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Developmental Psychology Study Guide 1

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Study guide/class notes for developmental psychology











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Uploaded on
November 10, 2024
Number of pages
20
Written in
2016/2017
Type
Class notes
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All classes

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Why Study Child Development?
 To understand human nature
 To shape social policy
 To be better parents
 Track physical growth over time (used to be depicted as mini adults)
o Had economic value (worked)

Historical Foundations: Early Philosophical Views
 Plato – the importance of child rearing in teaching self control & discipline
o Thought the infant comes in with innate knowledge
 Aristotle – geared more towards individual child
o Thought the infant comes into the world with a blank slate and all knowledge
comes with experience
 Locke – “tabula rasa” like Aristotle
o Thus, parents have a huge role because they immediately shape the
experience for the child and therefore the knowledge the child has
 Rousseau – argues that they come in with some sort of innate knowledge and they
will spontaneously learn themselves so give them maximum freedom from the
beginning and don’t start imposing instruction until later on
o Thinks formal education should start until age of 12 (opposite of locke – back
off at the beginning and only formally educate later)
 Major Controversy: Nature vs. Nurture
o We now know its really a mixture of both but still must examine implications

Historical Foundations: Research on Children
 The Industrial Revolution (mid 1840s)
o Children of 6/7 years old were working 12 hour days in dangerous and toxic
conditions
o Earl of Shaftesbury promoted child labor laws and social reform
o Put together a report based on the research on the children of their health,
conditions, happiness, etc.
o A call to the importance of studying children
 Darwin’s “baby biographies”
o Biographical sketch of his infant son’s development
o Influenced others about the importance of studying child development in
order to understand the nature of the human species
o 1877 Darwin published “The Sketch of an Infant, etc.” (on blackboard under
additional readings)



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, o Observational Study and Biography about his infant son and his observations
about his son’s development
 Motor development but also about cognitive and emotional
development

Historical Foundations: Child Development as a Discipline
 Emerged in the late 19th and early 20th century
 Spike in studies and published research (theories and journals) on children
 Sigmund Freud and John Watson

Themes in Child Development
 Nature and Nurture
 Development in different domains is connected (motor skills  cognitive
development)
 Active vs. Passive Child
o Is a child just a passive recipient having stuff happen to them or are they an
active part of their own development?
 Continuity/discontinuity in development
o Quantitative vs. qualitative
o Is it a linear development or more choppy like a staircase?
o Butterfly = discontinuous
o Pine tree = continuous

Five Theoretical Perspectives on Child Development
1) Biological Perspective - All growth and development is function of genes and
biology
o Maturational Approach - Gesell
 Pre-arranged plan – genetic blueprint that unfolds
 Experience/environment is irrelevant
 Specific sequence of motor milestones like sitting up before
walking, etc. – occurs the same way overtime
o Ethology/Evolutionary - Lorenz
 Combination of biology and experiences
 Think about development as adaptation to the environment
 Genetic plan/predisposition towards certain things in our
development but experiences play a part in that
 Behaviors that development in children from an evolutionary
standpoint as crucial for the survival of the species




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,  Ex: early attachment behaviors as pre-programed for survival with
care giver
 “critical periods” – specific times when certain developments
occur and imprint
 ex: goslings and imprinting
2) Psychoanalytic Perspective
o Psychosexual development
 Freud
 Importance of early childhood experiences which shape a person
 Stage theory – there are distinct stages that we all pass through
 Conflict resolution
 Id, ego, superego
o Psychosocial Development
 Erikson
3) Social Learning/Behaviorist Perspective
o Classical & Operant Conditioning
 Watson, Skinner, Pavlov
 Reinforcement and punishment
 Determined by “environment”
 Extreme behaviorist perspective would think nothing is biological
 Example: bell and bladder tension to condition someone to use the
bathroom when sleeping
o Social-Cognitive Theory
 Bandura
 Imitation and observation
 Based on “understanding” of world and “models” child encounters
 Self-efficacy
4) Cognitive Developmental Perspective
o Piaget’s theory
 Global stage theory
 Child as scientist
 Child is constructivist and active in their development
 Stair case, stage model (discontinuous)
o Information Processing Theory
 Component based (attention, memory, etc.)
 “computer” analogy
 linear, more continuous
5) Contextual Perspective




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