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INFANCY:

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Stages in Children's Emotional Development. Self-regulation and interest in world 'Falling in love' ... Signs of Abuse and Maltreatment: Bruises? Complaints of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INFANCY:


1
Chapter 6
  • INFANCY
  • The development of emotional and social bonds

2
Emotional Development
3
The Role of Emotional Competence
  • Emotion The physiological changes, subjective
    experiences and expressive behaviors that are
    involved in such feelings as love, joy, grief,
    and anger.

4
Emotional Development in Infancy
5
Social Referencing
  • An inexperienced person relies on a more
    experienced persons interpretation of event to
    regulate subsequent behavior.

6
Functions of Emotions
  • Help humans survive and adapt to environment
  • Guide and motivate human behavior
  • Support communication with others

7
Stages in Childrens Emotional Development
  • Self-regulation and interest in world
  • Falling in love
  • Developing intentional communication
  • Emergence of organized sense of self
  • Creating emotional ideas
  • Emotional thinking

8
Stability of Emotional Expression
  • Emotions and Cultural Norms

9
Emotional Intelligence (Goleman)
  • The ability to
  • Motivate oneself
  • Persist in the face of frustrations
  • Control impulses
  • Delay gratification
  • Empathize, hope
  • Regulate ones moods to keep distress from
    overwhelming ones ability to think

10
Attachment
  • An affectional bond that one individual forms for
    another and that endures cross time and space.

11
What is the Course of Attachment?
  • First stage arousal from all parts of
    environment
  • Second stage indiscriminate attachment
  • Third Stage specific attachment

12
How Do Attachments Form?
  • Ethological Adaptive for survival
  • Learning Mother and baby are rewarded for
    closeness

13
Who are the Objects of Attachment?
  • Mother
  • Father
  • Grandparent
  • Mother and another person

14
What are the Functions of Attachment?
  • Attachment behavioral system
  • Fear-wariness behavioral system
  • Affiliative behavioral system
  • Exploratory behavioral system

15
Temperament
  • Refers to the relatively consistent, basic
    disposition that underlie and modulate much of a
    persons behavior.

16
Individuality in Temperament
  • Difficult babies
  • Slow-to-warm-up babies
  • Easy babies

17
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18
Theories of Personality Development
19
The Psychoanalytic View (Freud)
  • For healthy personalities
  • 1. Breast-feeding
  • 2. Prolonged period of nursing
  • 3. Gradual weaning
  • 4. On-demand nursing schedule
  • 5. Delayed and patient potty training
  • 6. Freedom from punishment

20
Eriksons Psychosocial View
  • Development of basic trust in others
  • First social achievement willingness to let
    mother move out of sight.

21
The Behavioral (Learning) View
  • Concerned with outward display of emotions
  • Rewards appropriate behaviors
  • Extinguishes inappropriate behaviors

22
The Cognitive View and Information Processing
  • How children reason and solve problems
  • Examine cognitive, information-processing
    mechanisms that link affect to thinking and
    behavior

23
The Ecological View
  • Environmental influences contribute to
    development

24
Social Development
25
The Changing Demographics of Childhood
  • Increasing diversity of family structures
  • More single parents

26
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27
The Art of Becoming Human
  • Case studies of severe early deprivation
  • Prolonged neglect, abuse, and isolation
  • Abandonment and emotional-social deprivation
  • Institutionalization and severe deprivation
  • Reactive Attachment Disorder

28
Early Relationships and Social Development
  • Maternal Responsiveness and the Strange Situation
  • Securely attached infants
  • Insecure/avoidant infants
  • Insecure/resistant infants
  • Disorganized/disoriented infants
  • Stranger Anxiety and Separation Anxiety

29
Goodness of Fit
  • Match between characteristics of infants and
    their families
  • Good match optimal development
  • Poor fit stormy household, maladaptive
    functioning

30
Cultural Differences in Child Rearing
  • Child-rearing practices differ from one society
    to another
  • Greater contrast between industrialized and
    nonindustrialized countries
  • Quality of caregivers sensitivity and emotional
    availability is critical

31
Child Care for Infants and Toddlers
32
Parent -Infant Interaction
  • The mother as caretaker
  • The father as caretaker
  • Absentee fathers
  • Good, Better, Best?

33
Sibling-Infant Interaction
  • Older siblings serve as models for younger
    siblings
  • Many cultures require older siblings to care for
    younger siblings

34
Grandparents and Extended Family Interaction
  • Reasons American grandparents are caretakers
  • drug abuse
  • child abuse
  • abandonment
  • teenage pregnancy
  • parent unable
  • death of parent
  • other

35
Early Child-Care Practices
  • Child Day-Care Centers
  • Multiple Mothering

36
Choosing a Child-Care Provider
  • Interview Caregivers
  • Visit the Center
  • Ask Questions of the Center
  • Check References
  • Check the Licensing and/or Referral Program
  • Choose Quality Care
  • Stay Involved

37
Children at Risk Effects of Poverty
  • Child Neglect The absence of adequate social,
    emotional and physical care
  • Child Abuse The non-accidental physical attack
    on or injury to children by individuals caring
    for them

38
The Intergenerational Cycle of Violence
  • Signs of Abuse and Maltreatment
  • Bruises?
  • Complaints of beatings?
  • Child arrives early leaves late?
  • Absent or late often?
  • Behaviors that point to abuse?
  • Neglect of dress, appearance, health?
  • Breaking the Cycle of Violence
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