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Title: Fundamental Issues in


1
  • Fundamental Issues in
  • Developmental Psychology

2
Developmental Psychology
  • What shapes the way we change over time?
  • Focus on psychological changes across the entire
    life span
  • Every area of psychology can be looked at from
    this perspective
  • biological development
  • social development
  • cognitive/perceptual development
  • personality development

3
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4
Fundamental Issues Nature vs. Nurture
  • What is role of heredity vs. environment in
    determining psychological makeup?
  • Is IQ inherited or determined by early
    environment?
  • Is there a criminal gene?
  • Is sexual orientation a choice or genetically
    determined?
  • These are some of our greatest societal debates.

5
Fundamental Issues Is Development Continuous?
  • Development means change change can be abrupt or
    gradual
  • Two views of human development
  • stage theories there are distinct phases to
    intellectual and personality development
  • continuity development is continuous

6
Fundamental Issues in Developmental Psychology
  • Critical period Are there periods when an
    individual is particularly sensitive to certain
    environmental experiences?
  • Are the first hours after birth critical for
    parent-child bonding?
  • Is first year critical for developing trust?
  • Easier to learn a language before age 10?

7
Overview of Genetics
  • Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • Chromosomes are long twisted strands of DNA
  • DNA is the chemical basis of heredity and
    carries instructions
  • Genes are the basic unit of heredity single
    unit of DNA on the chromosome

8
Sex Linked Traits
  • Traits linked to the X or Y (sex) chromosomes
  • Usually recessive and carried on the X chromosome
  • Appear more frequently in one sex than another
  • Color blindness, baldness, hemophilia, Fragile X

9
Physical and Psychological Development Related
  • Physical development begins at conception
  • Physical maturity sets limits on psychological
    ability
  • visual system not fully functional at birth
  • language system not functional until much later
  • Prenatal environment can have lifetime influence
    on health and intellectual ability

10
Prenatal Development
  • Conceptionwhen a sperm penetrates the ovum
  • Zygotea fertilized egg
  • Germinal periodfirst two weeks after conception
  • Embryonic periodweeks three through eight after
    conception
  • Fetal periodtwo months after conception until
    birth

11
Prenatal Development
  • Prenatal defined as before birth
  • Prenatal stage begins at conception and ends with
    the birth of the child.

12
Zygote
  • A fertilized egg
  • The first two weeks are a period of rapid cell
    division.
  • Attaches to the mothers uterine wall
  • At the end of 14 days becomes an embryo

13
Prenatal Development
14
Embryo
  • Developing human organism from about 2 weeks
    after fertilization until the end of the eighth
    week
  • Most of the major organs are formed during this
    time.
  • At the end of the eighth week the fetal period
    begins.

15
Fetus
  • Developing human organism from nine weeks after
    conception to birth

16
Placenta
  • A cushion of cells in the mother by which the
    fetus receives oxygen and nutrition
  • Acts as a filter to screen out substances that
    could harm the fetus. Is it 100 effective?

17
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18
Prenatal Influences on Development
  • Nutrition
  • Anxiety
  • Mothers general health
  • Maternal age (Why does it matter?)
  • Teratogensany agent that causes a birth defect
    (e.g., drugs, radiation, viruses)

19
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20
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS)
  • Physical and cognitive abnormalities that appear
    in children whose mothers consumed large amounts
    of alcohol while pregnant

21
Infant Abilities
  • Infants are born with immature visual system
  • can detect movement and large objects
  • Other senses function well on day 1
  • will orient to sounds
  • turn away from unpleasant odors
  • prefer sweet to sour tastes
  • Born with a number of reflex behaviors

22
Infant Reflexes
  • Rootingturning the head and opening the mouth in
    the direction of a touch on the cheek
  • Suckingsucking rhythmically in response to oral
    stimulation
  • Babinskifanning and curling toes when foot is
    stroked

23
Rooting Reflex
  • Babys tendency, when touched on the cheek, to
    open the mouth and search for the nipple
  • Is an automatic, unlearned response

24
Infant Reflexes
  • Morothrowing the arms out, arching the back and
    bringing the arms together as if to hold onto
    something (in response to loud noise or sudden
    change in position of the head)
  • Graspingcurling the fingers around an object

25
Motor Development
  • Includes all physical skills and muscular
    coordination

26
  • An outward refelection of the infants developing
    brain is the attainment of more sophisticated
    motor skills.
  • Examples rolling over (2-5 months), sitting up
    (5-8 months), standing alone well (10-14 months),
    walking well (10-14 months).

27
Motor Development
28
Social and Personality Development
  • Forming close social and emotional relationships
    with caregivers is essential to the infants
    physical and psychological well-being.

29
Temperament
  • Infants are born with distinct and consistent
    behavioral styles.
  • Studied by Alexander Thomas and Stell Chess in
    the 1950s.
  • They looked at activity level, mood, regularity,
    and attention span.
  • Very much has a genetic and biological make up
    that can be altered greatly by the environment.

30
  • Easyadaptable, positive mood, regular habits
  • Slow to warm uplow activity, somewhat slow to
    adapt, generally withdraw from new situations
  • Difficultintense emotions, irritable, cry
    frequently
  • Averageunable to classify (1/3 of all children)

31
Infant Attachment
  • Intense emotional bond between infant and
    caregiver.
  • Attachment Theory an infants ability to thrive
    physically and psychologically depends on the
    quality of attachment.

32
Securely or Insecurely Attached
  • Securely attached Parents are consistently
    warm, responsive, and sensitive.
  • Insecurely attached develops when parents are
    neglectful, inconsistent, or insensitive to the
    moods or behaviors of the infant. Displayed by
    ambivalent or detached relationship.

33
Mary D. Salter Ainsworths Strange Situation
  • Infants between 1 and 2 years old
  • Mother-child dyads were observed in a playroom
    under four conditions
  • initial mother-child interaction
  • mother leaves infant alone in playroom
  • friendly stranger enters playroom
  • mother returns and greets child

34
Effects of Attachment
  • Secure attachment predicts social competence.
  • Deprivation of attachment is linked to negative
    outcome.
  • A responsive environment helps most infants
    recover from attachment disruption.

35
Harry Harlow
  • Did research with infant monkeys on how body
    contact relates to attachment
  • The monkeys had to chose between a cloth mother
    or a wire mother that provided food.

36
Harry Harlow
  • The monkeys spent most of their time by the cloth
    mother.

37
Harlows Study
38
  • Learning, Reasoning, and Language Development
    over the Life Span

39
Language Development
  • Linguist, Noam Chomsky said that every child is
    born with a universal grammar.
  • Infants are innately equipped to not only
    understand language but to extract grammatical
    rules from what they hear.
  • Parents innately encourage language by the way
    they speak, motherese or infant-directed speech.

40
  • Ann Fernalds studies have shown that infants
    prefer infant-directed speech.
  • Cooingvowel sounds produced 24 months
  • Babblingconsonant/vowel sounds between 4 to 6
    months
  • Even deaf infants coo and babble

41
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42
  • Babies have a comprehension vocabulary that is
    much larger than their production vocabulary.
  • First words are often syllables that come from
    the babbling.
  • Around age 2 they produce two word sentences.
  • By age 3 vocab has increased to over 3,000 words.

43
Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
  • Jean Piaget (18961980) Swiss psychologist who
    became leading theorist in 1930s
  • Piaget believed that children are active
    thinkers, constantly trying to construct more
    advanced understandings of the world
  • These understandings are in the form of
    structures he called schemas

44
Jean Piaget
  • Pioneer in the study of developmental psychology
    who introduced a stage theory of cognitive
    development that led to a better understanding of
    childrens thought processes
  • Proposed a theory consisting of four stages of
    cognitive development,
  • each representing a shift
  • in the way the child
  • thinks.

45
  • As a child matures, he/she does not simply
    acquire new information rather a new
    understanding is developed.
  • As a child assimilates new information and
    experiences, he eventually changes his way of
    thinking to accommodate new knowledge.
  • Piaget believed that the stages were biologically
    programmed to unfold at certain ages.

46
Development of Schemas
  • Schemas are frameworks that develop to help
    organize knowledge (mental representations of the
    world)
  • Assimilationprocess of taking new information or
    a new experience and fitting it into an already
    existing schema
  • Accommodationprocess by which existing schemas
    are changed or new schemas are created in order
    to fit new information

47
Assimilation/Accommodation
48
Assimilation/Accommodation
49
Assimilation/Accommodation
50
Piagets Approach
  • Primary method was to ask children to solve
    problems and to question them about the reasoning
    behind their solutions
  • Discovered that children think in radically
    different ways than adults
  • Proposed that development occurs as a series of
    stages differing in how the world is understood

51
Sensorimotor Stage (birth 2)
  • Information is gained through the senses and
    motor actions.
  • Expanded practical knowledge through reaching,
    grasping, pushing, pulling, pouring.
  • In this stage child perceives and manipulates but
    does not reason
  • Symbols become internalized through language
    development
  • Object permanence is acquired

52
Object Permanence
  • The understanding that objects exist even if they
    cant be seen.
  • Before 6 months infants act as if objects removed
    from sight cease to exist
  • Can be surprised by disappearance/reappearance of
    a face (peek-a-boo)
  • Video 15

53
Preoperational Stage
  • Piagets second stage of cognitive development,
    operations refers to logical mental activities.
  • From about age 2 to age 6 or 7
  • Children can engage in symbolic thought, they can
    use words, images, and symbols to represent the
    world.

54
Preoperational Stage (27 years)
  • Emergence of symbolic thought
  • Imagination and fantasy while playing
  • Irreversibility child cannot mentally reverse a
    sequence of events.
  • Centration focuses on one aspect of a
    situation.
  • Can not understand conservation, that two equal
    physical quantities remain equal if the
    appearance of one is changed, as long as nothing
    is added or subtracted.

55
Types of Conservation Tasks
56
  • Centration the child focused on one aspect,
    i.e. the height of the water.
  • Irreversibility child cannot reverse the
    sequence of events
  • Video 18

57
Egocentrism
  • In Piagets theory, the inability of the
    preoperational child to take another persons
    point of view
  • Includes a childs inability to understand that
    symbols can represent other objects.

58
Concrete Operational Stage (712 years)
  • Understanding of mental operations leading to
    increasingly logical thought limited to concrete
    reality tangible objects and events.
  • Can reverse mental operations.
  • They understand conservation.
  • Classification and categorization
  • Less egocentric
  • Inability to reason abstractly or hypothetically

59
Conservation
  • Number

In conservation of number tests, two equivalent
rows of coins are placed side by side and the
child says that there is the same number in each
row. Then one row is spread apart and the child
is again asked if there is the same number in
each.
60
Conservation
  • Length

In conservation of length tests, two same-length
sticks are placed side by side and the child says
that they are the same length. Then one is moved
and the child is again asked if they are the
same length.
61
Conservation
  • Substance

In conservation of substance tests, two identical
amounts of clay are rolled into similar-appearing
balls and the child says that they both have the
same amount of clay. Then one ball is rolled out
and the child is again asked if they have the
same amount.
62
Formal Operational Stage
  • Piagets fourth and last stage of cognitive
    development
  • About age 12 on up
  • Children begin to think logically about abstract
    concepts and form strategies about things they
    may not have experienced
  • Can solve hypothetical problems (What if.
    problems)

63
Formal Operational Stage (age 12 adulthood)
  • Formal operational thought emerges gradually.
  • Formal operational thinking is often limited to
    areas of expertise or interest.
  • Adolescent egocentrism illustrated by the
    phenomenon of personal fable and imaginary
    audience.

64
Assessing Piagets Theory
65
Piagets Theory Challenged
  • New studies indicate infants do more than sense
    and react
  • One study had 1-month-old babies suck one of two
    pacifiers without ever seeing them
  • When shown both pacifiers, infants stared more at
    the one they had felt in their mouth
  • This requires a sort of reasoning

66
Critique of Piagets Theory
  • Underestimates childrens abilities
  • He confused motor skill limitations with
    cognitive limitations.
  • Overestimates age differences in thinking
  • Vagueness about the process of change
  • Underestimates the role of the social environment
  • Lack of evidence for qualitatively different
    stages

67
Renee Baillargeon
  • Tested object permanence to challenge Piaget
  • Her research is based on the premise that
    infants, like adults, will look longer at
    surprising events that appear to contradict
    their understanding of the world.
  • Carrot study if a 3 ½ month old displayed
    object permanence, they would remember the size
    of the carrot. This is exactly what they found.
    Piaget believed that cognitive understanding were
    not possible until 9 months

68
Information-Processing Model of Cognitive
Development
  • Rather than distinct stages this model focuses on
    development of fundamental mental processes such
    as attention, memory, and problem solving.
  • Cognitive development is viewed as a process of
    continuous change over the lifespan.
  • Some say Piaget also underestimated the impact of
    social and cultural environment on cognitive
    development.

69
Vygotskys Sociocultural Perspective
  • Emphasized the childs interaction with the
    social world (other people) as a cause of
    development.
  • Interaction support and guidance children
    receive from parents, other adults, and older
    children.
  • Such guidance can stretch the childs cognitive
    abilities.
  • Cross-cultural studies have shown that cognitive
    development is strongly influenced by the skills
    that are valued and encouraged in a particular
    environment.
  • Vygotsky believed language to be the foundation
    for social interaction and thought, Piaget
    believed language was a byproduct of thought.

70
Vygotskys Sociocultural Perspective
  • Believed the cognitive development is strongly
    influenced by social and cultural factors.
  • Zone of proximal developmentwhat a child can do
    by interacting with another person, but cant do
    alone. Interaction with others can stretch
    cognitive abilities to new levels.
  • Cogntive development is strongly influenced by
    the skills that are valued and encouraged in a
    particular environment.
  • Piagetfocused on childrens interaction with the
    physical world

71
Adolescence
  • Transitional stage between late childhood and the
    beginning of adulthood.
  • Begins around age 12

72
Social Dev in Adolescence
  • Parent/adolescent relationships are quite
    positive
  • Some friction in inevitable, as relationships
    with peers and friends becomes increasingly
    important.
  • An adolescents social network begins to greatly
    influence their values, norms, and expectations.

73
  • Parents worry that peer influence will lead to
    undesirable behavior, but research has found that
    peer relationships tend to reinforce traits and
    goals that parents fostered during childhood.
  • Adolescents tend to form relationships with peers
    who are similar in age, social class, race, and
    beliefs about drinking, dating, church
    attendance, and educational goals.

74
Parental Patterns
  • Daumrinds three main parenting styles
  • Authoritarian parenting
  • Permissive parenting
  • Authoritative parenting

75
Authoritarian Parenting
  • Style of parenting marked by imposing rules and
    expecting obedience
  • Low in warmth
  • Discipline is strict and sometimes physical.
  • Communication high from parent to child and low
    from child to parent
  • Maturity expectations are high.

76
Permissive Parenting
  • Style of parenting marked by submitting to
    childrens desired, making few demands, and using
    little punishment
  • High in warmth but rarely discipline
  • Communication is low from parent to child but
    high from child to parent.
  • Expectations of maturity are low.

77
Authoritative Parenting
  • Style of parenting marked by making demands on
    the child, being responsive, setting and
    enforcing rules, and discussing the reason behind
    the rules
  • High in warmth with moderate discipline
  • High in communication and negotiating
  • Maturity expectations are moderate.

78
Parenting Styles
79
Identity Formation
  • Identity values, beliefs, and ideals that guide
    behavior
  • For the first time adolescents possess the
    cognitive skills necessary to deal with identity.
  • Children will describe themselves in concrete
    social and behavioral terms.
  • 8 y.o. I like to play with Lilly and draw
    pictures.
  • 14 y.o. I have strong religious beliefs, love
    animals, and want to be a veterinarian.

80
Aspects of personal identity that the adolescent
has no control over.
  • Gender
  • Race
  • Ethnic background
  • Socio-economic status

81
Self-evaluation begins
  • Social acceptance by peers
  • Academic success
  • Athletic abilities
  • Work abilities
  • Personal appearance
  • Romantic appeal

82
Eriksons Theory of Psychosocial Development
  • Each of the eight stages of life is associated
    with a particular psychosocial conflict that can
    be resolved in either a positive or negative
    direction.
  • Relationships play an important role in the
    outcome of each conflict.
  • According to Erikson the key conflict is identity
    versus identity diffusion.

83
  • According to Eriksons theory, the adolescents
    path to identity achievement begins with identity
    diffusion, little sense of commitment to any
    issue.
  • Followed by a moratorium period in which the
    adolescent experiments with different roles,
    values, and beliefs before arriving at a stable
    integrated identity.
  • Remember that identity continues to evolve over
    an entire lifespan.

84
Stage 1 (Birth1) - InfancyTrust vs. Mistrust
  • Infants must rely on others for care
  • Consistent and dependable caregiving and meeting
    infant needs leads to a sense of trust
  • Infants who are not well cared for will develop
    mistrust

85
Stage 2 (13 years) Toddlerhood Autonomy vs.
Shame and Doubt
  • Children are discovering their own independence
  • Those given the opportunity to experience
    independence will gain a sense of autonomy,
    promoting positive self-esteem.
  • Children that are overly restrained or punished
    harshly will develop shame and doubt in their
    abilities.

86
Stage 3 (36 years) Early ChildhoodInitiative
vs. Guilt
  • Sense of accomplishment will lead to initiative.
    Children learn to initiate activities and
    develops a sense of social responsibility
    involving the rights of others.
  • Parental overcontrol stifles spontaneity, sense
    of purpose, and social learning promoting
    feelings of guilt and fear of punishment.

87
Stage 4 (612 years) Middle and Late
ChildhoodIndustry vs. Inferiority
  • Stage of life surrounding mastery of knowledge
    and intellectual skills school work, sports.
  • Sense of competence and achievement leads to
    industry
  • Feeling incompetent and unproductive leads to
    inferiority

88
Stage 5 (Adolescence)Identity vs. Identity
Diffusion (Confusion)
  • Developing a sense of who one is and where one is
    going in life
  • Successful resolution leads to positive identity
  • Unsuccessful resolution leads to identity
    confusion or a negative identity

89
Stage 6 (Young adulthood)Intimacy vs. Isolation
  • Time for sharing oneself with another person
  • Capacity to hold commitments with others leads to
    intimacy
  • Failure to establish commitments leads to
    feelings of isolation

90
Stage 7 (Middle adulthood)Generativity vs.
Stagnation
  • Caring for others in family, friends, and work
    leads to sense of contribution to later
    generations. Unselfish concern for the welfare of
    the next generation.
  • Self-absorption and preoccupation with ones own
    needs lead to a sense of stagnation, boredom, and
    lack of meaningful accomplishments.

91
Stage 8 (Late adulthood to Death)Integrity vs.
Despair
  • Successful resolutions of all previous crises
    leads to integrity and the ability to see broad
    truths and advise those in earlier stages. Strong
    sense of self-acceptance.
  • Despair arises from feelings of helplessness and
    the bitter sense that life has been incomplete.
    Regret.

92
Kohlbergs Theory of Moral Development
  • Assessed moral reasoning by posing hypothetical
    moral dilemmas and examining the reasoning behind
    peoples answers
  • Proposed six stages, each taking into account a
    broader portion of the social world

93
Levels of Moral Reasoning
  • Preconventionalmoral reasoning is based on
    external rewards and punishments
  • Conventionallaws and rules are upheld simply
    because they are laws and rules
  • Postconventionalreasoning based on personal
    moral standards

94
PreconventialStage 1 Obedience and Punishment
Orientation
  • The earliest stage of moral development is
    especially common in young children, but adults
    are also capable of expressing this type of
    reasoning.
  • A focus on direct consequences
  • Negative actions will result in punishments
  • Positive actions will result in rewards

95
Stage 2 Mutual Benefit Whats in it for me?
  • At this stage of moral development, children
    account for individual points of view and judge
    actions based on how they serve individual needs.
  • 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. You scratch my back,
    Ill scratch your back.

96
ConventionalStage 3 Interpersonal Expectations
  • Often referred to as the "good boy-good girl"
    orientation, this stage of moral development is
    focused on living up to social expectations and
    roles. There is an emphasis on conformity, being
    "nice," and consideration of how choices
    influence relationships. Golden rule
  • 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

97
Stage 4 Law-and-Order Morality
  • At this stage of moral development, people begin
    to consider society as a whole when making
    judgments. The focus is on maintaining law and
    order by following the rules, doing ones duty
    and respecting authority

98
Post ConventionalStage 5 Legal Principles
  • At this stage, people begin to account for the
    differing values, opinions and beliefs of other
    people
  • A balance is struck between respect for laws and
    ethical principles that transcend specific laws.
  • social contract Laws that fail to promote
    general welfare or that violate ethical
    principles can be changed, reinterpreted, or
    abandoned

99
Stage 6 Universal Moral Principles
  • Kolhbergs final level of moral reasoning is
    based upon universal ethical principles and
    abstract reasoning. At this stage, people follow
    these internalized principles of justice, even if
    they conflict with laws and rules.
  • Self-chosen ethical principles
  • Profound respect for sanctity of human life
  • Kohlbery insisted the 6th stage existed, but he
    had a hard time finding examples.

100
Criticisms of Kohlberg's Theory of Moral
Development
  • Does moral reasoning necessarily lead to moral
    behavior? Kohlberg's theory is concerned with
    moral thinking, but there is a big difference
    between knowing what we ought to do versus our
    actual actions.

101
  • Is justice the only aspect of moral reasoning we
    should consider? Critics have pointed out that
    Kohlberg's theory of moral development
    overemphasizes the concept as justice when making
    moral choices. Factors such as compassion, caring
    and other interpersonal feelings may play an
    important part in moral reasoning.

102
Adult Development
  • Genetics and lifestyle combine to determine
    course of physical changes
  • Social development involves marriage and
    transition to parenthood
  • Paths of adult social development are varied and
    include diversity of lifestyles

103
Late Adulthood
  • Old age as a time of poor health, inactivity, and
    decline is a myth.
  • Activity theory of aginglife satisfaction is
    highest when people maintain level of activity
    they had in earlier years.

104
Death and Dying
  • In general, anxiety about dying tends to decrease
    in late adulthood
  • Kubler-Ross stages of dying
  • Denial
  • Anger
  • Bargain
  • Depression
  • Acceptance
  • Not universally demonstrated
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