psy223 topics to study

  • WIC program (woman infant children)

    • supplies supplemental food, health care referrals

    • participation is associated with better birth outcomes

    • children who participate have better cognitive development

    • the longer children are in the program, the better diet is in the long run

  • Piaget’s preoperational stage

    • 2-7 years of age

    • symbolic function substage

      • children start to use symbolic representation of things

      • ex. language, drawing something on a piece of paper, pretending a stick is a sword, pretend play

      • pretend play

      • egocentrism: child believes that they are the main character

        • everyone else is seeing the world the same way they are seeing it

        • mountain task:

          • 3d model of mountain landscape that is different from other sides

          • “what does the doll see”

          • child describes what they themselves are looking at

      • animism: giving human qualities/feeling to inanimate objects

    • intuitive thought substage

      • asking why

      • want to know everything

      • want true concrete answers

    • centration

      • focus only on one feature of something

  • Vygotsky’s theory

    • social constructivist approach

    • zone of proximal development

      • lower limit: things a child can do without help

      • upper limit: things a child can do with instruction

      • in between is ZPD, new things a child can learn how to do

    • scaffolding

      • restructuring where child is given the tools to do something on their own that they normally wouldn’t be able to do

    • thought

      • develop in a 3 step process

        • others’ statement

          • direct child’s behavior

        • private speech

          • child verbally talks to themselves

        • internalized private speech

          • the talk is internalized

  • Information-processing theory

    • overall idea is that the brain is a computer

    • attention

      • executive attention

        • overall organizing yourself

        • ex. what class do i have after this

      • sustained attention

        • focusing all your attention on one thing

    • school readiness

      • better prepared for school when attention is better

        • they score higher of school readiness

      • skills that children are expected to have when they start school

    • short-term memory

      • aka working memory

      • actively holding information in attention

      • digit-span task

        • limited capacity of 7-9 things at a time

        • strategies to remember numbers

          • can chunk numbers together

          • rehearsal

        • theory that children have a full capacity but they develop strategies to remember more numbers at once

    • long-term memory

      • first long-term memories begin around early childhood

      • memory is malleable, especially for young children

        • they are very susceptible to suggestion and they rely on others to help remember things

      • age

        • younger children are more willing to believe somebody than older

      • individual differences

        • personality and temperment

        • some children will be more resistant and other will be more accepting/open

      • interviewing techniques

        • for having children testify in court

        • children are susceptible to leading questions

        • need interviewers with a neutral tone and don’t ask any leading questions for more accurate memory recall

    • autobiographical memory

      • experiences that the child has had

      • a type of long term memory

    • executive function

      • in prefrontal cortex

      • cognitive inhibition: stop yourself from doing things

        • ex. temper tantrum, saying rude things

      • cognitive flexibility: dealing with new situations well

      • goal-setting: create a goal and taking steps to complete

      • delay of gratification: choosing not to accept an immediate reward to get a better reward later

        • ex. marshmellow test

  • Phonology and Morphology

    • phonology: sound system of a language, how different sounds can be combined to make words

    • morphology: knowledge that different sounds can change the meaning of the word

      • ex. adding -ed to the end of a word to make it past tense

      • overgeneralization: learning one rule and using it on everything

        • ex. learning that you put -s to make something plural, “I have two foots”

      • Berko (1958): to test the grammar rule of adding an s at the end, do the children actually understand or have they just memorized the word

  • syntax: the structure of a sentence

  • semantics: meaning of words and sentences

  • Pragmatics: how to appropriately use language

    • rules of conversation and politeness

  • project head start - federally funded program

    • target disadvantaged children who can’t afford preschool

    • build up academic skills so they are ready to start grade school and won’t be behind

    • mixed results

      • children in the program perform better academically in the start of school but then the effects plateau after a while

    • parenting contributions

      • good home environments, programs like head start will show better, long-lasting results

  • curriculum

    • constructivist approach

      • kids actively participating in activities

      • has more emphasis on socioemotional development

        • kids typically interact with each other, which builds socioemotional skills

    • direct-instruction approach

      • kids sitting on a mat listening to a teacher telling them how to do something

  • Erikson’s psychosocial development

    • initiative vs guilt

    • stage is categorized by curiosity on how the world works

    • if child is taking initiative and exploring, they will overcome the crisis

    • if they are ridiculed and punished, they will feel guilty and less likely to take initiative for the future

    • first step to developing an identity

  • Piaget’s Moral Reasoning

    • heteronomous morality stage

      • cannot change or break rules

        • if you break rules you are bad

      • justice and rules are unchangeable properties

      • outcome > intention

      • believe in immanent justice

        • if you do something wrong, your consequence will happen immediately

    • transition stage is 3 years

    • autonomous morality

      • rules and laws are created by people

        • social contracts that we have all agreed to follow

        • they are changeable

      • intention > outcome

  • kinner’s operant conditioning

    • behaviors have consequences

    • learn morals based on reinforcements/punishments given by caregiver

    • more likely to be reinforced for good moral behavior

  • Bandura’s social cognitive theory

    • observation, vicarious reinforcement

    • caregiver models moral behavior

  • social role theory

    • gender differences of how people act within society

    • children understand what these roles are

  • psychoanalytic theory of gender (Freud)

    • Oedipus and Electra complex

      • children are attracted to the opposite sex parent

    • same-sex parent

      • then switch and identify more with same sex parents

      • because they learn that sex is bad

    • critique of Freud (Callan, 2001)

      • relies on children have sexual feelings

      • gender-typed behavior: behavior that align with gender

        • Freud said this starts around 5 years old but gender-typed behavior starts before that

  • social cognitive theory of gender

    • observation and imitation of those with the same behavior

    • reward and punishment of gender-typed behavior

      • the way that people react to them based on how ppl behave

      • ex. girls get reinforced for playing for doll but boys get punished

    • gender-based treatment

  • gender schema theory

    • schema: what is appropriate for each gender

    • flow chart

  • emotional security theory

    • how children evaluate conflict

    • negative conflict: when parents are fighting and being nasty to each other

      • unhealthy for child to witness

    • positive conflict: parents can calmly discuss it, constructively working through the problem

      • healthy for child to witness

  • functions of play

    • anxiety and conflict

      • Freud said children play to alleviate anxiety because they are always thinking about sex

    • cognitive development

      • play is a way to explore environments, learn how to manipulate environments

    • exploratory drive

      • satisfy the need to explore and try new things

    • language and communication

      • play can develop language and communication

      • because you are with others

      • establishing rules/expectations

  • types of play

    • sensorimotor play

      • babies and toddlers

      • interacting with things in environment

      • looking at textures/colors/etc

    • practice play

      • repeating the same action to try to get better at it

      • ex. sports

    • pretense/symbolic play

      • imagining stuff in the environment is something else

      • ex. couch is a pirate ship, stick is a sword

    • social play

      • interacting with others

    • constructive play

      • combo of sensorimotor/practice and symbolic

      • ex. build a pirate ship with blocks

    • games

      • things that have rules

      • usually involves competition

  • learning disabilities

    • difficulty in understanding or using spoken or written language

    • listening, thinking, reading, writing, spelling

    • dyslexia: difficulty reading and spelling

    • dysgraphia: difficulty hand writing and matching sounds and letters

    • dyscalculia: difficulty understanding numbers and performing math equations

    • may be caused by issues information integration across brain regions

      • diff parts of brain not communicating with each other

  • education of children with disabilities

    • individuals with disabilities education act (IDEA)

      • required children to have access to public schooling, regardless of disability status

    • individualized education plan (IEP)

      • taking individual needs into account and accommodating them so they can be successful in school

    • least restrictive environment (LRE)

      • educating those with disabilities in a environment that looks like a classroom

      • their experiences align to as closely as possible to other children while having need met

    • inclusion

  • Piaget’s Concrete Operational Stage

    • 7-11 years old

    • logical reasoning

      • more logical reasoning

    • increase in classifications and understanding of interrelationships

    • seriation: putting things in order by some sort of rule

      • can do this

    • develop transitivity: using what you know about a few relationships to develop a conclusion about a new relationship

      • A=B

      • B=C

      • A _ C

  • Information-Processing Theory

    • working memory: actively manipulating and analyzing

      • if good working memory, then better at:

      • language comprehension

      • math skills

      • problem solving

      • reasoning

    • long-term memory

      • building knowledge and expertise

        • ex. Chess (Chi, 1978)

        • elementary students who were experts in chess vs college students who didn’t play chess

        • children were better at remembering the position of the pieces

          • understanding of how chess works

      • children learn strategies when learning info to make it easier to retrieve it later

        • elaboration: process it in more detail

          • ex. your own example, relate it to your own life

        • mental imagery: visualize it

        • comprehension > memorization

    • thinking

      • critical thinking: thinking reflectively, evaluating info to come to your own conclusion

        • schools don’t teach this

        • you don’t analyze content, you rehearse

      • critical thinking allows for deep understanding of info

      • creative thinking: use a new strategy to solve problems

      • intelligence vs creativity

        • intelligence test convergent thinking (same, correct answer)

        • creativity tests divergent thinking

      • creativity in the US

        • declining since the 1990s

          • because of screens, internet

          • never bored because we don’t have to entertain ourselves

    • metacognition: knowledge about cognition and thinking, strategies for thinking

      • error recognition

        • ex. comes in play when learning how to do math

      • better metacognition, higher school achievement

      • includes metamemory: knowledge about memories

        • ex. what kinds of things are harder/easier to remember

      • includes knowledge about strategies to think better

    • executive function

      • increase in self-control/inhibition

      • working memory is a big part of doing things in school

        • ex. activities in class, homework assignments

      • flexibility

        • ex. problem solving, adapting

  • the Binet Tests

    • first test to test intelligence

    • mental age (MA)

      • performing better than other ppl same chronological age: better mental age

    • intelligence quotient (IQ)

      • IQ = mental age / chronological age x 100

    • current name is Stanford-Binet tests

  • the Wechsler Scales

    • Wechler intelligence scale for Children-fifth edition (WISC-V)

      • scale for child

      • different scales for different age groups

    • give IQ score

    • individual scores for:

      • verbal comprehension

      • processing speed

      • fluid reasoning

      • visual spatial

  • Sternber’s Triarchic Theory

    • analytical intelligence

      • academic skills: make judgements, analyze info

        • are better students in school

    • creative intelligence

      • imaginative, design and invent things

        • want to solve problems in their own way, don’t like having explicit instruction

    • practical intelligence

      • relate to people socially, be able to go out in the world

        • street smarts, have a lot of common sense and social abilities

  • Gardner’s Eight frames of mind

    • kinds of intelligence

    • verbal: ability to use langauge

    • mathematical

    • spatial: ability to manipulate objects in 3d space

    • interpersonal: communicating with others

    • intrapersonal: knowledge about yourself, your thoughts and feelings

    • naturalistic: observing patterns in nature, understanding how ppl interact with each other

  • Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development

    • industry vs inferiority

      • curiosity about the world and how it works

      • how useful do you feel when you are older

    • industry

      • how things are made

      • how things work

      • encourage “doing”

        • ex. pulling apart a mechanical toy to see the parts

        • encouraged by parents

    • inferiority

      • mischief

      • making a mess

      • told that exploring is bad, being met with punishment

      • won’t feel useful when they are older

  • Kohlberg Levels

    • preconventional level

      • stage 1: punishment and obedience orientation

        • rules are the rules, if you break them you deserve to be punished

      • stage 2: instrumental exchange orientation

        • an eye for an eye, you do smth to me, i get to do smth to you back

    • conventional level

      • stage 3: mutual interpersonal expectations, relationships, and interpersonal conformity orientation

        • behavior is judged right/wrong based on how other interpret it

        • you behave in a way that makes others like you

      • stage 4: social system and conscience orientation

        • keeping the wheel of society turning in a beneficial manner, not behaving that causes a breakdown of society’s systems

        • maintaining social order

    • postconventional level

      • stage 5: social contracts or individual rights orientation

        • behave in ways that maximize the benefit for the majority of people

      • universal ethics principles

        • most people don’t ever reach this stage

        • you as an individual have developed a code of ethics and you behave in ways that follow that code

        • it’s okay to break rules if you’re upholding your personal ethical principles

  • Kohlberg’s critics

    • focused more on moral thought rather than moral behavior (Walker 2004)

      • is it more important to focus on how they would behave in fake dilemmas, or how they actually act in real life

    • conscious/deliberate vs unconscious/automatic (Haidt 2018)

      • people have a lot of time to think in these scenarios

      • some think that this should be based on a gut reaction

    • gender (Gilligan 1982, 1996)

      • justice perspective vs care perspective

      • all Kohlberg’s research was done on teenage boys

      • Gilligan said boys and girls prioritize different things

        • boys tend to lend more towards the justice perspective: was someone wronged, do they deserve retribution, how to get a justifiable outcome

        • girls tend to look via a care perspective: making sure someone is benefitting, connecting with others

          • girls tended to show lower moral development than boys did

    • culture and moral reasoning (Helwig, 2013)

      • other countries score “lower” bc they were not represented in the research

    • families (Narvaez and Bradshaw, 2023)

      • didn’t consider the effect of families on moral development

      • Kohlberg’s only thought peers had a influence

  • domain theory of moral development

    • to differentiate between moral vs societal conventions

    • moral domain

      • right vs wrong

      • based on justice

      • ex. lying, cheating

    • societal domain (social conventional reasoning)

      • rules, laws, and social conventions

      • arbitrary, malleable

      • ex. not holding the door open for someone

    • personal domain

      • individual preference, doesn’t impact anyone else

      • ex. what clothes to wear

  • sociometric status - where each child falls in hierarchy

    • if in the middle, you are average (most children)

    • popular: good social skills, well liked

    • neglected: forgotten about by peers

    • rejected: 2 subgroups are aggressive and withdrawn

    • controversial: well liked by some, disliked by others

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