Influential Theorists in Child Development Our class presentation HPC301
Apr 01, 2015
Influential Theorists in Child Development
Our class presentationHPC301
Who did you research?
Erik Erikson – Danielle & Kate Jean Piaget – Courtney & Jennifer Sigmund Freud – Emma & Kristen Maria Montessori – Sarah, Kaylea Albert Bandura – Lisa, Kerryanne J. Fraser Mustard – Leah & Courtney
Who will Mrs. Goulet look at?
Lawrence Kohlberg B.F. Skinner T. Berry Brazelton
Erik Erikson
Kate and Danielle
German psychologist and lecturer at Harvard and Yale Universities
Refined Sigmund Freud's stages of development
Famous for the phrase “identity crisis”
8 stages: – emotional development task– wide range of influences on children's behavior
About the Theorist
8 Stages of Personality Development
Age Stages
Infancy: Birth to 18 months Trust vs. Mistrust
Early Childhood: 2 to 3 years Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt
Preschool: 3 to 5 years Initiative vs. Guilt
School Age: 6 to 11 years Industry vs. Inferiority
Adolescence: 12 to 18 years Identity vs. Role Confusion
Youth Adulthood: 19 to 40 years Intimacy vs. Isolation
Middle Adulthood: 40 to 65 years
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Maturity: 65 to Death Ego Integrity vs. Despair
Advantages and Disadvantages of the Theory
ADVANTAGES
Serve as a good guideline Good idea of emotional
structure in children for parents
Good idea of personality structure in children for parents
Positive and negative attributes
Based off of our culture
DISADVANTAGES
Every child develops at different stages and not all follow strict guidelines
Nurture vs. Nature can change the stages that a child develops
Biological differences between girls and boys
More attention paid to younger generations
The End
Jean PiagetBy: Courtney Craig and Jennifer Murray
His Theory
The study of the development of children's understanding, through observing them and talking and listening to them while they worked on exercises he set.
This theory is primarily known as the “Development Stage Theory”
Ages focused on in Piaget’s Theory
Piaget’s theory applied to people of all ages; stages;
Sensori Motor (Birth – 2yrs) Pre- operational (2yrs – 7yrs) Concrete operational (7yrs – 11yrs) Formal operation 911yrs and up)
Aspect of Child Development
Piaget’s aspect of child development he studied was “Intellect”
Intellect is the ability of the mind to understand and comprehend knowledge
Advantages of the theory
Highly Supported world wide
Very influential Important impact
on education
Disadvantages of the theory
Piaget's whole work lacks scientific principles
Piaget's emphasis is on concepts of relationship.He does not investigate terms of concepts.
In his approach no direct teaching was involved
A child cannot engage in a difficult thought nor cannot perform any useful scientific activity.
Sigmund FreudKristen and Emma
Description
Founder of modern psychiatry Theorized that child experiences
affect their adult hood Believed sensory experiences
associated with feeding and toilet-training affect personality
Who It Affects
Starts at birth Continues throughout childhood Affects adulthood
Aspect of Child Development
Age vs. personality development How growing up affects the
personality How people around you affect
personality
Sigmund Freud Theory
ADVANTAGES
Changed how people defined psychology
Sigmund Freud ‘s theory has been taken and redefined by many other theorists
DISADVANTAGES
Many mis-diagnosed patients
Society often classified the theory as sexist
Maria MontessoriFounder of Montessori Method
Montessori Method
This method is characterized by emphasis on independence, respect for child’s natural psychological development and freedom of limits. She started to research philosophy methods in 1897. In 1907 she opened her first classroom in Rome called the Casa Dei Bambai or Children’s House. She would refer to her work as “scientific pedagogy.” Her theory is a model of human development and is an educational approach. She had two basic methods with children, and developing adults in psychological self-construction and children under the age of six have an innate path of psychological development. She believed that children act freely in an environment prepared.
Ages it applies to
This method applies to the ages from birth to 18 years old. E.g. Birth to three years, six to twelve, and twelve to eighteen.
Ages birth to three- She was testing all of their ability’s to see if something would change in their body as they got older. Also to see the different opportunities between them.
Ages six to twelve- Montessori used the term “cosmic education” to show both the universal scope and the idea that education in the second plane helped the child realize the human role in the functioning of the universe.
Ages twelve to eighteen- Education for these ages is less well developed. She did not establish a training program for this age group for teachers in her lifetime.
Aspect studied
Maria Montessori was basically making up a program for the psychological development of children’s minds. She was creating a method that would help them learn the roles of human development and society, something that would get there minds on the right track. She found a way to help children learn most things with mathematics, sciences and other more important things in the world. She would also have to test her theory out to see if it would work, and to see how a child's mind actually developed.
Advantages of Theory
Try and make a more enjoyable way for children to learn and keep them interested, teaching them manners, learning everything has there own place. Children’s minds are like sponges, they are always up to learn something new and absorb it all. Montessori also realized that every child learns at there own pace therefore different ways of learning and different paces. The environment provides a natural sense of discipline, the teacher plays a very good role in the classroom for the children.
Disadvantages of Theory
Does not give kids enough free time to play, they do a lot of learning through play. She has been said to be to “rigid” and did not allow children to reach there creative potential.
. He believed that environment shapes behavior and vice versa
. He believed that children learn by observing and modeling others
. He believed that if a child sees another kid being rewarded it is as effective as being rewarded oneself
. We think this theory applies to ages 2 to 5.
. We think this is because Little kids look up to their parents and if they see them doing something wrong or right then they think it is ok
• Albert Bandura was studying environment within children and parents
The advantages to this theory is that parents now know that they need to be careful of what their doing because their children are watching.
The disadvantages to this theory is that some parents don’t know how to set a good example towards their children
J. Fraser Mustard
Brain Development
Description of theory
He believes that community support for early childhood development has important benefits for society.
Ages of people
The age that this theory applies to is children under the age of six.
Aspects of the child
He was studying the brain development for children under six and how support from the community on this benefits society.
Advantages
Advantages of this theory would be gaining more knowledge on younger children.
Having more support from the community.
Will benefit our society.
Disadvantages
Disadvantages of this theory would be that not everyone would necessarily benefit from it, depending on your outlook.
Some people in the community or in our society might not support this theory.
Lawrence KohlbergMrs. Goulet
Lawrence Kohlberg
Kohlberg believed that moral development occurs in stages
As a child’s intellect and social skills develop, they are able to better understand right and wrong.
Lawrence Kohlberg Stages
Stage 1 – Obey rules to avoid punishment
Stage 2 – Understand that there isn’t one way of looking at something. Is it OK to steal bread if is to feed your family?
Stage 3 – Around the teen age. Believe in living up to expectations of family. Good behaviour means his motives were good. A druggy who steals has bad motives (selfish)
Lawrence Kohlberg Stages Stage 4 – Maintaining social order.
Obeying laws, respecting authority, and performing one's dutie
Stage 5 - They begin to think about society in a very theoretical way, stepping back from their own society and considering the rights and values that a society ought to uphold
Stage 6 – Justice - respecting the basic dignity, of all people as individual
Ages
All ages – Each stage progresses as the child grows up. This goes into adulthood
Kohlberg – Moral Reasoning
The study of moral reasoning believes we are not born with a code of what is right and wrong.
Advantages
Good for parents to believe that moral reasoning can be developed and cultivated
This study was only conducted on boys and therefore cannot be universally applied
Disadvantages
B.F. SkinnerMrs. Goulet
B.F. Skinner
Skinner believed that then environment influences behaviour
Children do things to either avoid punishment or to gain a reward
Children are passive in their own development
Ex. If a dog gets a pet or a treat for doing something he will likely do it again
Ages
I assume this applies to young children. See disadvantages.
Skinner – Behaviour theory
A scientific approach to explaining and predicting behaviour
Advantages
Great for raising a young child. Helps us understand why “time out”
works
Doesn’t take into account that a child has free will and will develop their own moral compass
Disdvantages
T. Berry BrazeltonMrs. Goulet
T. Berry Brazelton
Believed in focusing on an individual’s strengths vs. their drawbacks
The Scale, looks at a wide range infant behavior (up to 2 months old)
By the end of the assessment, the examiner has a behavioral "portrait" of the infant, describing the baby's strengths, adaptive responses and possible vulnerabilities.
Brazelton
The findings allow parents and care givers to tailor care giving to the baby's specific physical needs and behavioral style.
Does the baby like to be handled? Is the baby receptive to social interaction? Does the baby easily calm herself?
Brazelton – Infant Development
Study of why infants do what they do and how to use this information to care for them
Advantages
Up until Brazelton, studies only showed a child’s abnormalities. This study shows their capabilities
Babies change and evolve. Parents shouldn’t stick to the study as a bible for parenting their child
Disadvantages