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Chapter 1 Studying Children’s Development. Is the development of school readiness influenced by internal or environmental processes? Research Findings:

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 1 Studying Children’s Development. Is the development of school readiness influenced by internal or environmental processes? Research Findings:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 1 Studying Children’s Development

2 Is the development of school readiness influenced by internal or environmental processes? Research Findings: nearly half of the teachers were nativists remaining teachers thought it was environmental beliefs about school readiness influenced teachers’ recommendation of an extra year of kindergarten

3 Schools as a Context for Development Students will have spent more than 10,000 hours in school by the time they graduate from high school.

4 Percentage of Time Adolescents Spend in Different Settings (Figure 1.2)

5 Percentage of 3-,4-, and 5-Year- Olds in Preschool Programs (Figure 1.3)

6 Discussion Question Think and write down a vivid memory from your childhood school experience. Why has this memory stuck with you and the way you want to learn from this memory?

7 Why do children in the United States not perform as well as children from Singapore, Hong Kong, or Japan on international assessments? instructional practices differ more time spent on mathematics instruction approach to problem solving varies

8 Average Percentages of Concepts in 8 th Grade Mathematics Lessons that Were Stated vs. Developed (Figure 1.4)

9 Head Start programs can help offset some of the effects of poverty: truancy high school dropout teenage pregnancy unemployment

10 Number of Children in the United States: 1950-2020 (Projected) (Figure 1.5)

11 Portrait of America’s Kindergartners: Class of 1998/1999 (Figure 1.6) Ethnic background: 58% white, 19% Latino, 15% African American, 3% Asian, 2% American Indian or Alaskan Native, 1% Hawaiian Native or Pacific Islander. 75% live with two parents. Nearly 50% have mothers with some college education or a college degree.

12 Portrait of America’s Kindergartners: Class of 1998/1999 (Figure 1.6 cont.) Prior to kindergarten, 3 out of 5 children received care on a regular basis other than a parents. As children enter kindergarten for the first time, parents report that 92 percent are eager to learn and 75 percent persist at tasks very often. Nearly half of parents report that a family member reads or sings to their kindergarten-age child on a regular basis.

13 Portrait of America’s Kindergartners: Class of 1998/1999 (Figure 1.6 cont.) Approximately 66 percent of first-time kindergarten students can recognize their letters, and 94 percent can recognize numbers and count to 10. About 12 percent of boys and 11 percent of girls have a body mass index that places them at risk for becoming overweight. Important note: the above characteristics varied by family type, income level, ethnicity, language spoken at home, and maternal education.

14 Changing Demographics of U.S. School Population (Figure 1.7)

15 Discuss Question How involved should schools be in our children’s lives?

16 Children who speak a language other than English at home or who have difficulty speaking English: was 3 million in 2003, an increase from 1.3 million in 1979 represents approximately 5 percent of school-age children in the United States From: Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics, 2005

17 Since 1975, with the Children of All Handicapped Act (PL 94-142) a number of laws have been enacted to ensure equal opportunities for children with disabilities.

18 The Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEA) includes a zero-reject mandate.

19 What is the purpose and function of schools, should it focus on economic, personal or social development? As educators we should have a form of personal philosophy of education, briefly explain what you think the role schools play?

20 Figure 1.9: A Portrait of America’s Children Source: Children’s Defense Fund (2000).

21 Perspectives on Children’s Development biological psychoanalytic behavioral cognitive contextual

22 Development refers to changes in the child that occur over time.

23 Theory refers to a set of general statements used to explain facts.

24 Positions taken on certain basic core issues Nature versus nurture Stability versus plasticity Continuity versus discontinuity Passive versus active child Endpoint versus no endpoint

25 Biological Theories Have been used to explain changes in height, weigh, language, mental abilities, motor skills, and many other characteristics.

26 Psychoanalytic Theories Focus on developmental changes in the self and personality

27 Behavioral Theories Maintain that developmental changes in behavior are influenced by the environment, and the major mechanisms of development are principles of learning.

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29 Cognitive Theories Focus on the ways children construct their own understandings of their environment.

30 Model of Human Information Processing System (Figure 1.10)

31 Contextual Theories Focus on the influence of the social and cultural context on children’s development Social-Cultural Theory Ecological Theories

32 Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Model (Figure 1.11)

33 A research design is the plan or structure of an investigation.

34 A hypothesis is a statement derived from theory that has not yet been validated.

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36 A case study is an in-depth investigation of one person or a small group of individuals.

37 Correlational studies tell us what factors influence or are associated in a positive or negative way and are, perhaps, the most widely used design in developmental research.

38 Model of Positive Correlation Between School Achievement and Self-Esteem (Figure 1.12)

39 In a longitudinal study, the development of one group of children is tracked over several years.

40 In a cross-sectional study, researchers select children of different ages and measure the factor under study.

41 In an experimental study, participants are randomly selected and randomly assigned to either of two conditions: an experimental or a control group.

42 Model of the Bobo Doll Experiment (Figure 1.13)

43 Action research is carried out by teachers, administrators, and other change agents in the school to improve the educational environment for their students.

44 The Action Research Spiral (Figure 1.14)

45 Self-Reports Children can report on their own behavior, their parents’ and teachers’ behavior, or their peers’ behavior.

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47 Performance assessments seek to measure children’s ability to perform specific tasks correctly.

48 Conservation of Liquid Problem (Figure 1.17)

49 Reliability refers to the consistency or precision of a measurement when repeated under similar circumstances.

50 Validity of a measure refers to whether or not it provides an accurate measure of the phenomenon being studied.

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