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Life Span Development Modules 4-6. Physical Changes.

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Presentation on theme: "Life Span Development Modules 4-6. Physical Changes."— Presentation transcript:

1 Life Span Development Modules 4-6

2 Physical Changes

3

4 Smoking and Birth Weight

5 Neural Development

6 Motor Development

7 Language: Acquisition & Critical Periods

8 Noam Chomsky  nature argument - children have a predisposition to learn language  a person’s brain is hard- wired to learn vocabulary and the rules of grammar

9 B.F. Skinner  nurture argument - believed language was the result of learning through: 1. association: linking certain sounds with certain people or objects 2. imitation 3. rewards

10 Linguistic Relativity Hypothesis  proposed by Benjamin Whorf  one’s language determines what we can be aware of or think about (language governs thinking)  example: shades of white (snow) “I speak, therefore I think.”

11 Critical Period & Language  critical period – limited time when an event can occur; may be difficult, less successful, or impossible to develop it later  language critical period: around age 10  example: Genie case (video clip)

12 Cognitive Development Piaget’s Cognitive Stages pages 63-68

13 Cognition  all mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, & remembering  children think differently than adults

14 Jean Piaget  developmental psychologist  proposed first theory of the development of thinking & reasoning (four stages)  the way children think & solve problems depends on their stage of development

15 Schemas  Concepts or mental frameworks that help people organize & interpret information & experiences  Examples: dog, school, dating

16 How do you create schemas? 1. Assimilation 2. Accommodation

17 Assimilation  interpret a new experience within the context of existing schemas  Example: inviting someone out for a date

18 Accommodation  adapt (change) one’s current schemas to incorporate new information

19 Assimilation/Accommodation

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22 Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development StageAgeRangeDescription Key Developmental Events Sensorimotor Preoperational Concrete Operations Formal Operations

23 1) Sensorimotor Stage  birth – 2 years  child gathers information about world through senses & motor functions (grasping, touching)  key developmental event: object permanence

24 Object Permanence  awareness that things continue to exist even when they cannot be sensed  Develops between 8 – 10 months & is evidence of a working memory

25 2) Preoperational Stage  age 2 to 6 – 7  can understand language but does not think logically, egocentric in thought, doesn’t fully understand cause-and-effect connections  key developmental events: lack conservation, develop language, pretend play

26 Egocentrism  inability to take another’s point of view & understand their perspective

27 Conservation Task 1

28 Conservation  understanding that properties (mass, volume, numbers) remain the same even if you change an object’s form

29 Conservation

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32 Types of Conservation Tasks

33 3) Concrete Operational Stage  age 7 – 11  learn to think logically, can perform simple math operations & trial-and-error problem-solving strategies, difficulty with hypothetical scenarios  key developmental events: conservation

34 4) Formal Operational Stage  age 12 – adulthood  can think logically and in the abstract, can solve hypothetical problems (what if…. problems), can handle moral & ethical dilemmas  key developmental events: abstract logic, mature moral reasoning

35 Examples of Formal Operational Thought  Whenever Emily goes to school, Meredith also goes to school. Emily went to school. What can you say about Meredith?  “What would happen if there was no sun?”

36 Social Development in Infancy & Childhood: Attachment pages 68 - 71

37 Attachment  emotional tie with another person; demonstrated by seeking closeness to caregiver  3 Elements of Attachment: 1. body contact 2. familiarity 3. responsiveness

38 Body Contact - Harry Harlow Study  researched attachment in infant monkeys  monkeys had to choose between: cloth mother with no food wire mother that provided food Which do you think they choose?

39 Harry Harlow  Result: monkeys spent most of their time by the cloth mother

40 Familiarity  Sense of contentment with what/who you already know  Infants are familiar w/ parents and caregivers  Stranger anxiety – develops by around 8 month s

41 Social Development in Adolescence page 88 - 89

42 Erik Erikson  constructed an 8-stage theory of psychosocial development  each stage of life presents a unique set of social demands and conflicts  the way each demand/conflict is handled leads to a more or less desirable outcome

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45 Psychosocial Peg Word Mnemonic

46 Moral Development: Lawrence Kohlberg pages 85 -88

47 Lawrence Kohlberg  three-stage theory on how moral reasoning develops  moral reasoning – sense of right and wrong  note to self: read 1 st paragraph on page 86

48 1. Preconventional Moral Reasoning  characterized by the desire to avoid punishment or gain reward  typically children under the age of 9

49 2. Conventional Moral Reasoning  primary concern is to fit in and play the role of a good citizen  strong desire to follow the rules and laws  typical of most adults

50 3. Postconventional Moral Reasoning  characterized by universal ethical principles that represent the rights or obligations of all people  follow laws unless they violate ethical principles  most adults do not reach this level  not well supported – sample group: white, male, western cultures


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