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Class notes on Themes and Perspectives, Developmental Psychology

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Full class notes on the themes and perspectives in developmental psychology, week 1

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  • April 5, 2021
  • 6
  • 2019/2020
  • Class notes
  • Dr rory devine
  • All classes
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Introduction to Developmental Psychology
Themes and Perspectives in Developmental Psychology
What is developmental psychology?
 Development is the process by which an organism grows and changes through its
lifespan.
 It takes a lifespan perspective and looks at everything that might change throughout
the time period.
 Systematic changes – they are not random things, they seem to happen in a
coherent fashion.
 Organised changes – they are not random, things that occur across the species at
different times throughout their lifespan
 Successive changes – influenced by something that may have happened before but it
is also influencing something that might come later
 Developmental psychology is the scientific study of neural, cognitive, emotional,
behavioural and social development.
 Take a complex view when looking at development
 Developmental psychology asks two fundamental questions about the mind:
o What develops? – What is that we are interested in? something that is a
systematic, organised or successive change
o What are the causes of development? – Explanation, how do you actually
explain the phenomenon?
 It looks at things that may either cause or hinder development.
Concepts of development
 Can be considered in a number of ways:
o Universals – what is typical for the species
o Individual differences – why do people differ from one another
o Continuity
o Discontinuity
o Stability
o Change

Universals and individual differences
 Universals
o What is common across the species at a particular point in development?
o Focus on stages (qualitative differences) and assumes a ‘normal’ mature end
point.
o Variation is unimportant – focuses on mean and mode only
o ‘Experimental’ focus
o Looks at when children start to use language

, o They are not interested in the differences between each child and so will
compare two different age groups of children to find out any differences
 Individual differences
o Why do members of a species differ from one another in their development?
o Focus on quantitative differences between people
o Variation is central
o ‘Natural’ focus
o They try to figure out what makes people different to one another and
whether development is a part of why there are differences.
o They are interested in the variation so tend to use longitudinal studies.

Continuity and stability
 Continuity/discontinuity
o Degree of consistency in the group means
o Continuity = mean stays the same
o Discontinuity = mean changes
 Stability/instability
o Degree of consistency in the individual
differences
o Stability = rank order stays the same
o Instability = rank order changes
o Homotypic: A  A = can use the same measure at different times of
development to capture the same phenomenon
o Heterotypic: A  A1 = may use a different measure to capture the same
phenomenon at different stages of development
Focus of developmental Theories
 Domain Specific Theories
o Explains one specific topic in development
o Focus on a particular behaviour/trait/skill
o Emphasise mechanisms/processes with narrow effects
o For example, Hamlin’s ‘Moral Sense’ theory
 Domain General Theories
o Proposes that there are general mechanisms that influence many different
developmental factors
o There are general processes that cause development
o Focus on a range of behaviours/traits/skills
o Emphasise mechanisms/processes with broad effects
o For example, Piaget’s theory of cognitive development

Recurring Ideas in Developmental Psychology
 Age is an ambiguous variable (Rutter & Rutter, 1993)
 If it says something changes because of age this isn’t really an explanation

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