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Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood

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Title: Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood


1
Chapter 9
  • Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle
    Childhood

2
In This Chapter
3
Physical ChangesGrowth and Motor Development
From 6 to 12
  • General growth
  • Large muscle coordination
  • Fine motor control
  • Eye-hand coordination improvement
  • How did you grow during middle childhood?

4
Physical ChangesGrowth and Motor Development
From 6 to 12
  • Gender Differences
  • Girls
  • Faster in overall growth rate
  • Slightly more fat and less muscle
  • Better coordination
  • Boys
  • Boys faster and stronger

5
The Brain and Nervous System
  • Major Middle Childhood Growth Spurts
  • From 6 to 8 years Increases in the sensory and
    motor cortex
  • From 10 to 12 years Frontal lobes and cerebral
    cortex add synapses

6
The Brain and Nervous System
7
Cognitive ChangesThe Brain and Nervous System
  • Spatial perception lateralization
  • Improves learning math concepts and
    problem-solving
  • Spatial cognition
  • Ability to infer rules from and make predictions
    about movements of objects in space

8
Cognitive ChangesHealth and Wellness
  • Rate and Type of Injury Changes with Age
  • Head injuries
  • Motor vehicles and bicycles
  • Traumatic brain injuries (TBI)
  • Reduced by helmet usage

9
Cognitive ChangesHealth and Wellness
  • Asthma Chronic disease that causes airways to
    become sore and swollen
  • Causes
  • Allergens, irritants, weather, exercise,
    infections
  • Consequences
  • Most frequent cause of school absence

10
Health and WellnessObesity
  • Obesity Excess body fat that has adverse effect
    on health
  • Most serious long-term health risk of middle
    childhood
  • Affecting nearly 1 in 5 children
  • Associated with adult obesity
  • Lets look at the prevalence of overweight
    children over time.

11
Figure 9.1 Prevalence of Overweight among
U.S. 6 11 Year Olds
  • Figure to come

12
Cognitive ChangesLanguage
  • During the school-aged years, children
  • Demonstrate improved grammar skills and
    pronunciation
  • Engage in conversation with many ages
  • Increase in vocabulary, especially derived words

13
Figure 9.2 Vocabulary Growth in Middle
Childhood
14
Cognitive ChangesPiagets Concrete Operational
Stage
  • Concrete Operational Stage Thinking logically
    about concrete concepts but have difficulty
    understanding abstract or hypothetical concepts
  • School-aged children
  • Understand rules that govern physical reality
  • Distinguish between appearance and reality
  • Utilize a set of powerful schemas

15
Cognitive ChangesPiagets Concrete Operational
Stage
  • Do you know what powerful schema school-aged
    children use?

16
Figure 9.3 An Example of Concrete
Operational Thinking
17
Piagets Concrete Operational StageDirect Tests
of Piagets View
  • Horizontal decalage Applying new thinking to all
    kinds of problems
  • Conservation Ability to logically determine
    certain quantity remains same despite adjustment
    of container, shape, or apparent size
  • Lets see how children perform on tests of
    conservation.

18
Figure 9.4 Within-Stage Development in Concrete
Operations
19
Direct Tests of Piagets ViewSiegler
  • Concrete Operations as Rules for Problem Solving
  • Siegler
  • Cognitive development consists of acquiring a set
    of basic rules applied to broader ranges of
    problems.
  • Movement from one rule to next requires
    experience.
  • This approach is a cross between Piagets and
    information processing theories.

20
Figure 9.5 Piagets Balance Task
21
Advances in Information Processing
SkillsProcessing Efficiency
  • Processing efficiency Ability to make efficient
    use of short-term memory capacity
  • Major component of cognitive growth
  • Increases speed of cognitive processing
  • Change validated with cross-cultural research

22
Advances in Information Processing
SkillsAutomaticity
  • Automaticity Ability to recall information from
    long term memory without using short term memory
    capacity
  • Frees up short-term memory space for more complex
    processing
  • Achieved primarily through practice

23
Advances in Information Processing
SkillsExecutive and Strategic Processes
  • Executive processes Information processing
    skills allowing a person to devise and carry out
    alternative strategies for remembering and
    problem solving
  • Metacognition thinking about thinking
  • Memory strategies

24
Advances in Information Processing
SkillsExpertise
  • Expertise Amount of information possessed
    improves information processing
  • Categorize information in complex and
    hierarchical ways
  • Stirs capacity for creativity
  • Chi research

25
SchoolingOverview
  • Every society seeks ways of teaching children
    skills needed in adulthood.
  • In U.S., formal education is one of most
    important influence on cognitive development in
    middle childhood.

26
Schooling
  • Literacy Ability to read and write
  • Phonological awareness
  • Balanced approach utilizes systematic and
    explicit phonics instruction
  • Sound-symbol connections and explicit language
    mechanics instruction
  • Curriculum flexibility

27
Second-Language Learners
  • Limited English Proficient (LEP) Limited ability
    to read, write, speak, or understand English
  • English Language Learners (ELL) Limited English
    proficiency prevents full participation in
    regular education classes
  • By 2008, one-half of all U.S. classrooms had one
    or more ELL or LEP students

28
Second-Language Learners
  • Programs and services provided
  • Bilingual education
  • ESL
  • Home-school programs
  • No single approach is most successful
  • Any structured program better than submersion
  • Transition to English-only program is necessary

29
Achievement and Intelligence Tests
  • Standardized tests Individual performance
    determined by comparing score to average score
    obtained from large sample of similar individuals
  • Kinds of tests
  • Achievement tests
  • Paper and pencil intelligence tests

30
Yes or No?
  • IQ tests should be used as the primary or only
    criteria for placing children in educational
    programs.

31
SchoolingAchievement and Intelligence Tests
32
?
?
Questions To Ponder
  • Which theory describes intelligence better
    multiple intelligences or the triarchic theory?
    Why?
  • Obesity is becoming a major problem in the U.S.
    What can a parent do to help an obese child or to
    help a child avoid becoming obese?

33
SchoolingGroup Differences in Achievement
  • Sex differences
  • No consistent differences between boys and girls
    on total IQ or achievement test scores
  • Differences shaped by interaction between biology
    and environmental factors

34
SchoolingGroup Differences in Achievement
  • Ethnic differences
  • Problems associated with economic status access
    to prenatal care family stability
  • Style differences
  • Analytic
  • Relational

35
SchoolingCross Cultural Differences in
Achievement
  • U.S. children significantly behind industrialized
    nation peers in math and science
  • North American parents emphasize innate ability
    Asians emphasize hard work
  • Teaching methods vary
  • Studies may be measuring surface rather than
    subtle variations

36
Children with Special NeedsOverview
  • 13 of all U.S. children receive some kind of
    special education
  • See Table 9.4 for a list of disabilities for
    which U.S. children receive special education
    services
  • One of the growing categories of disabilities
    include learning disabilities

37
Children with Special NeedsLearning Disabilities
Learning disabilities Disorder in which child
has difficulty in mastering specific academic
skill, even though she or he possesses normal
intelligence and no physical or sensory handicap.
38
Children with Special NeedsAttention-Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
  • ADHD Neurobiological disorder characterized by
    developmentally inappropriate impulsivity,
    inattention, and, in some cases, hyperactivity
  • Causes
  • Cultural factors
  • Treatment
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