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1The Developing PersonThe Developing Person• Developmental Psychology– a branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive and social change throughout the life span2Stage theories1. All humans move through a orderedseries of stages.2. Each stage is associated with developmental goals.Piaget’s Approach to Cognitive Development– Carefully observed children– especially his own– used this information to form his theory– (believed that infants learn by doing!)Who was Piaget?one of the most influential developmental theorists of the 20th century3• Believed that knowledge is the product of direct motor behavior in infants• Both quantity and quality of knowledge increase• Believed that cognitive development occurs in an orderly and gradual fashion • His theory is thus based on a stage approach to developmentPiaget believed that infants have mental structures called SCHEMAS(organized patterns of understanding the world)• Newborn schemes differ from adult schemas– Reflexes (sucking & rooting) • Schemas become more sophisticated as motor capabilities advance4Two principles underlie children's schemes:• ASSIMILATION is when ––• ACCOMMODATION is ––Piaget believed that …All children pass through a series of universalstages in a fixedorder.A. sensorimotor B. preoperational C. concrete operations D. formal operations (we will elaborate on these more later…)5Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development• Stage 1: Sensorimotor (0-2) – Object Permanence•– Mental representation– Self recognitionPiaget’s Theory • Stage 2:Preoperational (2-7) – Symbolic Play– Egocentric thought•6Piaget’s Stages• Stage 3: Concrete Operational (7-11)– Principal of Conservation•• Stage 4: Formal Operational– Abstract thought and logical reasoningHowever, specific aspects of Piaget's theory have been criticized.1)2) 3) 4)7Developmentalist’s thoughts on Piaget…• Most developmentalists agree that Piaget's descriptions of how cognitive development proceeds during infancy are accurate. • Piaget considered a master observer. • Studies show that children do learn about the world by acting on objects in their environment.Typical Age RangeDescription of StageDevelopmental PhenomenaBirth to nearly 2 years SensorimotorExperiencing the world through senses and actions (looking, touching, mouthing)•Object permanence•Stranger anxietyAbout 2 to 6 yearsAbout 7 to 11 yearsAbout 12 through adulthoodPreoperationalRepresenting things with words and images but lacking logical reasoning•Pretend play•Egocentrism•Language developmentConcrete operationalThinking logically about concrete events; grasping concrete analogies and performing arithmetical operations•Conservation •Mathematical transformationsFormal operationalAbstract reasoning•Abstract logic•Potential for moral reasoningPiaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development8Television: Learning From the Media• Average preschooler watches 20 to 30 hours of TV a week!  Television may be harnessed to facilitate cognitive growth. • Sesame Street is the most popular educational program in U.S. • Viewers had significantly larger vocabularies. • Lower income viewers were better prepared for school, scored higher on tests of cognitive ability, and spent more time reading.9Social Development• Attachment– an emotional tie with another person– shown in young children by seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress on separation• Harry Harlow• Mary AinsworthSocial Development• Harlow’s Surrogate Mother Experiments– Monkeys preferred contact with the comfortable cloth mother, even while feeding from the nourishing wire mother10The 8 staged episodes of the AINSWORTH STRANGE SITUATION1. Mother & baby enter an unfamiliar room2. Mother sits, letting baby explore3. Adult stranger enters room can converses with mom and then baby4. Mother exits the room, leaving baby with stranger5. Mom returns; greets and comforts baby and stranger leaves6. Mom departs leaving baby alone7. Stranger returns8. Mother returns and stranger leavesInfants’ reactions to the strange situation vary considerably, depending on the nature of attachment with mother…• 66% are SECURELY ATTACHED CHILDREN, who use mother as a safe base, at ease as long as she is present, exploring when they can see her, upset when she leaves, and go to her when she returns. • 20 % are labeled AVOIDANT CHILDREN who do not seek proximity to the mother; after she leaves they seem to avoid her when she returns as if they are angered by her behavior.11The Strange Situation Technique• About 12 % are AMBIVALENT CHILDREN who display a combination of positive and negative reactions to their mothers; they show great distress when the mother leaves, but upon her return they may simultaneously seek close contact but also hit and kick


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ARCC PSYC 2215 - The Developing Person

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