – less wealth than the developed countries 82% of total world population

9 Population Growth and the Demographic Divide (2 of 4)
Two reasons the United States follows a different demographic path: Total fertility rate is higher than most developed countries United States allows more LEGAL immigration than most developed countries, and also has millions of undocumented immigrants Highlight information regarding immigration in United States. Include both legal and illegal immigration.

10 Population Growth and the Demographic Divide (3 of 4)
40% of world’s population lives on less than $2 per day 80% of world’s population lives on a family income of less than $6,000 per year Developed countries – 50% go on to tertiary education Developing countries – about 20% of children don’t complete primary school

11 Population Growth and the Demographic Divide (4 of 4)
Individualistic – cultural values such as independence and self expression Collectivistic – cultural values such as obedience and group harmony Traditional culture – rural culture that adheres more closely to historical traditions than urban people Globalization – increasing connections between different parts of the world

12 Figure 1.1 World Population Growth
What happened in recent human history to cause population to rise so dramatically? Source: Population Reference Bureau (2014)

13 Figure 1.2 Projected Ethnic Changes in the U.S. Population to 2050
Which ethnic group is projected to change the most in the coming decades, and why?

14 Map 1.1 Worldwide Variations in Population and Income Levels (1 of 2)

15 Map 1.1 Worldwide Variations in Population and Income Levels (2 of 2)
Developed countries represent only 18% of the world population yet they are much wealthier than developing countries. At what point in its economic development should a developing country be reclassified as a developed country?

16 Variations Within Countries
Majority culture – the group that sets most of the norms and standards and hold most of the positions of political, economic, intellectual and media power Minority culture-group whose members share characteristics such as ethnicity, religion, or language Contexts – settings and circumstances Socioeconomic status (SES) – social class including educational level, income level, and occupational status Gender – expectations of male and female roles Ethnicity – cultural origin and traditions, race, religion, and language

17 Evolution and the Birth of Culture (1 of 4)
Darwin – The Origin of Species Natural selection Young are born with variations of characteristics Species change little by little each generation

18 Evolution and the Birth of Culture (2 of 4)
Humans’ evolutionary beginning shares ancestry with chimpanzees and gorillas Human evolutionary line called hominid line Hominid line evolved into Homo sapiens

19 Evolution and the Birth of Culture (3 of 4)
Larger brains Wider pelvis (female) Longer dependency Development of tools Control of fire

20 Evolution and the Birth of Culture (4 of 4)
Upper Paleolithic Period Art appeared, as did trade and cultural differences Neolithic Period 10,000 to 5,000 years ago, animals and plants domesticated Development of Civilization Including Egyptian, India, China, and Mediterranean

21 Figure 1.3 Changes in Brain Size in Early Humans
Highlight development of bipedal locomotion. Trace brain growth and scavenging roles as part of impetus of evolution.

22 Human Evolution and Child Development Today
Human development can be understood by understanding human evolution Evolutionary psychology – Branch of psychology that examines how patterns of human functioning and behavior have resulted from adaptations to evolutionary conditions Development is partly based on evolution Little biological change since Homo sapiens Development of larger brain contributes to culture and environmental expansion

23 Theories of Child Development

24 Classic Theories Classic theories date back 3,000 years
Greek philosopher, Solon divided early life into 7 year segments Human lifespan is not really divided clearly into definitive biological stages Scientific study of child development is only about 120 years old

25 Psychoanalytic Theory: Freud (1 of 2)
Based on Freud’s belief of sexual desire as the driving force behind human development Driven by three psychic structures Id: basis is pleasure principle Superego: basis of conscience Ego: basis of reality

26 Psychoanalytic Theory: Freud (2 of 2)
Psychosexual stages focused on areas of sensation and fixation Limits include complexity of human behavior and Freud’s research methodology

27 Table 1.1 Freud’s Psychosexual Stages
Age period Psychosexual stage Main features Infancy Oral Sexual sensations centered on the mouth; pleasure derived from sucking, chewing, biting Toddlerhood Anal Sexual sensations centered on the anus; high interest in feces; pleasure derived from elimination Early childhood Phallic Sexual sensations move to genitals; sexual desire for other-sex parent and fear of same-sex parent Middle childhood Latency Sexual desires repressed; focus on developing social and cognitive skills Adolescence Genital Reemergence of sexual desire, now directed outside the family Table gives information for stages. Highlight Oedipus complex and give specifics on limitations as presented in textbook.

28 Psychoanalytic Theory: Erikson
Focuses on social and cultural environment and not on sexuality Continued throughout life span and not limited to first six years, as with Freud Eight stages of development characterized by crisis and resolution

29 Figure 1.5 Erikson’s Eight Stages of Psychosocial Development
Use table to highlight each stage. Can use this time to ask critical thinking question. “Based on experiences, which theory of human development do you consider more valid, Erikson’s or Freud’s?”

30 Behaviorism and Learning Theories
Focus on what a child does, rather than think, feel, or imagine Conditioning is the fundamental learning process in behaviorism Classical Conditioning-Neutral relate to meaningful Operant Conditioning-Responding to environmental responses Social Learning Theory allows for imitation and modeling

31 Constructivist Theories: Piaget
Piaget focused on different ways that children think as they age Called cognitive developmental approach Maturation-biologically driven Schemes-cognitive structures Assimilation-altering new information to fit existing scheme Accommodation-changing a scheme to adapt new information

32 Table 1.2 Stages of Cognitive Development in Piaget’s Theory
Characteristics 0-2 Sensorimotor Capable of coordinating the activities of the senses with motor activities 2-7 Preoperational Capable of symbolic representations, such as in language, but with limited ability to use mental operations 7-1 Concrete Operations Capable of using mental operations, but only in concrete, immediate experience; difficulty thinking hypothetically 11-15 and up Formal Operations Capable of thinking logically and abstractly; capable of formulating hypotheses and testing them systematically; thinking is more complex; and can think about thinking (metacognition)

33 Constructivist Theory: Vygotsky
Referred to as a sociocultural theory Emphasis on society and cultural impact on learning Two major ideas Zone of proximal development Scaffolding

34 Information Processing Theory
Information Processing Approach Views cognitive changes as continuous Historically compared thinking to a computer Focuses on areas of attention, perception and memory

35 Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Framework
Focuses on multiple influences that shape behavior and is not a stage theory Five levels: Microsystem – Immediate environment Mesosystem – Interconnections Exosystem – Societal institutions Macrosystem – Cultural beliefs and values Chronosystem – Time, historical context

36 Figure 1.7 The Systems in Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Theory

37 Weisner’s Ecocultural Theory
Emphasizes ecological and cultural aspects of the activities and settings of development Activity settings are important Personnel Cultural goals and schemas Motives and feelings Tasks Normative scripts

38 Figure 1.8 Weisner’s Ecocultural Theory
Weisner’s ecocultural theory of child development proposes that there are ecocultural niche features that affect a child’s development.

39 A Cultural-Developmental Model
Cultural-Developmental Approach Throughout life span people live within cultural communities where they continuously interact and negotiate with others who convey cultural beliefs, skills, and knowledge Stages can be ambiguous and variable

40 Stage Theory Prenatal development Adolescence Infancy
Toddlerhood Early childhood Middle childhood Adolescence Emerging adulthood Young adulthood Middle adulthood Late adulthood

41 How We Study Child Development

42 The Five Steps of the Scientific Method (1 of 3)
The scientific method is composed of 5 steps Identifying a question Forming a hypothesis Choosing a research method or design Collecting data Drawing conclusions

43 The Five Steps of the Scientific Method (2 of 3)
Identify a question of scientific interest Can come from previous research, a theory, or personal observation Form a hypothesis The researcher’s idea about a possible answer to a research question Will dictate research methods, design, and analysis

44 The Five Steps of the Scientific Method (3 of 3)
Choose a research method and design The way hypotheses are investigated Collect data to test the hypothesis Researchers try to collect a sample that represents the population Draw conclusions Data is inferred and peer reviewed Can lead to theory modification or changes

45 Figure 1.9 The Steps of the Scientific Method

46 Ethics in Child Development Research
Institutional review boards (IRBs) work to prevent ethical violations Ethical guidelines include Protection from physical and psychological harm Informed consent prior to participation Confidentiality Deception and debriefing

47 Research Methods and Designs (1 of 6)
Researchers use various methods to investigate human development Questionnaires Closed or open-ended Interviews – qualitative Observations Ethnographic research Case studies Biological methods

48 Research Methods and Designs (2 of 6)
Experiments help to establish cause and effect Experimental group receives treatment Control group receives no treatment Independent variable – different for the experimental group than control group Dependent variable – outcome that is measured to calculate results of the experiment Give specifics of Experiment/Control/IV and DV

49 Research Methods and Designs (3 of 6)
Experiments Advantage is degree of control Disadvantage is applicability to real life Natural Experiment Exists naturally and provides interesting scientific information

50 Research Methods and Designs (4 of 6)
Researchers use multiple methods, but it is important that they have reliability and validity Reliability: consistency of measurement Validity: truthfulness of the measure Does it measure what it claims to measure?

51 Research Methods and Designs (5 of 6)
Research design allows researchers to examine changes over time Cross-sectional Gathers information from wide age range at a single time Correlation Positive Negative Go in detail about strengths which connects to weaknesses and describe causation and correlation

52 Research Methods and Designs (6 of 6)
Longitudinal design follows same persons over time Can focus on how people change over time Can deal with cohort effects to some degree Cross Sequential design combines cross sectional approach with longitudinal approach Speak on strengths and weakness and there may still be generational effects as all individuals are from one time period

53 Table 1.3 Research Methods: Advantages and Limitations
Questionnaire Large sample, quick data collection Preset responses, no depth Interview Individuality and complexity Time and effort of coding Observations Actual behavior, not self-report Observation may affect behavior Ethnographic research Entire span of daily life Researcher must live among participants; possible bias Case studies Rich, detailed data Difficult to generalize results Biological measurements Precise data Expensive; relation to behavior may not be clear Experiment Control, identification of cause and effect May not reflect real life Natural experiment Illuminate gene–environment relations Unusual circumstances; rare

54 Figure 1.10 Physical Health and Exercise Are Correlated—But Which Causes Which?

55 Figure 1.11 Religiosity Changes With Age—But Is It an Age Effect or a Cohort Effect?

56 Table 1.4 Research Designs: Advantages and Limitations
Method Definition Advantages Limitations Cross-sectional Data collected at one time point Quick and inexpensive Correlations difficult to interpret Longitudinal Data collected at two or more time points Monitors change over time Time, expense, attrition Cross-Sequential Data collected at two or more time points with the same participants, who are different ages at the outset of the study Can detect differences related to chronological age and distinguish them from those related to cohort effects Time, expense, attrition


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