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Zusammenfassung

Developmental Psychology - full short summary

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This is a full summary for the Exam of the "Developmental Psychology"- course in Block 2A (Psychology Bachelor, English track). The summary briefly captures all relevant chapters of the course book "Life-Span Human Development", Edition 9e. It sticks close to the literature, but does not focus on irrelevant details or examples. It should provide You with the essential contents of the course, without being too time-consuming.

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DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
Own summary (book)
Block 2A

Legende:
Dvlp. = developmemtal
Rs. = researcher
HD = human development
Betw. = between




Chapter 1: Understanding Life-Span Human Development
1.1 How Should We Think about Development?
Development defined as:
- systematic changes & continuities over life span
- gains, losses & neutral changes in physical, cognitive & psychosocial functioning
- more than growth (childhood) & biological aging (adulthood)
Context & History:
- historical, cultural & subcultural context
- influenced by age grades, age norms & social clocks
- concepts changed over history in Europe & US, differ in cultures
- 17th century: children seen as innocents;
- late 19th century: adolescence emerged as distinct phase;
- only 20th century: recognition of emerging adulthood, middle-aged “empty nest”
period & old age with retirement
Nature-nurture:
- nature-nurture issue
 understanding interaction of biology & maturation with environment & learning

1.2 What Is the Science of Life-Span Development?
Historical Development:
- goals of description, prediction, explanation & optimization, began with Darwin etc.
- American psychologist Stanley Hall:
o use of questionnaires & attention to all phases of life span, (also storm &
stress of adolescence)
o Hall = founder of developmental psychology
- Paul Baltes:
o modern assumptions about life-span perspective on human development:
 (1) occurs throughout life span
 (2) can take many different directions
 (3) gains & interlinked losses (at every age)
 (4) characterized by plasticity
 (5) affected by historical & cultural context
 (6) influenced by interacting causal factors
 (7) understood if scholars from multiple disciplines work together

1

,1.3 How Is Development Studied?
Methods:
- scientific method  formulating theories & testing hypotheses
o derived from theory by conducting research with sample (best: random
sample) representative of larger population of interest.
o Good theories = internally consistent, falsifiable & supp. by data
- Commonly: verbal reports, behavioral observations (naturalistic, structured) &
physiological measures.
- experiments  best way to explain development
o random assignments to conditions, manipulation of IV & experimental control
o but: not all dvlp. issues studied with experiments for ethical reasons
- Case studies often limited generalizability
- Correlational studies directionality- & third variable problems (when aiming for cause-
effect conclusions)
- Developmentalists use meta-analyses
 synthesize results of multiple studies of same issue
- Developmental research aims to describe age effects on development
o Cross-sectional studies compare different age groups but confound age
effects and cohort effects
o Longitudinal studies study age change but confound age effects and time-of-
measurement effects
o Sequential studies combine the cross-sectional and longitudinal approaches

1.4 What Challenges Do Developmental Scientists Face?
Challenges:
- to understand human development, researchers must:
o study it in variety of ecological contexts
o develop culturally sensitive methods & measures
o keep own cultural values/ethnocentrism from biasing conclusions
- standards of ethical research practice:
o informed consent
o debriefing individuals when withheld information
o protecting participants from harm
o maintaining confidentiality of data




Chapter 2: Theories of Human Development
2.1 Developmental Theories & The Issues They Raise
- Theories organize & explain facts of HD
o theories should be intern. consistent, falsifiable & supported by data
- The four major issues in Human Development:
o nature & nurture
o activity & passivity
o continuity & discontinuity
o universality & context specificity
2

, - Biological needs drive development, but parents affect a child’s success in dealing with
conflicts & can contribute to emotional problems (especially if overly restrictive/
punitive)
- Erik Erikson (neo-Freudian) compared to Freud:
o emphasized social influences more than biological urges
o ego more emphasis than ID
o more optimistic view of human nature
o theorized about whole life span
- Erikson’s psychosocial theory:
o development proceeds through 8 psychosocial stages
 issues of trust
 autonomy
 initiative
 industry
 identity
 intimacy
 generativity
 integrity
o Parents, peers & larger culture influence how conflicts are resolved
- Although benefits of Freud’s theory:
o attention to unconscious
o early experiences in family
o emotional aspects of development,
- downsides of Freud’s theory:
o not easily falsifiable
o many specifics lack support
- Although Erikson broadened Freud’s theory & considered whole life span, his theory
partly also difficult to test

2.2 Psychoanalytic Theory
- Freud’s psychoanalytic theory:
o humans are irrational beings
o driven by inborn biological instincts (largely unconscious)
o personality consists of: id, ego, and superego (that order)
- Libido rechanneled across five psychosexual stages:
o oral, anal, phallic, latent, and genital
o Each stage involves psychic conflicts that can
 result in fixation at stage
 create need for defense mechanisms
 have lasting effects on personality

2.3 Learning Theories
- Learning theorists
 humans change gradually & develop in many directions depending on environmental
- Behaviorist Watson focused on Pavlov’s classical conditioning in the learning of
emotional responses
- Skinner highlighted operant conditioning & roles of reinforcement and punishment

3

, - Bandura’s social cognitive theory:
o importance of cognitive processes in learning
o observational learning as most important type of human learning
o self-efficacy  reciprocal determinism among person, behavior, and
environment shapes development
- Learning theories are:
o well supported & applicable across life-span
o but DON’T necessarily explain normal developmental changes
o UNDERemphasize biological influences on development

2.4 Piaget: Cognitive Developmental Theory
- Piaget’s cognitive developmental perspective
o humans adapt to- & create new understandings of world
o through active interactions with world (constructivism)
- interaction of biological maturation & experience:
children progress through four universal, invariant & qualitatively different
stages of thinking:
o sensorimotor,
o preoperational,
o concrete operational,
o formal operational
- great influence of Piaget
- but: critique for his concept
o broad stages incorrect
o underestimated young children
o lacks social- & cultural influences on development (Vygotsky’s sociocultural
perspective)
o too little emphasis on cognitive processes such as attention & memory
(information-processing approach)

2.5 Systems Theories
- Systems & contextual theories:
o development as product of ongoing transactions
o & mutual influence betw. individual & environment
- Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological model:
o person & environment (at the microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, and
macrosystem levels) as mutually influencing each other over time
(chronosystem)
- Bronfenbrenner  development-producing proximal processes
- Bronfenbrenner  study process, person, context & time in his PPCT model
- BUT: Systems theories are incomplete & DON’T provide coherent picture of HD

2.6 Theories in Perspective
- 20th century: stage theories:
o Freud’s emphasizing biological forces
 way to learning theories emphasizing environmental influences
 Piaget’s cognitive developmental theory
4

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