UNIT V
Prenatal and Childhood Development
1. Zygote: Fertilized egg; the first stage of human development.
2. Genes: DNA segments that determine traits, inherited from parents.
3. Embryo: Early development stage (2-8 weeks) with basic organs forming.
4. Fetus: Later development stage (9 weeks-birth) where growth and organs continue maturing.
5. Teratogens: Harmful substances (e.g., drugs) that can cause birth defects.
6. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS): Birth defects from alcohol exposure during pregnancy.
1. Rooting Reflex: Baby turns head and opens mouth when cheek is touched, helping find food.
2. Sucking Reflex: Baby sucks when the roof of the mouth is touched, allowing for feeding.
3. Moro Reflex: Baby spreads arms and then pulls them in when startled by loud noise or feeling of falling.
4. Grasping Reflex: Baby automatically grasps objects placed in their palm.
5. Babinski Reflex: Baby’s toes fan out when the sole of the foot is stroked.
6. Stepping Reflex: Baby makes walking movements when their feet touch a surface.
8. Temperament: Inborn emotional and activity level patterns, sociability and something that remains constant
9. Maturation: Biological growth that happens naturally, aiding motor and cognitive development.
10. Cognition: Mental processes like thinking, learning, and memory.
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
11. Sensorimotor Stage: (0-2 yrs) Learning through senses and actions; develops object permanence.
12. Schemas: Mental structures for organizing information (mental molds)
13. Assimilation: Fitting new info into existing schemas.
14. Accommodation: Changing schemas to include new info.
15. Object Permanence: Understanding objects exist even when out of sight. “out of sight out of mind”
16. Preoperational Stage: (2-7 yrs) Language and symbolic thought but lacks logic; too young to perform mental operations
17. Conservation: Understanding that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape.
18. Egocentrism: Difficulty seeing others’ perspectives.
Theory of Mind: The ability to understand that others have thoughts, feelings, and perspectives different from your own
19. Concrete Operational Stage: (7-11 yrs) Logical thinking about concrete events and the ability to do basic math
20. Formal Operational Stage: (12+ yrs) Abstract and hypothetical thinking.
21. Stranger Anxiety: Fear of strangers, typically beginning around 8 months and can recognize family.
Secure Attachment: A healthy attachment where the child feels safe to explore and is upset when the caregiver leaves but is easily comforted upon return.
Insecure Attachment: An unhealthy attachment where the child may be anxious, avoidant, or ambivalent toward the caregiver, showing distress or indifference when the caregiver leaves or returns.
22. Attachment: Emotional bond with caregiver.
23. Critical Period: Key time for forming bonds and learning certain skills, language period
24. Imprinting: Rapid attachment process in some animals during early life; first thing they see they love.
Parenting Styles
25. Authoritarian Parenting: Strict rules, high expectations.
26. Permissive Parenting: Few rules, lenient.
27. Authoritative Parenting: Balanced, demanding yet responsive; best outcomes.
Module 5: Adolescence
1. Adolescence: Transition from childhood to adulthood; starts with puberty.
2. Puberty: Physical and hormonal changes for sexual maturity.
3. Primary Sex Characteristics: Organs directly involved in reproduction.
Secondary Sex Characteristics: traits that emerge during puberty and distinguish the sexes, including body hair, voice changes, and breast development in females.
Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development
4. Preconventional Morality: Obeying rules to avoid punishment or gain rewards; normally under age of nine.
5. Conventional Morality: Following rules to maintain social order; most adults
6. Postconventional Morality: Acting based on personal ethical principles; barely anyone achieves this.
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Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages
7. Trust vs. Mistrust: (Infancy) Developing trust if needs are met.
8. Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt: (Toddlerhood) Learning independence.
9. Initiative vs. Guilt: (Preschool) Trying new things, taking initiative.
10. Competency vs. Inferiority: (School age) Building skills or feeling inferior.
11. Identity vs. Role Confusion: (Adolescence) Developing a sense of self.
12. Intimacy vs. Isolation: (Young adulthood) Forming close relationships.
13. Generativity vs. Stagnation: (Middle adulthood) Contributing to society.
14. Integrity vs. Despair: (Late adulthood) Reflecting on life with satisfaction or regret.
Module 6: Adulthood and Aging
1. Social Clock: Societal timing for life milestones (e.g., marriage, retirement).
2. Menopause: End of menstrual cycles in women, typically in middle age.
3. Alzheimer’s Disease: Progressive memory and cognitive loss in old age.
4. Senile Dementia: Decline in mental ability with age.
5. Fluid Intelligence: Quick, abstract reasoning; decreases with age.
6. Crystallized Intelligence: Accumulated knowledge; remains stable or increases.
Key People
1. Jean Piaget: Developed stages of cognitive development.
2. Harry Harlow: Studied attachment through monkey experiments.
3. Konrad Lorenz: Discovered imprinting in animals.
4. Mary Ainsworth: Created Strange Situation Test to study attachment.
5. Lawrence Kohlberg: Developed stages of moral reasoning.
6. Erik Erikson: Proposed stages of psychosocial development across the lifespan.
Prenatal and Childhood Development
1. Zygote: Fertilized egg; the first stage of human development.
2. Genes: DNA segments that determine traits, inherited from parents.
3. Embryo: Early development stage (2-8 weeks) with basic organs forming.
4. Fetus: Later development stage (9 weeks-birth) where growth and organs continue maturing.
5. Teratogens: Harmful substances (e.g., drugs) that can cause birth defects.
6. Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS): Birth defects from alcohol exposure during pregnancy.
1. Rooting Reflex: Baby turns head and opens mouth when cheek is touched, helping find food.
2. Sucking Reflex: Baby sucks when the roof of the mouth is touched, allowing for feeding.
3. Moro Reflex: Baby spreads arms and then pulls them in when startled by loud noise or feeling of falling.
4. Grasping Reflex: Baby automatically grasps objects placed in their palm.
5. Babinski Reflex: Baby’s toes fan out when the sole of the foot is stroked.
6. Stepping Reflex: Baby makes walking movements when their feet touch a surface.
8. Temperament: Inborn emotional and activity level patterns, sociability and something that remains constant
9. Maturation: Biological growth that happens naturally, aiding motor and cognitive development.
10. Cognition: Mental processes like thinking, learning, and memory.
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
11. Sensorimotor Stage: (0-2 yrs) Learning through senses and actions; develops object permanence.
12. Schemas: Mental structures for organizing information (mental molds)
13. Assimilation: Fitting new info into existing schemas.
14. Accommodation: Changing schemas to include new info.
15. Object Permanence: Understanding objects exist even when out of sight. “out of sight out of mind”
16. Preoperational Stage: (2-7 yrs) Language and symbolic thought but lacks logic; too young to perform mental operations
17. Conservation: Understanding that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape.
18. Egocentrism: Difficulty seeing others’ perspectives.
Theory of Mind: The ability to understand that others have thoughts, feelings, and perspectives different from your own
19. Concrete Operational Stage: (7-11 yrs) Logical thinking about concrete events and the ability to do basic math
20. Formal Operational Stage: (12+ yrs) Abstract and hypothetical thinking.
21. Stranger Anxiety: Fear of strangers, typically beginning around 8 months and can recognize family.
Secure Attachment: A healthy attachment where the child feels safe to explore and is upset when the caregiver leaves but is easily comforted upon return.
Insecure Attachment: An unhealthy attachment where the child may be anxious, avoidant, or ambivalent toward the caregiver, showing distress or indifference when the caregiver leaves or returns.
22. Attachment: Emotional bond with caregiver.
23. Critical Period: Key time for forming bonds and learning certain skills, language period
24. Imprinting: Rapid attachment process in some animals during early life; first thing they see they love.
Parenting Styles
25. Authoritarian Parenting: Strict rules, high expectations.
26. Permissive Parenting: Few rules, lenient.
27. Authoritative Parenting: Balanced, demanding yet responsive; best outcomes.
Module 5: Adolescence
1. Adolescence: Transition from childhood to adulthood; starts with puberty.
2. Puberty: Physical and hormonal changes for sexual maturity.
3. Primary Sex Characteristics: Organs directly involved in reproduction.
Secondary Sex Characteristics: traits that emerge during puberty and distinguish the sexes, including body hair, voice changes, and breast development in females.
Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development
4. Preconventional Morality: Obeying rules to avoid punishment or gain rewards; normally under age of nine.
5. Conventional Morality: Following rules to maintain social order; most adults
6. Postconventional Morality: Acting based on personal ethical principles; barely anyone achieves this.
---
Erikson’s Psychosocial Stages
7. Trust vs. Mistrust: (Infancy) Developing trust if needs are met.
8. Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt: (Toddlerhood) Learning independence.
9. Initiative vs. Guilt: (Preschool) Trying new things, taking initiative.
10. Competency vs. Inferiority: (School age) Building skills or feeling inferior.
11. Identity vs. Role Confusion: (Adolescence) Developing a sense of self.
12. Intimacy vs. Isolation: (Young adulthood) Forming close relationships.
13. Generativity vs. Stagnation: (Middle adulthood) Contributing to society.
14. Integrity vs. Despair: (Late adulthood) Reflecting on life with satisfaction or regret.
Module 6: Adulthood and Aging
1. Social Clock: Societal timing for life milestones (e.g., marriage, retirement).
2. Menopause: End of menstrual cycles in women, typically in middle age.
3. Alzheimer’s Disease: Progressive memory and cognitive loss in old age.
4. Senile Dementia: Decline in mental ability with age.
5. Fluid Intelligence: Quick, abstract reasoning; decreases with age.
6. Crystallized Intelligence: Accumulated knowledge; remains stable or increases.
Key People
1. Jean Piaget: Developed stages of cognitive development.
2. Harry Harlow: Studied attachment through monkey experiments.
3. Konrad Lorenz: Discovered imprinting in animals.
4. Mary Ainsworth: Created Strange Situation Test to study attachment.
5. Lawrence Kohlberg: Developed stages of moral reasoning.
6. Erik Erikson: Proposed stages of psychosocial development across the lifespan.