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Title: Child Psychopathology PowerPoint 1


1
Blessing the Children
  • Mark 1013-16
  • And they kept bringing young children to him
    that he might touch them and the disciples were
    reproving them for it. But when Jesus saw it He
    was indignant and pained , and said to them,
    allow the children to come to Me.--- do not for
    bid or hinder them --- for to such belongs the
    kingdom of God. Truly I tell you , whoever does
    not receive and welcome the kingdom of God as a
    little child, positively shall not enter it at
    all. And he took the children up one by one in
    His arms and fervently invoked a blessing,
    placing His hands upon them.
  • Jesus touched the children.
  • He related to them one to one.
  • The Lord blessed the children. He could
    impart a divine blessing for He was God.
  • How do we bless and curse the
    children we come in contact with?

2
Developmental Psychopathology
Houghton College
Houghton College
  • Childhood psychopathology is the study of
    mental illness or disorders in children.
  • We will study the etiology, dynamics,
    diagnosis and treatment of psychopathology in
    children.
  • Developmental psychopathology is the study of
    the developmental processes that contribute to
    the formation of, or resistance to,
    psychopathology.
  • This approach assumes that child psychopathology
    can be understood as normal development gone
    awry.
  • (e.g. child having fears, will
    grow out of it)
  • This approach alerts us to the fact that some
    problem behavior is normal in the course of life.
    (e.g. my boys fear of a dinosaur exhibit)
  • The fruits of this approach affirm Freuds
    analogy that
  • The child is father to the man
    What does this mean?
  • Our childhood experiences teach
    and form us, as a father does.

3
Developmental Framework
  • Time
  • Chronological time is used by some
    scientists to anchor change. (e.g. Gesell)
  • Stages of development are used more often
    to understand developmental changes.
  • Stage theories make two assumptions
  • 1) Stages represent qualitative changes in
    behavior and mental processing.
  • 2) The stages unfold in an unalterable
    sequence.
  • Why is, How old is your child?,
    usually followed by, What stage is your child
    in?
  • Movement to the next stage and
    transition periods between stages are often times
    of conflict and stress.
  • Critical period - a period of time that
    is thought to be crucial for later development
    for it is the optimal time to develop an ability
    or skill
  • Sensitive period particular
    developments come to the fore and are most
    vulnerable to disruption and open to
    amelioration.

4
Developmental Context
  • The intrapersonal context concerns variables
    within the person, such as personality
    characteristics, thought, feelings, etc.
  • The interpersonal context involves interaction
    among individuals. There are two important
    interpersonal contexts of child development the
    family and the peer group.
  • The superordinate context has to do with groups
    of individuals taken as a unit (i.e. culture and
    social class).
  • The organic context has to do with physiological
    variables (i.e. genetics, brain chemistry, etc.).
  • These contexts interact with one another (see
    Bronfenbrenners Ecological Theory).

5
Purposes of Psychology
  • Describe- get the facts and give an objective
    picture of the data

  • Explain- get at the reasons or causes for a
    behavior
  • Predict-we try to form a hypothesis (testable
    statement that an expected outcome will result
    from specific conditions)
  • Control- make behavior happen- start, stop, or
    regulate its rate or strength

Psychology tries to
6
Medicine tries to
  • Describe-symptoms and the conditions in which
    they came about
  • Explain- determine the etiology (genesis of the
    disorder) and the diagnosis
  • Predict determine the prognosis (the expected
    outcome of a disorder)
  • Control- develop a treatment plan (along with a
    prescription) to control the disorder (cure it,
    stabilize it, control the symptoms)

7
Classical Conditioning
  • Classical conditioning- The learning process in
    which an originally neutral stimulus becomes
    associated with a particular response that the
    stimulus did not originally produce.
  • An unconditioned stimulus (US) elicits an
    unconditioned response (UR) without any previous
    conditioning. This is an unconditioned reflex.
  • US ---- UR unconditioned reflex

8
Classical Conditioning
  • When a conditioned stimulus (CS) which is
    previously neutral, is paired with an
    unconditioned stimulus (US) this constitutes a
    reinforced trial.
  • CS ---- US reinforced trial
  • With enough reinforced trials the conditioned
    stimulus (CS) is ultimately able to elicit a
    conditioned response (CR) which constitutes a
    conditioned reflex.
  • CS ---- CR conditioned reflex

9
Phases of Classical Conditioning
  • Acquisition- The probability of a CR increases as
    the CS is paired with the US.
  • Extinction- The probability of the CR decreases
    as the CS and the US are not paired.
  • Spontaneous recovery- after extinction the CS
    spontaneously prompts the CR
  • Stimulus generalization- stimuli similar to the
    CS may elicit a CR
  • Savings- When the CS and US are paired again, the
    CR returns with strength.

10
Social Learning Theory
  • How was it that people, even small children,
    learned without any apparent reinforcement?
  • Social learning is proposed (Albert Bandura). It
    is sometimes called imitation, observational, or
    vicarious learning- This is learning that occurs
    by observing the behavior of others as well as
    the environmental outcomes of their behavior.
  • The necessary conditions are
  • Attention to the behavior
  • Retention of the scene
  • Motivation to reproduce
  • Potential to reproduce the behavior
  • Two main factors that produce modeling
  • The model is liked and respected by the
    observer
  • The observer sees the model reinforced
  • e.g., I want to be like Mike., I
    am Tiger Woods.

11
Cognitive Developmental Stages
  • Jean Piaget- Swiss biologist (1896-1980)
  • A human beings primary adaptive capacity and
    advantage over other animals is their ability to
    organize the world.
  • Assimilation- refers to fitting new information
    into old schemas (e.g. child sees a different
    kind of dog).
  • Accommodation- a new schema is needed or old ones
    need to change so the new information fits
    better (e.g. child constructs the schema cat
    when the dog schema fails.
  • e.g. it is easy to assimilate the kindness of
    Jesus into His character profile. However, my
    divine healing schema needed to be revised in
    order to make sense of the fact that some people
    were not healed.

12
Cognitive Developmental Stages
  • Sensorimotor Stage birth until 2 years of age
  • In the beginning, the world is nothing but a
    succession of transient, unconnected sensory and
    motor reactions.
  • Two trends that move the child to the next
    stage
  • 1) The child develops their first schemas
    (i.e. mental representations that help us relate
    to the world)
  • Schemas originate as ways of relating to the
    world.
  • For example, the child has four separate ways
    of relating to the world looking, reaching,
    grasping, and sucking. At about 5 or 6 months
    the child begins to coordinate all four into a
    unified exploratory schema.
  • You are presently using an analogous schema
    with one addition What are you doing?

13
Cognitive Developmental Stages
  • 2) Object permanence is developed
  • For the child out of sight is out of existence
    (e.g. object hidden by book).
  • Separation anxiety (at 8 months) and stranger
    anxiety are accentuated by the childs lack of
    object permanence.
  • Erickson says, Separation anxiety is the first
    form of ontological anxiety.
  • (e.g. separation, death, separation from God)
  • How can we help a child with separation anxiety?

14
Freuds Psychosexual Stages
  • Pleasure is sought from different erogenous zones
    (pleasure centers) as the child develops. e.g.
    oral stage- pleasure is found in the mouth area
  • Fixation- arrested development the child fails
    to move on to the next stage or does so with much
    energy and time given over to the previous stage.
  • What is the source of a fixation?
  • Excess- too much gratification at this stage and
    the child wants to stay there or go back to it
    when anxious (regression).
  • e.g. child breast fed too long
  • Deprivation- the child is deprived of
    satisfaction at the stage and keeps seeking it.
  • e.g. bulimic patient

15
Separation-Individuation (Mahler)
  • Normal autism (0-2 months) The child is in an
    autistic shell and cannot differentiate well
    between self and other, external and internal,
    but is thought to distinguish between good and
    bad states. The child is in an objectless period.
  • Symbiotic period (2-4 months) The infant
    experiences the self and caretaker as being
    joined. The child is dimly aware of the other,
    but is bound up in symbiotic oneness.
  • At about four months old the separation-individuat
    ion phases begin. Separation concerns the childs
    disengagement and differentiation from the
    mother. Individuation involves the development
    of a stable inner representation of the mother, a
    time sense, a capacity for testing reality, and
    an awareness that others have an existence
    discrete from the childs.

16
Separation-Individuation Subphases
  • 1) Differentiation (4-8 months)-Delay in
    answering the childs needs and mismatched goals
    help the child to recognize that the caregiver is
    a separate person with her own feelings and
    intentions.
  • The childs preferential smile indicates both
    recognition of the care giver and the specific
    bond that has been formed.
  • 2) Practicing (8-15 months)- The infant can now
    crawl away to explore the world and is
    intoxicated with his or her own abilities and
    sense of omnipotence. There is a new world to
    explore, but the caregiver is still the center of
    that world. The child moves in ever widening
    circles around the parent, but often returns to
    their parental safe base to emotionally
    refuel. Mahler calls this the practicing
    phase, to reflect the infants active
    experimentation with independence versus
    attachment. As the child develops
    representational thought and fears separation,
    and feels less omnipotent, there is a new desire
    to approach the caregiver.

17
Separation- Individuation Subphases
  • 3) Rapprochement (15-24 months)- The child has
    ambivalence for the caregiver, as the child
    alternates between clinging to the caregiver and
    pushing the caregiver away. Sometimes the child
    in this phase shows strong reactions to
    separation from the caregiver, including protest,
    anger, depressive mood, and inability to play
    alone.
  • 4) Object constancy (In this case emotional
    object constancy) (24-36 months)- Central to
    object relations theory is that the childs
    sense of self develops in the context of the
    caregiver. Children who experience warm and
    sensitive care internalize an image of the loving
    parent- the good parent- and therefore
    themselves as lovable (the good me). In
    contrast, children who experience poor parenting
    internalize an image of their caregiver as angry
    and rejecting and come to see themselves as
    unworthy (the bad me). Actually, all children
    have good me and bad me images of themselves.

18
Images and Splitting
  • The healthy child can integrate the bad mother
    and good mother images into a realistic image
    of mother.
  • The healthy child can also integrate the bad me
    and good me images into a realistic view of the
    self.
  • The unhealthy child in an attempt to keep from
    being threatened by bad mother images engages
    in splitting. Bad images will be kept separate in
    the mind and the child will then alternate
    between devaluing and admiring his or her mother.
    The child will often split off images of the bad
    me from images of the good me and hence
    alternate between good and bad feelings about the
    their own being.

19
Family Systems Model
  • In this approach the family is viewed as a
    dynamic system in which each member of the family
    can effect the other.
  • Triangulation
  • Parent-child coalition- arises when one
    parent forms an alliance with one of the children
    and largely excludes the other parent (e.g.
    daughter takes over for mother who is depressed,
    son and father that make the mother powerless and
    feel alone)
  • Child caught in the middle- the child
    attempts to have a coalition with both parents to
    be a peacemaker and/or
  • go-between. (e.g. Wayne pulled apart)
  • Detouring- Parents spend almost all
    their time and energy on the children and neglect
    their own relationship. The parents often have to
    face their own issues when the child and/or
    children get better.

20
Developmental Psychopathology
  • Developmental psychopathology is the study of the
    developmental processes that contribute to the
    formation of, or resistance to, psychopathology.
  • The Organizational perspective views the human
    organism in a holistic way, as an integrated and
    dynamic system in which all domains of
    development the cognitive, social, emotional,
    and biological are in continual interaction
    with one another. We therefore use all the
    models which might help us gain this holistic
    perspective (see the Developmental Umbrella on
    p.17).

21
Developmental Psychopathology
  • A key to understanding development in this
    perspective is to attend to the tasks at each
    stage of development termed stage-salient
    issues that must be confronted and mastered.
    Whether these issues are resolved , in adaptive
    or maladaptive ways influences future adaptation.
    (e.g. Eriksons key assumption)
  • Another important feature of developmental
    psychopathology is that it pictures a continuum
    between normal and abnormal development. It is
    important to have a clear understanding of
    adaptive development in order to understand how
    development might go awry and why development
    takes one path rather than the other in the case
    of an individual.

22
Risk Factors
  • Risk factor- any condition or circumstance that
    increases the likelihood that psychopathology
    will develop
  • Examples
  • organic context- neurological damage
  • intrapersonal context- low
    self-efficacy
  • interpersonal context- parental
    neglect
  • superordinate context- poverty
  • There can of course be many risks which have
    a cumulative effect.

23
Vulnerability
  • Vulnerability - a characteristic that intensifies
    the response to risk, whereas a risk tends to
    determine a disturbance directly
  • Examples
  • Gender- boys more vulnerable to stress
  • Temperament- children who are difficult to
    care for are more often the target of parental
    irritability, criticism, and hostility

24
Protective Factors and Resiliency
  • Protective factors factors that promote or
    maintain healthy development
  • Examples
  • intelligence,
  • athletic ability
  • loving parents
  • involvement in church
  • Resilient- children who make a good adjustment
    in spite of being at high risk

25
Protective Mechanisms
  • Protective mechanisms help us understand the
    processes that protect the child.
  • 1) Reduction of risk impact
  • (e.g. parents forbid child to be with
    gang)
  • 2) Reduction of negative chain reactions
  • (e.g. a parent stops most of their
    yelling and speaks respectfully, the child is
    less angry and starts behaving a little better,
    the parent stops punishing so often, the child is
    less angry and behaves well, the parent stops
    yelling)

26
Protective Mechanisms
  • 3) Promote self-esteem and self-efficacy
  • (see Building of the Self handout)
  • 4) Opening of opportunities
  • The resilient child will often take
    advantage of opportunities that reduce the impact
    of risk factors.
  • (e.g. A young woman gets close to her
    aunt who knows how to nurture a child in a way
    her mother does not. A young boy from the
    ghetto decides to go as far as he can with his
    education.)
  • Determining will of God helps 1) ability
    2) passion 3) open doors 4) peace

27
Risks, Vulnerabilities, and Protective
Factors
  • It is important to note that no factor inherently
    falls into the risk or vulnerability categories.
    For example, poverty acts as a risk factor for
    many forms of mental disorder and yet may play
    the role of a vulnerability by increasing the
    likelihood that a child will act negatively to a
    stressor (e.g. poor child who is more vulnerable
    to loss of all possessions in a fire)
  • Gaining an understanding of the risks,
    vulnerabilities, and protective factors that
    exist for each child is crucial for developing a
    treatment plan.

28
Developmental Pathways
  • Developmental pathway- How does psychopathology
    emerge over the lifetime of individuals?
  • Comorbidity refers to two illnesses occurring
    together (e.g. anxiety and depression,
    hyperactivity and conduct disorder)
  • Transformation- the same disorder is manifested
    over time by different symptoms and behaviors
    (e.g. insecurely attached child is dependent on
    mother, teacher, spouse)

29
Transactions
  • Transactions- a series of dynamic, reciprocal
    interactions between the child and his or her
    family, and social context (see p. 25)
  • Child born prematurely gt
  • Parental anxiety gt
  • Childs difficult conduct gt
  • Parental avoidance gt
  • Childs language delay
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