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Theories of Social Development 1.Psychoanalytic Theories Freud’s Erikson’s 2.Learning Theories Behaviorist Learning theories (Watson, Skinner) Social Learning.

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Presentation on theme: "Theories of Social Development 1.Psychoanalytic Theories Freud’s Erikson’s 2.Learning Theories Behaviorist Learning theories (Watson, Skinner) Social Learning."— Presentation transcript:

1 Theories of Social Development 1.Psychoanalytic Theories Freud’s Erikson’s 2.Learning Theories Behaviorist Learning theories (Watson, Skinner) Social Learning theories 3.Social Cognition Theories 4.Ecological and Evolutionary Theories Bioecological theories (Bronfenbrenner) Ethology/Evolutionary Psychology Theories

2 1. Psychoanalytic Theories Freud (1856-1939)  Behavior: the need to satisfy basic drives Balancing act between:  Id: pleasure seeking; develops early in the first year  Ego: rational problem solving; develops late in the first year  Superego: internal moral standards; develops between ages 3-6  Weakness: Highly untestable  4 important contributions:  Role of early experience  Value of subjective experience  Unconscious  Emotional relationships

3 Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development Stage 1:Basic Trust vs Mistrust First year Crisis: sense of trust in caregiver Learned to form contingencies, expectations, predictions Stage 2:Autonomy vs Shame and Doubt 1–3 years Crisis: developing independence and sense of self-efficacy Stage 3:Initiative vs Guilt 4–6 years Crisis: developing standards/conscience without being crushed by worry of failure Stage 4:Industry vs Inferiority 6–puberty Crisis: mastering skills to fit in with the culture (engage in social comparison) Stage 5:Identity vs Role Confusion Adolescence–early adulthood Crisis: sense of identity Who am I?

4 2. Learning Theories Behaviorism (Watson) Remember Little Albert? Systematic Desensitization Operant Conditioning (Skinner)  Every act is based on outcomes of past behavior (Positive outcome increases behavior, neg. decreases)  It is hard to extinguish a behavior that is intermittently reinforced  If parents give in once…  Attention is a powerful reinforcer  Behavior modification

5 Social Learning Theory  Focus on observation and imitation Bobo Doll Experiment

6 3. Theories of Social Cognition how children think about their own and others thoughts, feelings, motives, intentions, expectations, and behaviors Focus on internal/cognitive factors rather than external factors Selman’s Stage Theory of Role Taking he said until age 6 children are virtually unaware of others’ perspectives (new data refutes this) but clearly perspective-taking is important Dodge’s Info-Processing Theory Emphasized cognitive processes (such as interpretation) (e.g. hostile attribution bias, self-fulfilling prophecies)

7 4. Ecological Theories of Development Micro-direct/immediate Meso-interconnections Exo-indirect Macro-cultural/social context Chrono-temporal changes

8 Ethological/Evolutionary Models:  Just as evolution influenced our physical traits it no doubt influenced our behavioral traits  certain genes predispose individuals to behave in a way that increases survival, mating,and reproduction. These genes are passed on.  focus on the adaptive or survival value of behavior  Konrad Lorenz (1903-1989)-Imprinting in animals (attachment in humans?)  Preference for face-like stimuli Weakness: Not easily testable, and data consistent with other theories as well

9 Social Dev. Theories Exercise Name all psychological/behavioral gender differences you can. Name all gender stereotypes you can. How would each of the following types of theorists explain such gender differences: –Behaviorist learning theorists? –Social Learning theorists? –Social Cognition theorists? –Bioecological theorists (how would each of the 5 systems influence gender)? –Evolutionary theorists?


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