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I' Infancy and Toddlers

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Can't go beyond 42 months (future prognosis) Helps teachers and parents and ... Single score designed to show how your child compares to ... to disengage from ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: I' Infancy and Toddlers


1
I. Infancy and Toddlers
  • Infant Neurological Development
  • BSID
  • DQ
  • Temperament
  • Attachment and Bonding
  • Evolutionary Views
  • John Bowlby
  • Mary Ainsworth
  • Harry Harlow

2
Infant Neurological Development
3
Infant Neurological Development
  • Bayley Scales of Infant Development
  • Diagnosis for ages 2 to 42 months.
  • 3 ½ years
  • Two main areas of development
  • Mental abilities
  • Senses
  • Perception
  • Memory
  • Learning
  • Problem Solving
  • Language
  • Motor abilities
  • Fine (use of fingers)
  • Gross (walking)
  • Cant go beyond 42 months (future prognosis)
  • Helps teachers and parents and shows problem
    areas.

4
Infant Neurological Development
  • Developmental Quotient (DQ)
  • Arnold Gesell (1880-1961)
  • Single score designed to show how your child
    compares to the average child.
  • Relates to performance in four domains
  • Motor Skills
  • Language Use
  • Adaptive Behavior
  • Personal-Social
  • Standardized Score of 100 means that the child
    is average and does not deviate from the norm in
    either direction.
  • Does factor in your age.
  • May be biased toward Americans.

5
Infant Neurological Development
  • Temperament
  • Easy Babies-
  • Have a positive disposition.
  • Body functions operate regularly.
  • Adaptable.
  • Difficult Babies-
  • Have negative moods.
  • Slow to adapt to new situations.
  • When confronted with a new situation, tend to
    withdraw.
  • Slow-to-warm Babies-
  • Inactive.
  • Showing relatively calm reactions to their
    environment.
  • Moods are generally negative.
  • Withdraw from new situations, adapting slowly.

6
Attachment Theory
  • Attachment
  • Positive emotional bond that develops between a
    child and a particular individual.
  • Evolutionary Perspective on Attachment
  • The infant is born with the fathers facial
    characteristics so that he will know that the
    child is his.
  • Infants do inherit more facial characteristics
    from their father.
  • Infants smile often in the early years.
  • Is this a reaction to their parents smiling?
  • Are they rewarded when they smile after us?
  • Is it a survival tactic to make sure that they
    are well taken care of?

7
Attachment TheoryJohn Bowlby (1907-1990)
  • We can understand human behavior only by
    considering its
  • environment of adaptedness
  • Became concerned about the disturbances of
    children found in institutions.
  • Children seemed unable to love later in life
    because of
  • malformed attachments early in life.
  • Mother/Infant Bond is very important to
    development.
  • Imprinting-Theory rests on the ideas set in
    motion by ethologists.
  • __________________________________________________
    ___________________________________

8
Attachment TheoryJohn Bowlby (1907-1990)
  • Phases of Attachment
  • Phase 1- (Birth to 3 months)
  • Indiscriminate responsiveness to humans.
  • The infant will respond positively to anyone.
  • Phase 2- (3 to 6 months)
  • Focuses on familiar people.
  • Babies responses become more selective.
  • Phase 3- (6 months to 3 years)
  • Intense attachment and active proximity seeking.
  • Increased and intense attachment to very select
    people.
  • Separation anxiety.
  • Phase 4- (3 years to the end of childhood)
  • Partnership behavior.
  • Child is more willing to let the parent go, or
    leave the relationship as long as they come back.
  • The child basically becomes a partner in the
    relationship.

9
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Ainsworth Strange Situation
  • Sequence of staged episodes that illustrate
  • the strength of attachment between a child and
    their mother.
  • Eight Stage Process
  • Mother and baby enter an unfamiliar room.
  • Mother sits down, leaving the baby free to
    explore (3 minutes).
  • Adult stranger enters the room and converses
    first with the mother
  • and then with the baby.
  • Mother exits the room, leaving the baby alone
    with the stranger
  • (up to 3 minutes).
  • Mother returns, greeting and comforting the baby,
    and the
  • stranger leaves (3 minutes).
  • Mother departs again, leaving the baby alone (3
    minutes).
  • Stranger returns (3 minutes).
  • Mother returns and the stranger leaves (3
    minutes).

10
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Discovered four types of attachment styles
  • They show how well the child will form
    relationships in adulthood.
  • Most are the result of the way the parents rear
    the child.
  • I. Secure
  • II. Avoidant
  • III. Ambivalent
  • IV. Disorganized-Disoriented

11
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Secure Attachment
  • Children use the mother as a home base and are at
    ease when she is present.
  • When she leaves-
  • Become upset and go to her as soon as she
    returns.
  • Represent a balance between over-involvement with
    the environment or with the mother.
  • Might explore the environment but as the strange
    situation proceeds, their balance of behavior
    will increasingly tip towards
  • Proximity-seeking behavior.
  • Contact-maintaining behavior.
  • Child will form relationships later in life with
    ease.
  • Result of good parenting practices.

12
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Avoidant Attachment
  • Children-
  • Do not seek proximity to the mother.
  • Turn their attention to the environment.
  • Wont react when the mother leaves the room
  • Wont react when the mother comes back.
  • Learned that nurturance will not be forthcoming
    from their mothers.
  • Inconsistent mothering over the first year.
  • Child will more likely be antisocial and have
    difficulty forming attachments.
  • Caused by parents that do not love their
    child/spend little time with them.

13
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Ambivalent Attachment
  • Children display a combination of positive and
    negative reactions.
  • While most children may whimper or cry when their
    mother leaves the room, they
  • will usually pacify themselves and begin to
    settle and play.
  • Unable to disengage from the mother.
  • When the mother returns, they may also begin to
    scream and rage.
  • More likely be antisocial and have difficulty
    forming attachments.

14
Attachment TheoryMary Ainsworth
  • Disorganized-Disoriented
  • Children show inconsistent/contradictory
    behavior.
  • Mothers
  • Inconsistent with their child.
  • Smile and accept them sometimes, and push them
    away at other times.

15
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Love Experiments
  • Focus
  • Maternal-deprivation and isolation experiments on
    rhesus monkeys.
  • Demonstrated
  • Importance of care-giving and companionship in
    the early stages of primate development.

16
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Surrogate Mother Experiment
  • Offered young rhesus monkeys a choice between two
    surrogate "mothers."
  • Group 1-
  • Terrycloth Mother provided no food.
  • Wire Mother did.
  • Group 2-
  • Terrycloth Mother provided food.
  • Wire Mother did not.

17
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Findings
  • Monkeys clung to Terrycloth Mother in both
    groups.
  • Monkeys chose Wire Mother only when it provided
    food.
  • Terrycloth Mother provided something more
    valuable than food.
  • Provided Contact Comfort.
  • Harlow's interpretation Preference forTerrycloth
    Mother demonstrated the importance of affection
    and emotional nurturance in mother-child
    relationships.
  • The monkeys that had only a wire mother had
    trouble digesting the milk and
  • suffered from diarrhea more frequently.
  • Whenever a frightening stimulus was brought into
    the cage the monkeys ran.
  • to the cloth mother for protection and comfort
    no matter which group they were in.

18
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Unfamiliar Room
  • Cloth Surrogate/Unfamiliar Room
  • Monkeys clung to it until they felt secure enough
    to explore.
  • Once they began to explore they would
    occasionally
  • return to the cloth mother for comfort.
  • Without Cloth Surrogate/Unvamiliar Room
  • Acted very differently.
  • Freeze in fear and cry, crouch down, or suck
    their thumbs.
  • Some would even run from object to object,
    apparently
  • searching for the cloth mother as they cried and
    screamed.
  • Monkeys placed in this situation with Wire
    Mothers
  • exhibited the same behaviors that the monkeys
    with
  • no mother did.

19
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Isolation Experiment
  • Partial Isolation
  • Involved raising monkeys in bare wire cages that
    allowed them to see, smell, and hear other
    monkeys, but provided no opportunity for physical
    contact.
  • Total Social Isolation
  • Involved rearing monkeys in isolation chambers
    that precluded any and all contact with other
    monkeys.

20
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • Findings
  • Partial isolation
  • Blank staring
  • Repetitive circling in cages
  • Self-mutilation
  • Total isolation
  • (left alone for 3, 6, 12, or 24 months of "total
    social deprivation.)
  • Severely psychologically disturbed.
  • No monkey has died during isolation.
  • When initially removed from total social
    isolation
  • Go into a state of emotional shock
  • Autistic self-clutching and rocking
  • 1 of 6 isolated for 3 months refused to eat and
    died 5 days later.
  • The autopsy report attributed death to emotional
    anorexia.

21
Attachment TheoryHarry F. Harlow
  • 6 months of total social isolation
  • So devastating and debilitating that Harlow had
    assumed initially that 12 months of isolation
    would not produce any additional decrement.
  • This assumption proved to be false.
  • 12 months of isolation practically obliderated
    the monkeys.
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