Child Development midterm 1 flashcards
The role of genes; epigenetics
Epigenetics: changes in your environment will increase of decrease expression of a gene
Changes in gene expression without modifying DNA
E.g. changes in brain development resulting from parents’ drug or alcohol use during gestation
Say parents were using one drug/substance during gestation for child #1 and another substance during #2, they will develop differently
A gene may be active in one person and not another, of within different cells in one individual
The way genes affect our development is complicated
We have more than 20k genes
You can't exactly predict how people will develop based on their genes
In almost all cases, single genes are not responsible for a single outcome
Our development/outcomes are polygenic
Period of the zygote, embryo, fetus and milestones within each
The period of zygote (or germinal period)
Shortest stage of prenatal period (2 weeks)
Zygote divides and grows in complexity
Travels to the uterus
Implants in the uterine wall
Placenta forms
The period of the embryo
2 to 8 weeks
When embryo grows
Significant growth occurs in the major organs and body systems
Embryo has three distinct layers:
1. Ectoderm -- forms skin, hair, teeth, sense organs, brain and spinal cord
2. Endoderm -- produces digestive system, liver, pancreas, and respiratory system
3. Mesoderm -- becomes the muscles, bones, blood, and circulatory system
The period of the fetus
2 to 8 weeks
Is about 1 inch long
Appears to have gills and a tail like structure
Has rudimentary eyes, nose, lips, and teeth
Has stubby bulges that form arms and legs
Undergoes rapid head and brain growth -- 50% of it's length and 100,000 neurons in a min
Nervous system starts functioning around the 5th week, producing weak brain waves
How development proceeds:
Cephalocaudal development: pattern of human growth proceeds from the head downward
Proximodistal development: human growth occurs first in the central areas and then extends outward
Teratogens are most harmful during this period
Period of the fetus
8 weeks to birth, longest stage
Fetus undergoes rapid change
Increases in length about 20 times
Proportions change
2 months: 50% of length is the head
5 months: ⅜ of length is the head
Birth: ¼ length is the head
Fetus substantially increases in weight
4 months: weighs about 4 ounces, can feel them move
7 months: weighs about 3 pounds
birth : weighs just over 7 pounds
Organs become differentiated, begun to function
Fetus can hear and feel vibrations of sound
Sensory capabilities of the developing fetus
Vision:
Typically cant see further than 8-16 inches away from their face
Can discriminate levels of brightness
Can distinguish different colors and may have color preference
Through infancy, favor high-contrast images/toys/objects
Hearing:
Evidence for hearing as early as 7 months gestation (before birth, aka 7 months from conception)
Exhibit familiarity with certain sounds
acuity /accuracy is not fully developed
Touch:
most well-developed sense at birth
Respond to stimuli (reflexes) and pain
Smell and taste:
Well-developed
Pucker lips when a sour taste is placed on them
Respond with suitable facial expressions to other tastes
Teratogens during prenatal development
Teratogens are most harmful during the period of the fetus (2-8 week period)
Effects of teratogens vary with time
Period of the zygote: relative impervious
Period of the embryo: most deleterious
Period of the fetus: minor damage
Hard to pinpoint the primary cause of damage:
Effects differ from different individuals
Cumulative effects are common
Race and socio-economic status (SES) are influential factors
Teratogens:
The effects of substances on prenatal development resulting in negative outcomes (e.g. low birth weight, underdevelopment, etc.)
Outcomes are affected by dose, cumulative effects, and sensitive period (times of rapid physiological or behavioral development
4 categories of teratogens:
Physical teratogens, high heat
Saunas, hot tubs, or infections that raise body temperature to 102 degrees fahrenheit or higher
Associated with neural tube defects, spontaneous abortions, and various cardiovascular abnormalities
Metabolic conditions affecting pregnancy
Metabolic conditions affect the process of converting energy from food, affecting the development and function of the body
These include: malnutrition, diabetes, and thyroid disorders
Infections
Rubella virus, herpes simplex virus, covid 19, and syphilis can cause congenital abnormalities
Drugs and chemicals
Radiation, heavy metals (including lead), insecticide and herbicides, prescription and over the counter drugs, illicit and recreational drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, nicotine, caffeine, and even some vitamins
APGAR scale: assesses need for intensive care for babies after birth
Conducted 1-5 minutes after birth
Measures: heart rate, respiration, muscle tone, reflex response (babinski)
Low/very low birth weight vs small for gestational age
LOW BIRTH WEIGHT
Low weight: less than 5.5 lbs
Very low: 3.25
→ difficulty maintaining ok body temp, more risk 4 infection, increased risk of cerebral palsy
preventable w/proper prenatal care
possible cause of lbw: preterm baby - early birth triggered by any disruption to mother→ release anti inflammatory
SMALL FOR DATE/GESTATIONAL AGE
Weigh less than 90% of all babies the same gestational age
VERY SERIOUS bc growth negative affected
Mortality rates 4 times higher
Sensory capabilities of the newborn (old misconception: bb has minimal abilities)
Vision
Typically can’t see farther than 8-16 in
Can discriminate levels of brightness
Can distinguish diff colors and color preferences
Typically: favor high contrast, images toys and objects
Hearing
Evidence for hearing as 7th months gestation
Exhibit familiarity w/sounds
Acuity is not fully developed (20/400 vision)
Touch
Most well dev sense at birth
Respond to stimuli (reflexes) and pain
Ppl used to believe that they didn’t feel pain so they didn’t give them pain meds 🙁
Smell and taste
Well dev
Pucker lips when sour
Respond w/suitable facial expressions to other tastes
Reflexes in newborns
Reflex: involuntary mvmnt in response to stimuli
unlearned, organized, involuntary
Rooting, swallowing, sucking (food)
Soughing, sneezing, blinking (protect from pathogens)
Some leave (Babinski) other stay (blink, swallow, sneeze, gag)
Physical qualities/development (how infants grow, brain changes, typical weight and height gains)
Growth
Newborn Weight and Height
Avg weight 7.5 lb
Avg height 20 in
Head goes from 50% of length (in womb) → 25%
2 ways humans grow
Cephalocaudal growth: head first
Big ass anime baby heads
Proximodistal: grows from the inside out
Brain Changes/Dev
Neurons: nerve cells (slides)
Constantly form new and stronger connections
Plasticity: ability of brains to adapt to change (ex: enviro and damage)
Sensory and experiences affect size of individual neurons & interconnections
Enrichment valuable bc sensitive period (ex: cuddling , talking, singing)
Development (book)
,brain 25% of adult weight
Most neurons are present at birth but not fully mature
Typical weight and height gains
Initial, temporary 5% of body weight followed by period of rapid growth
4 months: 2x birth weight
One year: 3x b weight
26-32 in
age 2: 4x b weight
2 important hormones
Human Growth Hormone (HGH): influences ALL growth except for CNS
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone: Central nervous system (CNS) growth
Beginnings of language development
Language: systematic , meaningful arrangement of symbols which provides basis for comm
Stages of lang dev
Intentional Vocalizations (first couple months)
Cooing - repeating sounds, vocalizations, gurgling
Practice for vocalizations
Vowel sounds (ooo, nanana)
Speaking turns - pausing in conversation, waiting for other ppl to talk
Babbling and gesturing (4-6 months)
Babbling: Elaborate vocalizations, inc. sounds req for language
Gesturing: For deaf babies, use gestures for wants, reactions, feelings
Rhythm and pattern of language used when deaf babies sign is same as when babies babble
Understanding (10 mo)
Understand more than what they say
Holophrastic speech (12-13 mo)
Partial words to convey thoughts
Ex: ju → for juice
Underextension
Word for an object can only be used for that object
Ex: they may the word doggie only applies for that one dog
over extension (more often): generalizing, think a label applies to all objects
Ex: every animal is a doggie
1st words and Cultural Influences: first word differ based on culture
English: nouns
Chinese: verbs bc it verb friendly
May be bc diff emphasis given to objects based on culture
Vocab growth spurt
1 yr: 50 words
Toddlers: 200
telegraphic speech
stringing minimal words together to get message across
Ex: doggie pretty give bby ball
child-directed speech: exaggerating certain cowl and consonant sounds, high-pitched voice (ex: girl → GIRLIE, horsie)
Maybe bc this way of speaking more clearly articulates sounds or bc it’s attention grabbing
Gross and fine motor skill development (e.g., milestones, examples of each type of motor skill
Gross motor skills:Voluntary movements that use large muscle groups (typ: arm mvnt, crawling)
First skills developed
Milestones (phys skills seen in all children as they grow)
Fine motor skills
Exact mvnts of feet, hands, toes, fingers (reach and grasp)
Real grasps start at 4 mo (tho w/o thumbs)
9 mo: PINCER grip - finger and thumb PINCH
Dev slower bc proximodistal dev
Progress made in first two years
Piaget: Schemes, accommodation, assimilation
Schemes: groupings of patterns and patterns
Assimilation: fitting new info into existing schemas based on current knowledge/past
Good for relating
Ex: these things both have ears, tails, fur → doggie schema!
Accommodation: changing existing ways of thinking in response to new stimuli (we change/create new schema)
Ex: this cat ain’t no dog → new schema!
Piaget: Sensorimotor stage (born-2 years)
First cognitive stage
Intelligence based on how one experiences and senses the world
Criticism of piaget
Debate on his explanations for the cause of change
The Strange Situation - what was measured, types of attachment and differences between types of attachment
Harlow’s study with infant monkeys, findings/relevance to child development
Object permanence
Language learning/development approaches
language acquisition device (nativist approach)
Types of play
Helps preschoolers develop!
American academy of pediatrics (AAP) says it is essential for the cognitive, physical, social, and emotional well-being of children and youth
United nations high commission for human rights
Maintains that play as a basic right of every child
These types of play are not common until the end of the preschool years
May be seen earlier among children with substantial social experience
Functional play
Simple, repetitive activities, typical of 3 year olds
May involve objects of repetitive muscular movements
Ex: playing with dolls, skipping, jumping, rolling, and unrolling a piece of clay
Doing something for the sake of being active rather than creating
Declines with age
Constructive play
Manipulate objects to produce or build something
Evident by age 4
Ex: building with lego or putting together a puzzle
Has and ultimate goal of producing something
Provides opportunity to test developing physical and cognitive skills and practice fine muscle movements
Parallel play:
Children play with similar toys, in a similar manner, but do not interact with each other
Typical during early preschool years
Onlooker play
Children simply watch others at play but do not actually participate themselves
May be silent of may make comments of encouragement or advice
Associative play:
2+ children interact by sharing or borrowing toys of materials, although they do not do the same thing
Cooperative play
Children genuinely interact with one another, taking turns, playing games, or devising contests
Pretend play also changes during the preschool period
Becomes increasingly unrealistic and more imaginative - children understand/use symbols more
Pretend play is important to expanding cognitive skills
Able to practice activities that are a part of their culture
Play helps brain develop and become more sophisticated
Depriving animals of play affects the course of brain development
Deficiencies in the development of the prefrontal cortex (decision-making, higher order thinking)
Culture affects style of play
Erikson’s stage
Erikson’s psycho-social stages
Approximate age: what we’re most concerned about in terms of our development
Birth-1y - trust v mistrust
1-3y - autonomy v shame and doubt
3-6y - initiative v guilt
6-11y - industry v inferiority
Adolescence - identity v role confusion
Psychosocial development (erikson’s autonomy vs shame and doubt)
Changes in the understandings of self as members of society/a large collective
Changes in their comprehension of the meaning of others’s behavior
Erikson’s stages: initiative vs. guilt stage
Children 3-6 years experience conflict between wanting independence and consequences of actions
Want to do things on their own, but feel guilty when they fail
Sense of self - resolving conflicts
Parents who react positively can help c hildren resolve the opposing feelings
Parents who are supportive of them being independent (is really important at this age)
Providing children with opportunities to act independently, while giving direction and guidance supports children, while giving direction and guidance supports children/their sense of initiative
Discouraging a child’s efforts contributes to sense of guild and affects self concept
Thinking about the self:
Self concept: out identity or set of beliefs about who we are as a person
Statements from children describing their own self concepts are not necessarily accurate
They overestimate their own skills/abilities and knowledge
Reflects culture:
Collectivistic: promotes interdependence
Tend to regard themselves as parts of a larger social network, where they are interconnected with and responsible to/for others
Individualistic: emphasizes personal identity, uniqueness
See themselves as self-contained and autonomous
Children focus on what sets them apart from others
Physical development (brain growth, weight and height gains, etc)
The growing brain:
Brain grows at a faster rate than any other part of the body
At age 2, brain is ¾ of adult size/weight
By age 5, brain is 90% of adult weight
Body is only 30% of adult weight
Myelin: protective, insulative coating around axons of neurons
Increases and speeds neural transmission
Corpus callosum:
Fibers connecting the left and right hemispheres, significant growth during this period
Dopamine neurotransmitters increase substantially in the 3 to 6 year age period, reward and motor movement
From 3-6 years, the most rapid growth is seen in the frontal lobe
Age 6 through puberty, more rapid growth takes place in the temporal and patient lobes
Density of synapses (connections) peaks at ~4 years of age
True episodic memory may begin at this point
Prefrontal cortex: extensive development from 3-6 years of age, through mid-20s
Parenting styles
Effective parenting, teaching desired behavior: how well a parent responds to a child's needs and also how much a parent demands of a child (parents fall into 4 categories)
Authoritarian parents
Parents who are controlling, punitive, rigid, and cold
Value strict, unquestioning obedience from their children and do not tolerate expressions of disagreement
Research finds: children of authoritarian parents tend to be withdrawn, can be incredibly dependent of hostile
Permissive parents:
Parents who provide lax and inconsistent feedback
Have inconsistent expectations for children
Sometimes they are reality laid back, other times they are more strict
Research finds: children of permissive parents tend to be dependent and more difficulty with social connections and self regulating
Authoritative parents:
Parents who are firm, setting clear and consistent limits, but try to reason with their parents
Explain why they should behave in particular way
Research finds: children of authoritarian parents, generally independent, friendly, self-assertive, cooperative, motivated to achieve, able to regulate their own behavior
Some authoritative parents display supportive parenting. Parental warmth, proactive teaching, calm discussion, and interest in involvement
Uninvolved parents:
Parents who show virtually no interest in their children, displaying indifferent, rejecting behavior
In it's most extreme form, it results in neglect
Research finds: children of uninvolved parents tend to have disrupted emotional development; impedes physical and cognitive development
Gross and fine motor skill development (e.g., milestones, examples of each type of motor skill)
Gross motor skills:
By 3 years old, children have mastered a lot of gross motor skills:
Jumping
Hopping on one foot
Skipping
Running
By 4 they can throw a ball with enough accuracy for someone to catch it
By 5 they can play ring-toss or mini basketball
Why do they advance as we get older?
Partly because of changes to skeletal system (like we saw in babies video)
And partly because of practice…
Fine motor skills:
At age 3, children can:
Put together a simple puzzle
Fit blocks into matching holes
By age 4, they can:
Fold a paper into triangular designs
Print their name with a crayon
By age 5, they can hold and manipulate a pencil
Conservation: the quantity is unrelated to the arrangement and physical appearance of objects
Kids cant take into account the multiple aspects of a situation
Results from centration - young children cannot focus on multiple aspects of a situation, takes things at “face value”
Egocentrism during preoperational stage (piaget)
This kid is so self centered
Thinking does not usually take the viewpoints of others into account
Lack of awareness that others see things from a different physical perspective
Failure to realize that others may hold thoughts, feelings, and points of view that are different
At the heart of several behaviors in children
Talking to themselves
Ignoring what others tell them
Being bas at hide and seek
Strengths:
Useful wat of thinking about progressive advances in cognitive ability
Insightful and groundbreaking, for that time
Weaknesses:
Observations of relatively few children
Underestimated children’s capabilities
Stage theory
Children can be taught to answer correctly on conservation tasks
Focuses on deficiencies in thinking
Vygotsky - learning, scaffolding
Learning:
Cognitive development: a result of social interactions
Children learn through guided participation
Children gradually grow intellectually and begin to function on their own because of assistance provided by partners
Contended that the nature of partnership between developing children and adults/peers is determined largely by cultural and societal factors
Culture and society established institutions that promote development
Culture and society emphasize particular tasks
Toys
Gender roles
Scaffolding:
Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
Level at which a child can almost, but not fully, comprehend or perform a task without assistance
Scaffolding: support for learning and problem-solving that encourages independence and growth
Includes cultural tools -- actual, physical items, as well as and intellectual and conceptual framework for solving problems
Pencils, paper, calculators, computers, language, alphabetical and number systems, mathematical and scientific systems, religion, etc.
The role of genes; epigenetics
Epigenetics: changes in your environment will increase of decrease expression of a gene
Changes in gene expression without modifying DNA
E.g. changes in brain development resulting from parents’ drug or alcohol use during gestation
Say parents were using one drug/substance during gestation for child #1 and another substance during #2, they will develop differently
A gene may be active in one person and not another, of within different cells in one individual
The way genes affect our development is complicated
We have more than 20k genes
You can't exactly predict how people will develop based on their genes
In almost all cases, single genes are not responsible for a single outcome
Our development/outcomes are polygenic
Period of the zygote, embryo, fetus and milestones within each
The period of zygote (or germinal period)
Shortest stage of prenatal period (2 weeks)
Zygote divides and grows in complexity
Travels to the uterus
Implants in the uterine wall
Placenta forms
The period of the embryo
2 to 8 weeks
When embryo grows
Significant growth occurs in the major organs and body systems
Embryo has three distinct layers:
1. Ectoderm -- forms skin, hair, teeth, sense organs, brain and spinal cord
2. Endoderm -- produces digestive system, liver, pancreas, and respiratory system
3. Mesoderm -- becomes the muscles, bones, blood, and circulatory system
The period of the fetus
2 to 8 weeks
Is about 1 inch long
Appears to have gills and a tail like structure
Has rudimentary eyes, nose, lips, and teeth
Has stubby bulges that form arms and legs
Undergoes rapid head and brain growth -- 50% of it's length and 100,000 neurons in a min
Nervous system starts functioning around the 5th week, producing weak brain waves
How development proceeds:
Cephalocaudal development: pattern of human growth proceeds from the head downward
Proximodistal development: human growth occurs first in the central areas and then extends outward
Teratogens are most harmful during this period
Period of the fetus
8 weeks to birth, longest stage
Fetus undergoes rapid change
Increases in length about 20 times
Proportions change
2 months: 50% of length is the head
5 months: ⅜ of length is the head
Birth: ¼ length is the head
Fetus substantially increases in weight
4 months: weighs about 4 ounces, can feel them move
7 months: weighs about 3 pounds
birth : weighs just over 7 pounds
Organs become differentiated, begun to function
Fetus can hear and feel vibrations of sound
Sensory capabilities of the developing fetus
Vision:
Typically cant see further than 8-16 inches away from their face
Can discriminate levels of brightness
Can distinguish different colors and may have color preference
Through infancy, favor high-contrast images/toys/objects
Hearing:
Evidence for hearing as early as 7 months gestation (before birth, aka 7 months from conception)
Exhibit familiarity with certain sounds
acuity /accuracy is not fully developed
Touch:
most well-developed sense at birth
Respond to stimuli (reflexes) and pain
Smell and taste:
Well-developed
Pucker lips when a sour taste is placed on them
Respond with suitable facial expressions to other tastes
Teratogens during prenatal development
Teratogens are most harmful during the period of the fetus (2-8 week period)
Effects of teratogens vary with time
Period of the zygote: relative impervious
Period of the embryo: most deleterious
Period of the fetus: minor damage
Hard to pinpoint the primary cause of damage:
Effects differ from different individuals
Cumulative effects are common
Race and socio-economic status (SES) are influential factors
Teratogens:
The effects of substances on prenatal development resulting in negative outcomes (e.g. low birth weight, underdevelopment, etc.)
Outcomes are affected by dose, cumulative effects, and sensitive period (times of rapid physiological or behavioral development
4 categories of teratogens:
Physical teratogens, high heat
Saunas, hot tubs, or infections that raise body temperature to 102 degrees fahrenheit or higher
Associated with neural tube defects, spontaneous abortions, and various cardiovascular abnormalities
Metabolic conditions affecting pregnancy
Metabolic conditions affect the process of converting energy from food, affecting the development and function of the body
These include: malnutrition, diabetes, and thyroid disorders
Infections
Rubella virus, herpes simplex virus, covid 19, and syphilis can cause congenital abnormalities
Drugs and chemicals
Radiation, heavy metals (including lead), insecticide and herbicides, prescription and over the counter drugs, illicit and recreational drugs, alcohol, cigarettes, nicotine, caffeine, and even some vitamins
APGAR scale: assesses need for intensive care for babies after birth
Conducted 1-5 minutes after birth
Measures: heart rate, respiration, muscle tone, reflex response (babinski)
Low/very low birth weight vs small for gestational age
LOW BIRTH WEIGHT
Low weight: less than 5.5 lbs
Very low: 3.25
→ difficulty maintaining ok body temp, more risk 4 infection, increased risk of cerebral palsy
preventable w/proper prenatal care
possible cause of lbw: preterm baby - early birth triggered by any disruption to mother→ release anti inflammatory
SMALL FOR DATE/GESTATIONAL AGE
Weigh less than 90% of all babies the same gestational age
VERY SERIOUS bc growth negative affected
Mortality rates 4 times higher
Sensory capabilities of the newborn (old misconception: bb has minimal abilities)
Vision
Typically can’t see farther than 8-16 in
Can discriminate levels of brightness
Can distinguish diff colors and color preferences
Typically: favor high contrast, images toys and objects
Hearing
Evidence for hearing as 7th months gestation
Exhibit familiarity w/sounds
Acuity is not fully developed (20/400 vision)
Touch
Most well dev sense at birth
Respond to stimuli (reflexes) and pain
Ppl used to believe that they didn’t feel pain so they didn’t give them pain meds 🙁
Smell and taste
Well dev
Pucker lips when sour
Respond w/suitable facial expressions to other tastes
Reflexes in newborns
Reflex: involuntary mvmnt in response to stimuli
unlearned, organized, involuntary
Rooting, swallowing, sucking (food)
Soughing, sneezing, blinking (protect from pathogens)
Some leave (Babinski) other stay (blink, swallow, sneeze, gag)
Physical qualities/development (how infants grow, brain changes, typical weight and height gains)
Growth
Newborn Weight and Height
Avg weight 7.5 lb
Avg height 20 in
Head goes from 50% of length (in womb) → 25%
2 ways humans grow
Cephalocaudal growth: head first
Big ass anime baby heads
Proximodistal: grows from the inside out
Brain Changes/Dev
Neurons: nerve cells (slides)
Constantly form new and stronger connections
Plasticity: ability of brains to adapt to change (ex: enviro and damage)
Sensory and experiences affect size of individual neurons & interconnections
Enrichment valuable bc sensitive period (ex: cuddling , talking, singing)
Development (book)
,brain 25% of adult weight
Most neurons are present at birth but not fully mature
Typical weight and height gains
Initial, temporary 5% of body weight followed by period of rapid growth
4 months: 2x birth weight
One year: 3x b weight
26-32 in
age 2: 4x b weight
2 important hormones
Human Growth Hormone (HGH): influences ALL growth except for CNS
Thyroid Stimulating Hormone: Central nervous system (CNS) growth
Beginnings of language development
Language: systematic , meaningful arrangement of symbols which provides basis for comm
Stages of lang dev
Intentional Vocalizations (first couple months)
Cooing - repeating sounds, vocalizations, gurgling
Practice for vocalizations
Vowel sounds (ooo, nanana)
Speaking turns - pausing in conversation, waiting for other ppl to talk
Babbling and gesturing (4-6 months)
Babbling: Elaborate vocalizations, inc. sounds req for language
Gesturing: For deaf babies, use gestures for wants, reactions, feelings
Rhythm and pattern of language used when deaf babies sign is same as when babies babble
Understanding (10 mo)
Understand more than what they say
Holophrastic speech (12-13 mo)
Partial words to convey thoughts
Ex: ju → for juice
Underextension
Word for an object can only be used for that object
Ex: they may the word doggie only applies for that one dog
over extension (more often): generalizing, think a label applies to all objects
Ex: every animal is a doggie
1st words and Cultural Influences: first word differ based on culture
English: nouns
Chinese: verbs bc it verb friendly
May be bc diff emphasis given to objects based on culture
Vocab growth spurt
1 yr: 50 words
Toddlers: 200
telegraphic speech
stringing minimal words together to get message across
Ex: doggie pretty give bby ball
child-directed speech: exaggerating certain cowl and consonant sounds, high-pitched voice (ex: girl → GIRLIE, horsie)
Maybe bc this way of speaking more clearly articulates sounds or bc it’s attention grabbing
Gross and fine motor skill development (e.g., milestones, examples of each type of motor skill
Gross motor skills:Voluntary movements that use large muscle groups (typ: arm mvnt, crawling)
First skills developed
Milestones (phys skills seen in all children as they grow)
Fine motor skills
Exact mvnts of feet, hands, toes, fingers (reach and grasp)
Real grasps start at 4 mo (tho w/o thumbs)
9 mo: PINCER grip - finger and thumb PINCH
Dev slower bc proximodistal dev
Progress made in first two years
Piaget: Schemes, accommodation, assimilation
Schemes: groupings of patterns and patterns
Assimilation: fitting new info into existing schemas based on current knowledge/past
Good for relating
Ex: these things both have ears, tails, fur → doggie schema!
Accommodation: changing existing ways of thinking in response to new stimuli (we change/create new schema)
Ex: this cat ain’t no dog → new schema!
Piaget: Sensorimotor stage (born-2 years)
First cognitive stage
Intelligence based on how one experiences and senses the world
Criticism of piaget
Debate on his explanations for the cause of change
The Strange Situation - what was measured, types of attachment and differences between types of attachment
Harlow’s study with infant monkeys, findings/relevance to child development
Object permanence
Language learning/development approaches
language acquisition device (nativist approach)
Types of play
Helps preschoolers develop!
American academy of pediatrics (AAP) says it is essential for the cognitive, physical, social, and emotional well-being of children and youth
United nations high commission for human rights
Maintains that play as a basic right of every child
These types of play are not common until the end of the preschool years
May be seen earlier among children with substantial social experience
Functional play
Simple, repetitive activities, typical of 3 year olds
May involve objects of repetitive muscular movements
Ex: playing with dolls, skipping, jumping, rolling, and unrolling a piece of clay
Doing something for the sake of being active rather than creating
Declines with age
Constructive play
Manipulate objects to produce or build something
Evident by age 4
Ex: building with lego or putting together a puzzle
Has and ultimate goal of producing something
Provides opportunity to test developing physical and cognitive skills and practice fine muscle movements
Parallel play:
Children play with similar toys, in a similar manner, but do not interact with each other
Typical during early preschool years
Onlooker play
Children simply watch others at play but do not actually participate themselves
May be silent of may make comments of encouragement or advice
Associative play:
2+ children interact by sharing or borrowing toys of materials, although they do not do the same thing
Cooperative play
Children genuinely interact with one another, taking turns, playing games, or devising contests
Pretend play also changes during the preschool period
Becomes increasingly unrealistic and more imaginative - children understand/use symbols more
Pretend play is important to expanding cognitive skills
Able to practice activities that are a part of their culture
Play helps brain develop and become more sophisticated
Depriving animals of play affects the course of brain development
Deficiencies in the development of the prefrontal cortex (decision-making, higher order thinking)
Culture affects style of play
Erikson’s stage
Erikson’s psycho-social stages
Approximate age: what we’re most concerned about in terms of our development
Birth-1y - trust v mistrust
1-3y - autonomy v shame and doubt
3-6y - initiative v guilt
6-11y - industry v inferiority
Adolescence - identity v role confusion
Psychosocial development (erikson’s autonomy vs shame and doubt)
Changes in the understandings of self as members of society/a large collective
Changes in their comprehension of the meaning of others’s behavior
Erikson’s stages: initiative vs. guilt stage
Children 3-6 years experience conflict between wanting independence and consequences of actions
Want to do things on their own, but feel guilty when they fail
Sense of self - resolving conflicts
Parents who react positively can help c hildren resolve the opposing feelings
Parents who are supportive of them being independent (is really important at this age)
Providing children with opportunities to act independently, while giving direction and guidance supports children, while giving direction and guidance supports children/their sense of initiative
Discouraging a child’s efforts contributes to sense of guild and affects self concept
Thinking about the self:
Self concept: out identity or set of beliefs about who we are as a person
Statements from children describing their own self concepts are not necessarily accurate
They overestimate their own skills/abilities and knowledge
Reflects culture:
Collectivistic: promotes interdependence
Tend to regard themselves as parts of a larger social network, where they are interconnected with and responsible to/for others
Individualistic: emphasizes personal identity, uniqueness
See themselves as self-contained and autonomous
Children focus on what sets them apart from others
Physical development (brain growth, weight and height gains, etc)
The growing brain:
Brain grows at a faster rate than any other part of the body
At age 2, brain is ¾ of adult size/weight
By age 5, brain is 90% of adult weight
Body is only 30% of adult weight
Myelin: protective, insulative coating around axons of neurons
Increases and speeds neural transmission
Corpus callosum:
Fibers connecting the left and right hemispheres, significant growth during this period
Dopamine neurotransmitters increase substantially in the 3 to 6 year age period, reward and motor movement
From 3-6 years, the most rapid growth is seen in the frontal lobe
Age 6 through puberty, more rapid growth takes place in the temporal and patient lobes
Density of synapses (connections) peaks at ~4 years of age
True episodic memory may begin at this point
Prefrontal cortex: extensive development from 3-6 years of age, through mid-20s
Parenting styles
Effective parenting, teaching desired behavior: how well a parent responds to a child's needs and also how much a parent demands of a child (parents fall into 4 categories)
Authoritarian parents
Parents who are controlling, punitive, rigid, and cold
Value strict, unquestioning obedience from their children and do not tolerate expressions of disagreement
Research finds: children of authoritarian parents tend to be withdrawn, can be incredibly dependent of hostile
Permissive parents:
Parents who provide lax and inconsistent feedback
Have inconsistent expectations for children
Sometimes they are reality laid back, other times they are more strict
Research finds: children of permissive parents tend to be dependent and more difficulty with social connections and self regulating
Authoritative parents:
Parents who are firm, setting clear and consistent limits, but try to reason with their parents
Explain why they should behave in particular way
Research finds: children of authoritarian parents, generally independent, friendly, self-assertive, cooperative, motivated to achieve, able to regulate their own behavior
Some authoritative parents display supportive parenting. Parental warmth, proactive teaching, calm discussion, and interest in involvement
Uninvolved parents:
Parents who show virtually no interest in their children, displaying indifferent, rejecting behavior
In it's most extreme form, it results in neglect
Research finds: children of uninvolved parents tend to have disrupted emotional development; impedes physical and cognitive development
Gross and fine motor skill development (e.g., milestones, examples of each type of motor skill)
Gross motor skills:
By 3 years old, children have mastered a lot of gross motor skills:
Jumping
Hopping on one foot
Skipping
Running
By 4 they can throw a ball with enough accuracy for someone to catch it
By 5 they can play ring-toss or mini basketball
Why do they advance as we get older?
Partly because of changes to skeletal system (like we saw in babies video)
And partly because of practice…
Fine motor skills:
At age 3, children can:
Put together a simple puzzle
Fit blocks into matching holes
By age 4, they can:
Fold a paper into triangular designs
Print their name with a crayon
By age 5, they can hold and manipulate a pencil
Conservation: the quantity is unrelated to the arrangement and physical appearance of objects
Kids cant take into account the multiple aspects of a situation
Results from centration - young children cannot focus on multiple aspects of a situation, takes things at “face value”
Egocentrism during preoperational stage (piaget)
This kid is so self centered
Thinking does not usually take the viewpoints of others into account
Lack of awareness that others see things from a different physical perspective
Failure to realize that others may hold thoughts, feelings, and points of view that are different
At the heart of several behaviors in children
Talking to themselves
Ignoring what others tell them
Being bas at hide and seek
Strengths:
Useful wat of thinking about progressive advances in cognitive ability
Insightful and groundbreaking, for that time
Weaknesses:
Observations of relatively few children
Underestimated children’s capabilities
Stage theory
Children can be taught to answer correctly on conservation tasks
Focuses on deficiencies in thinking
Vygotsky - learning, scaffolding
Learning:
Cognitive development: a result of social interactions
Children learn through guided participation
Children gradually grow intellectually and begin to function on their own because of assistance provided by partners
Contended that the nature of partnership between developing children and adults/peers is determined largely by cultural and societal factors
Culture and society established institutions that promote development
Culture and society emphasize particular tasks
Toys
Gender roles
Scaffolding:
Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
Level at which a child can almost, but not fully, comprehend or perform a task without assistance
Scaffolding: support for learning and problem-solving that encourages independence and growth
Includes cultural tools -- actual, physical items, as well as and intellectual and conceptual framework for solving problems
Pencils, paper, calculators, computers, language, alphabetical and number systems, mathematical and scientific systems, religion, etc.