Top Banner
10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues: 1. Nature and Nurture Bouchard Study 2. Continuous vs. Discontinuous development 3. Longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies
43

10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

Jan 11, 2016

Download

Documents

Silvia Eaton
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development

• Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research

• Basic issues:1. Nature and Nurture

• Bouchard Study

2. Continuous vs. Discontinuous development3. Longitudinal vs. cross-sectional studies

Page 2: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Prenatal DevelopmentThe birds and the bees, a quick review:

• Eggs and sperm• Chromosomes • DNA• Genes• Zygote • Embryo• Fetus• Teratogens

– Fetal Alcohol Syndrome

Page 3: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Page 4: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

45 days

Page 5: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Page 6: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Newborn Development

• Tabula Rasa? (nope)

• Reflexes:

1. Rooting

2. Moro (startle)

3. Babinski

4. Grasp

5. Step

Page 7: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Newborn Development, cont’d

Newborn senses - most are fully developed, some development occurs as we age

• Sight• Hearing• Touch• Taste• Smell

Page 8: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Newborn Temperament

Babies seem to be born with a basic social temperament that generally sticks with us as we age

1. Easy babies

2. Difficult babies

3. “slow to warm up” babies

Page 9: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Brain Development

• We are born with just about all the neurons we’ll ever have

• Neurons are not yet well connected (few synaptic connections)

• As we learn, dendrites grow to make new connections

• Brain Plasticity

Page 10: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Neural Development

Page 11: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Motor Development

• Progresses through various predictable stages

• Not dramatically affected by our environment except in extreme cases

• Cerebellum is developing at its own pace

Page 12: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Page 13: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Attachment

• Imprinting: Konrad Lorenz (1937) – critical period– Do humans have critical periods?

• Harry Harlow1950’s monkey experiment– Effects of attachment deprivation

• Mary Ainsworth - Secure vs. Insecure attachment– The strange situation study

• Implications for Divorce and Day care

Page 14: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Harry Harlow’s Attachment Study - wire frameand soft mom

Page 15: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Konrad Lorenz

Page 16: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Parenting Styles

Baumrind’s research (1971)

• Authoritarian

• Permissive

• Authoritative

• Effects of different styles:

Page 17: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Page 18: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Stage theories of development

Several significant stage theories for different areas of development

1. Piaget’s Cognitive Developmental Theory

2. Erikson’s Social Development Theory

3. Kohlberg’s Moral Development Theory

Page 19: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Jean Piaget

Page 20: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Piaget’s Cognitive Theory of Development

• Three major concepts drive cognitive development:

1. Scheme

2. Assimilation

3. Accomodation• In any new situation, we try to use our existing

scheme first (assimilation), then we change our scheme (accommodate) if we have to.

Page 21: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Piaget’s Cognitive Theory of Development

Stage 1: Sensorimotor• Babies are forming schemes about their sensory

world and their place in it• Missing Object permanence at the beginning• Develops early

– Impossible situation studies

• As soon as babies develop object permanence, they are ready to learn schemes in the next stage

Page 22: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Object Permanence

Page 23: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Piaget’s Cognitive Theory of Development

Stage 2: Pre-operational stage• Learning schemes about manipulating real-world

objects(beginning of logic)• Learning concepts of conservation

– Number– Area– Volume

• Learning Reversibility• Egocentrism

Page 24: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Page 25: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Piaget’s Cognitive Theory of Development

Stage 3: Concrete Operations• Have schemes for real-world objects, can’t

think abstractly yet• Won’t be fooled by the concepts of

conservation again• Theory of mind - some will have and some

won’t• Can Decenter - less egocentrism

Page 26: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Piaget’s Cognitive Theory of Development

Stage 4: Formal Operations

• Has schemes for real-world objects and can think abstractly

• Formal logical thought, hypotheses, etc.

• Metacognition

• Spotlight syndrome

Page 27: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Evaluation of Piaget

• Recent studies indicate:

1. Piaget has the right stages in the right order

2. Development is more continuous than he thought

3. He underestimated children • Research methods were flawed

Page 28: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Module 5: Adolescence

• Definition of adolescence

• Biological or social concept?

• Changes across cultures and history

• Physical changes during puberty

Page 29: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Kohlberg’s theory of moral development

• Happens throughout life, most of us reach the final stages during adolescence

• Three levels:1. Pre-conventional

2. Conventional

3. Post-conventional

Page 30: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Lawrence Kohlberg

Page 31: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Erikson’s theory of social development

• Student of Freud - all these social “decisions” happen at an unconscious level

• Very difficult theory to test

• Coined the term “identity crisis” and “mid-life crisis”

• 8 stages of life

Page 32: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Erik and Joan Erikson

Page 33: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Erikson’s theory of social development - Stages

1. Infants - Trust vs. Mistrust

2. Toddlers - Autonomy vs. Shame/Doubt

3. Pre-schooler - Initiative vs. Guilt

4. Elem. School - Industry vs. Inferiority

Page 34: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Erikson’s theory of social development - Stages

5. Adolescents - Identity vs. Role confusion• Experimentation• Rebellion• Self-ishness• Optimism and energy

6. Young adults - Intimacy vs. Isolation

7. Middle age - Generativity vs. Stagnation

8. Older adults - Integrity vs. Despair

Page 35: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Gender Development

• Starts early in childhood, keeps developing through our lives

• Early influences are very important• Gender vs. Sex• Gender identity

• gender typing

• biological vs. cognitive explanations for gender differences

• Gender schemata

Page 36: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Sexual Orientation• Very controversial research regarding how we

develop our sexual orientation• Researchers agree it’s a combination of nature and

nurture– Some brain based differences– Twin studies– No one knows what the environmental influences are– They are NOT: early sexual experiences, orientation of

parents, masculinity/femininity of parents, identification with parents

– Researchers do not view orientation as a choice

Page 37: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Module 6: Adulthood and Aging

• Most psychological developmental stage theories stop at adolescence (except for Erikson)

• Most of the research done on adulthood and aging investigates specific psychological issues

Page 38: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Aging and Memory

Page 39: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Dementia

Page 40: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Aging and Intelligence

Fluid Intelligence• One’s ability to reason speedily and abstractly• Can be used to solve novel logic problems• Declines as people get older

Crystallized intelligence• One’s accumulated knowledge and verbal skills• Tends to increase with age

Page 41: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Age and Verbal/Nonverbal Intelligence

Page 42: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology

Overall Life Satisfaction

• Most studies show the elderly as happy and satisfied with life.

• People tend to mellow with age.

• Most regrets focus on what the person didn’t do rather than mistakes they have made in life.

Page 43: 10/5/04Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology Module 4: Prenatal and Childhood Development Developmental Psychology: applied vs. basic research Basic issues:

10/5/04 Module 4,5&6: Developmental Psychology