Overview of Child DevelopmentChild DevelopmentDomains of DevelopmentTheoriesOrigins of Child Development Theories6th - 15th centuries Medieval period16th Century Reformation period17th Century Age of Enlightenment18th Century Age of Reason19th Century Industrial Revolution20th CenturyPsychoanalytical TheoriesSigmund FreudErik EriksonBehavioral and Social Learning TheoriesBehaviorismJohn WatsonB. F. SkinnerSocial Learning TheoryBiological TheoriesMaturationists: G. Stanley Hall and Arnold GesellEthologyKonrad LorenzAttachment TheoryCognitive TheoriesJean PiagetPiaget’s Cognitive Development StagesLev VygotskyInformation Processing TheorySystems TheoryUrie BronfenbrennerBronfenbrenner’s Ecological ModelOutline of 20th Century TheoriesPowerPoint PresentationOverview of Child DevelopmentChild DevelopmentDefinition:Change in the child that occurs over time. Changes follow an orderly pattern that moves toward greater complexity and enhances survival.Periods of development:Prenatal period: from conception to birthInfancy and toddlerhood: birth to 2 yearsEarly childhood: 2-6 years oldMiddle childhood: 6-12 years oldAdolescence: 12-19 years oldDomains of DevelopmentDevelopment is described in three domains, but growthin one domain influences the other domains.Physical Domain:body size, body proportions, appearance, brain development, motor development, perception capacities, physical health.Cognitive Domain:thought processes and intellectual abilities including attention, memory, problem solving, imagination, creativity, academic and everyday knowledge, metacognition, and language.Social/Emotional Domain:self-knowledge (self-esteem, metacognition, sexual identity, ethnic identity), moral reasoning, understanding and expression of emotions, self-regulation, temperament, understanding others, interpersonal skills, and friendships.TheoriesWhat is a theory?Orderly set of ideas which describe, explain, and predict behavior. Why are theories important?To give meaning to what we observe.As a basis for action -- finding ways to improve the lives and education of children.Origins of Child Development Theories6th - 15th centuriesMedieval periodPreformationism: children seen as little adults.Childhood is not a unique phase.Children were cared for until they could begin caring for themselves, around 7 years old.Children treated as adults (e.g. their clothing, worked at adult jobs, could be married, were made into kings, were imprisoned or hanged as adults.)16th CenturyReformation periodPuritan religion influenced how children were viewed.Children were born evil, and must be civilized. A goal emerged to raise children effectively. Special books were designed for children.17th Century Age of EnlightenmentJohn Locke believed in tabula rasaChildren develop in response to nurturing.Forerunner of behaviorismwww.cooperativeindividualism.org/ locke-john.jpg18th CenturyAge of ReasonJean-Jacques Rousseau children were noble savages, born with an innate sense of morality; the timing of growth should not be interfered with.Rousseau used the idea of stages of development.Forerunner of maturationist beliefs19th CenturyIndustrial RevolutionCharles Darwin theories of natural selection and survival of the fittest Darwin made parallels between human prenatal growth and other animals.Forerunner of ethology20th CenturyTheories about children's development expanded around the world. Childhood was seen as worthy of special attention.Laws were passed to protect children,Psychoanalytical TheoriesBeliefs focus on the formation of personality. According to this approach, children move through various stages, confronting conflicts between biological drives and social expectations.Sigmund FreudPsychosexual TheoryWas based on his therapy with troubled adults. He emphasized that a child's personality is formed by the ways which his parents managed his sexual and aggressive drives.Erik EriksonPsychosocial TheoryExpanded on Freud's theories. Believed that development is life-long. Emphasized that at each stage, the child acquires attitudes and skills resulting from the successful negotiation of the psychological conflict. Identified 8 stages:Basic trust vs mistrust (birth - 1 year)Autonomy vs shame and doubt (ages 1-3)Initiative vs guilt (ages 3-6)Industry vs inferiority (ages 6-11)Identity vs identity confusion (adolescence)Intimacy vs isolation (young adulthood)Generativity vs stagnation (middle adulthood)Integrity vs despair (the elderly)Behavioral and Social Learning TheoriesBeliefs that describe the importance of the environment and nurturing in the growth of a child.BehaviorismDeveloped as a response to psychoanalytical theories. Behaviorism became the dominant view from the 1920's to 1960's.John WatsonEarly 20th century, "Father of American Behaviorist theory.”Based his work on Pavlov's experiments on the digestive system of dogs.Researched classical conditioningChildren are passive beings who can be molded by controlling the stimulus-response associations.www.psych.utah.edu./…/Cards/Watson.htmlB. F. SkinnerProposed that children "operate" on their environment, operational conditioning.Believed that learning could be broken down into smaller tasks, and that offering immediate rewards for accomplishments would stimulate further learning.Social Learning TheoryAlbert Bandura Stressed how children learn by observation and imitation. Believed that children gradually become more selective in what they imitate.Biological TheoriesBelief that heredity and innate biological processes govern growth.Maturationists: G. Stanley Hall and Arnold Gesell Believed there is a predetermined biological timetable.Hall and Gesell were proponents of the normative approach to child study: using age-related averages of children's growth and behaviors to define what is normal.EthologyExamines how behavior is determined by a species' need for survival. Has its roots in Charles Darwin's research. Describes a "critical period" or "sensitive period,” for learningKonrad LorenzEthologist, known for his research on imprinting.Attachment TheoryJohn Bowlby applied ethological principles to his theory of attachment.Attachment between an infant and her caregiver can insure the infant’s survival.Cognitive TheoriesBeliefs that
View Full Document