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Developmental Psychology Ultimate Study Guide: Full Summary

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This document is a complete, semester-long study guide for Developmental Psychology, designed to take you from Midterm 1 all the way through the final. It pulls together lecture content, textbook ideas, and key research into one organized, exam-focused outline that’s easy to turn into flashcards or use as a last-minute cram pack. The notes cover all major topics typically included in an Developmental Psychology course , including: - Foundations & Methods - Biological Foundations & Prenatal Development - Brain, Physical, and Motor Development - Cognitive Development - Learning, Perception, and Motor in Infancy - Language Development - Intelligence & Academic Achievement - SES, Poverty, Achievement Gap & Brain - Emotional Development, Temperament, Stress - Attachment, Self, and Identity The document is highly structured as a detailed outline, with clear headings, subpoints, and explanations written in straightforward, student-friendly language. It’s perfect if you want: - A one-stop summary for your Developmental Psychology final - To build flashcards quickly from a clean, organized outline - To review all three midterms plus final material without flipping between multiple sets of notes If your class covers anything like “Developmental Psychology,” “Child Development,” or “Lifespan Development,” this guide will save you a ton of time and help you focus on what actually shows up on exams.

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Summarized whole book?
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Uploaded on
December 21, 2025
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Written in
2025/2026
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Summary

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I. Foundations of Developmental Psychology
1. What Is Development & Child Development
●​ Development
○​ Systematic, organized changes over time in:
■​ Physical body: size, brain, motor skills, puberty.
■​ Cognition: thinking, reasoning, memory, language.
■​ Emotion & social behavior: relationships, regulation, personality.
○​ Includes:
■​ Growth (gains, improvements).
■​ Decline (aging, sensory loss) later in life.
●​ Child Development
○​ Focus = conception through adolescence.
○​ Goal = understand:
■​ How children change (trajectories).
■​ Why they change (biological, cognitive, social, cultural, historical causes).




2. Major Themes & Classic Theorists
2.1 Nature vs Nurture – Classic Thinkers

●​ Plato – Nature
○​ Children born with innate ideas and knowledge.
○​ Education = helping them “remember” or express what’s already inside.
●​ Aristotle – Nurture
○​ Children’s minds shaped by experience.
○​ No built-in ideas; observation and environment build knowledge.
●​ John Locke – Nurture, “Tabula Rasa”
○​ Newborn = blank slate.
○​ All traits, behaviors, and knowledge come from:
■​ Parenting.
■​ Education.
■​ Life experiences.
○​ Emphasizes discipline, habits, training.
●​ Jean-Jacques Rousseau – Nature + “Natural Goodness”
○​ Children are innately good.
○​ Development unfolds naturally, like plants growing.

, ○​ Adults should interfere as little as possible; follow the child’s lead.
●​ John Watson – Behaviorist (Extreme Nurture)
○​ Claimed with full control of environment he could train any healthy infant into any kind
of specialist.
○​ Focused only on observable behavior.
○​ Learning through conditioning and reinforcement.

2.2 Quantitative vs Qualitative Change

●​ Quantitative Change
○​ Gradual, continuous change in amount:
■​ Height, weight.
■​ Vocabulary size.
■​ Memory span.
○​ Same underlying process; just more or less of it.
●​ Qualitative Change
○​ Change in kind or structure:
■​ New ways of thinking (e.g., Piaget’s stages).
■​ Nonverbal → using language.
■​ Concrete thinking → abstract thinking.
○​ Stage-like: distinct shifts rather than smooth.

2.3 Sociocultural Context

●​ Sociocultural context = the broad environment shaping development:
○​ Historical time:
■​ Growing up pre-internet vs post-smartphone.
■​ COVID-era vs pre-COVID.
○​ Physical surroundings:
■​ Urban vs rural.
■​ Noise, crowding, pollution, neighborhood safety.
○​ Socioeconomic status (SES):
■​ Income, education, occupation, neighborhood.
■​ Affects nutrition, healthcare, schooling quality, stress, enrichment.
●​ Explains why same-age kids can look totally different in skills and outcomes.

,II. Research Methods in Developmental
Psychology
3. Scientific Method
1.​ Form a research question.
2.​ Review past research/theories.
3.​ Form a hypothesis (testable prediction).
4.​ Design a study (participants, measures, procedures).
5.​ Collect data.
6.​ Analyze with statistics.
7.​ Interpret results (support vs contradict hypothesis).
8.​ Report findings (papers, talks).
9.​ Replicate/extend to see if it holds up.


4. Key Example: Romanian Adoption Study
●​ Children raised in extremely deprived orphanages (minimal caregiving, stimulation).
●​ Adopted into nurturing families at different ages:
○​ Adopted earlier (e.g., before ~6 months):
■​ Better recovery in IQ, social behavior, attachment.
○​ Adopted later (e.g., after ~2 years):
■​ More persistent cognitive, emotional, social problems.
●​ Takeaways:
○​ Sensitive periods matter: timing of experience is crucial.
○​ Early severe deprivation can have long-lasting effects, but early intervention helps.




5. Research Strategies: Correlational & Experimental
5.1 Correlational Research

●​ Goal: examine relationships between naturally occurring variables.
●​ Correlation coefficient r:
○​ Range: -1 to +1.
○​ Positive (r > 0): both go up or down together (e.g., study time & grades).
○​ Negative (r < 0): one up, one down (e.g., stress & sleep quality).
○​ r ≈ 0: no linear relationship.
●​ Correlation ≠ causation:

, ○​ Direction problem: X → Y or Y → X?
○​ Third-variable problem: Z (e.g., parenting style) affects both X and Y.

5.2 Experimental Research

●​ Goal: test causality by manipulating one variable.
●​ Key parts:
○​ Independent Variable (IV): the thing you change (e.g., teaching method).
○​ Dependent Variable (DV): the outcome you measure (e.g., test score).
○​ Control Group: no manipulation or baseline treatment.
○​ Random Assignment: participants randomly assigned to conditions → balances
pre-existing differences, increases internal validity.
●​ Types of Experiments:
○​ Lab Experiments:
■​ High control, strong causal claims.
■​ Low realism/generalizability (artificial situation).
○​ Field Experiments:
■​ Manipulation in real-world settings (schools, homes).
■​ More realistic, but less control.
○​ Natural/Quasi-Experiments:
■​ Groups created by events or policies, not random assignment (e.g., different
schools, laws).
■​ Realistic but weaker causal claims.

5.3 Reliability & Validity

●​ Reliability = consistency.
○​ Test-retest: same person, similar score across time.
○​ Inter-rater: different observers give similar ratings.
●​ Validity = does it measure what it claims to measure?
○​ A “reading test” that mostly measures IQ, not reading, has low validity for reading.
○​ A measure can be reliable but not valid (consistently wrong).




6. Designs for Studying Development Over Time
●​ Cross-sectional:
○​ Different ages measured at one time (5 vs 10 vs 15).
○​ Pros: quick, cheap.
○​ Cons: cohort effects — differences might be due to generation, not age.
●​ Longitudinal:
○​ Same individuals tracked over time.
○​ Pros: shows true developmental change and individual trajectories.
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