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Social Development

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Social Development. The changing nature of relationships with others over the life span ... innate drives to develop social relationships and that these promote ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Development


1
Social Development
  • The changing nature of relationships with others
    over the life span

2
What Are the Issues ?
  • Individuals develop socially. How do social
    relationships develop?
  • What factors drive social development?
  • biological
  • cultural
  • cognitive

3
Eriksons Theory
  • Biological in belief that there are innate drives
    to develop social relationships and that these
    promote survival (Darwinism)
  • Divided life span into eight psychosocial stages,
    each associated with a different drive and a
    problem or crisis to resolve
  • Outcome of each stage varies along a continuum
    from positive to negative

4
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5
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6
Infant Attachment
  • Intense emotional bond between infant and
    caregiver

7
Harlows Study of Attachment
  • Infant rhesus monkeys placed with two surrogate
    mothers, one wire, one covered with soft cloth
  • Milk-producing nipple attached to either wire or
    cloth mother

8
  • Attachment was based on contact comfort rather
    than feeding

9
Ainsworths Strange Situation
  • Mother-child observed in playroom
  • 4 conditions
  • initial mother-child interaction
  • mother leaves infant alone in playroom
  • friendly stranger enters playroom
  • mother returns and greets child

10
Forms of Attachment
  • Securely attached - explores the room when mother
    present, becomes upset and explores less when
    mother not present, shows pleasure when mother
    returns
  • Avoidantly attached - form of insecure
    attachment child avoids mother and act coldly to
    her

11
Forms of Attachment
  • Anxious resistant attachment - insecure
    attachment child remains close to mother and
    remains distressed despite her attempts to comfort

12
Memory and attachment history (Belsky et al.,
1996)
Recognition score
13
Gender Differences
  • Biological basis difference in prenatal hormone
    exposure
  • Cultural basis difference in interactions with
    caregivers

14
Hoffmans Categories of Discipline
  • Power assertion - use of rewards and real or
    threatened punishments to control childrens
    behavior
  • Love withdrawal - expressing disapproval of child
    rather than action
  • Induction - verbal reasoning in which parent
    induces child to think about harmful consequences
    of actions

15
Baumrinds Parenting Styles
  • Authoritarian - value obedience and use a high
    degree of power assertion
  • Authoritative - less concerned with obedience,
    greater use of induction
  • Permissive - most tolerant, least likely to use
    discipline
  • Neglectful - completely uninvolved

16
Kohlbergs Theory of Moral Development
  • Assessed moral reasoning by posing hypothetical
    moral dilemmas and examining the reasoning behind
    peoples answers
  • Proposed five stages, each taking into account a
    broader portion of the social world

17
Levels of Moral Reasoning
  • Preconventional - moral reasoning is based on
    external rewards and punishments
  • Conventional - laws and rules are upheld simply
    because they are laws and rules
  • Postconventional - reasoning based on personal
    moral standards

18
Stage 1 Obedience and Punishment Orientation
  • A focus on direct consequences
  • Negative actions will result in punishments
  • Positive actions will result in rewards

19
Stage 2 Self-Interested Exchanges
  • Reflects the understanding that different people
    have different self-interests, which sometimes
    come in conflict
  • Getting what one wants often requires giving
    something up in return

20
Stage 3 Interpersonal Accord and Conformity
  • An attempt to live up to the expectations of
    important others
  • Positive actions will improve relations with
    significant others
  • Negative actions will harm those relationships

21
Stage 4 Law-and-Order Morality
  • To maintain social order, people must resist
    personal pressures and follow the laws of the
    larger society

22
Stage 5 Human-Rights and Social-Welfare Morality
  • A balance is struck between respect for laws and
    ethical principles that transcend specific laws
  • Laws that fail to promote general welfare or that
    violate ethical principles can be changed,
    reinterpreted, or abandoned
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