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Lecture Notes

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Includes the following chapters: CHAPTER 1: Theories and Methods CHAPTER 2: Heredity, Environment, and the Brain CHAPTER 3: Prenatal and Postnatal Health and Development CHAPTER 4: Perceptual and Motor Development CHAPTER 5: Cognitive Development CHAPTER 6: Language Development in Infancy and...

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  • September 27, 2024
  • 30
  • 2023/2024
  • Class notes
  • Dr. michelle hurst
  • All classes
All documents for this subject (1)
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go126
CHAPTER 1: Theories and Methods
● Goals: describe explain and thus improve (apply) the lives of children and
parents
● Basic vs Applied Science
● Quantitative: Gradual change
● Qualitative: Period of transitioning
1. What is a way in which child development is quantitative?
2. What is a way in which child development is qualitative?
● Individual differences
● Developmental Onset: the approximate age when specific skills emerge
○ example: puberty can change from child to child, language can change
● Rate of Change: the course of change over time, including how fast/slow
● The form of skills: what behavior looks like in children with diverging
experiences
● Developmental Stability: whether children who are relatively high or low on a
particular behavior or characteristic at a certain point in time are also relatively
high or low on the same behavior or characteristic at later times
● Plasticity: the capacity to adapt to changing environment and experiences
○ leads to instability
● A common tool:
○ growing charts
■ the absolute weight relative to others
■ focusing on the curve (development relative to oneself)
● sometimes kids don’t stay on the curve
■ “rate of change matters more than absolute value”
● There is often developmental stability
● Nature AND Nurture
○ nature: biological endowment
○ nurture: environmental and experimental influencing development
○ development is the product of a complex, continual interplay between
biology and environment
○ Aristotle: total experience ~ Locke
○ Plato: innate knowledge ~ Rousseau
● Developmental Cascades: changes of one kind can have cascading effects,
setting other kinds of changes in motion, both immediately and at later ages
● Developmental Domain
● Cascades over time & across domains
○ Children’s language play a role in their emotional development
○ Locomotion (crawling & walking) can lead to learning new words


, FOUNDATIONAL THEORIES
Evolutionary Theory:
● Darwin, survival of the fittest, natural selection
● Specific behaviors in children confer evolutionary benefits
● Child’s environment influences otherwise universal, biological tendencies
○ Attachment to caregivers => depends on the caregiver
● Bullying: a bully’s behaviors make little sense to an outsider, they may yield
adaptive benefits for the aggressor
Psychodynamic Theories:
1. Psychosexual Stages:
➢ Freud
➢ Emphasis on children’s biological drives, particularly the sex drive
➢ How well children satisfy their drives depend on the behaviors they
learn from their caregivers (environment)
➢ Children have to learn how to satisfy their drives socially and
psychologically accepted
➢ id, ego, superego
2. Psychosocial Stages:
➢ Erik Erikson
➢ People confront specific challenges in their search for an identity at
different stages in the life course
➢ At every stage, people experience unique internal conflicts of who they
are
➢ Children might work on resolving psychosocial conflicts through play by
acting out society’s demands and expectations, such as when a child
pretends an adult doll scolds a child doll for not cleaning her room

These are both qualitative changes!

Behaviorism:
● John Watson
● A scientific approach explaining people’s behavior as learned through
conditioning
● Reaction against psychodynamic theories focusing on unobservable conflicts,
underlying features, and largely untestable predictions

Classical Conditioning:
● Albert & rat (crying)
● examples: infant opening her mouth when the mother sits on the feeding chair
Operant Conditioning:
● B.F. Skinner
● Behaviors increase or decrease depending on whether they are rewarded or
punished
● Skinner Box, positive (reward) vs negative reinforcement (negative removed)

, Constructivism:
● Jean Piaget
● Two people react to same scenarios differently most of the time so not
everything can be environmental
● Need to understand “child’s mind”
● Children’s active role
● He both described and explained children’s behavior
● 4 Qualitative Stages:
○ Sensorimotor (0-2 years):
■ Infants schemas are limited to their sensory and motor inputs
○ Preoperational (2-7 years):
■ Capable of mental representation, object permanence, deferred
imitation, symbolic play
○ Concrete Operational (7-11):
■ logical and organized thinking but it is limited to concrete things
○ Formal Operational (11+):
■ abstract and hypothetical thinking
● Moving through stages:
○ Assimilation
○ Disequilibrium vs Equilibrium
○ Accomodation

Sociocultural Theory:
● Lev Vygotsky
● agrees with Piaget but thinks Piaget skipped social interactions
● children learn through interacting with knowledgeable adults, such as parents
and teachers, and in doing so master more challenging tasks than they would
when acting alone

CONTEMPORARY THEORIES

Nativism & Core Knowledge Theories: represent innate and domain specific
representational structures
❖ Chomsky - Language
❖ Babies differentiating between small and large objects
❖ CORE KNOWLEDGE:
➢ objects
➢ actions
➢ number
➢ space
➢ agency

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