Assignment 1 Semester 1 2026
Unique number:
Due Date: April 2026
QUESTION 1
In the seventeenth century, John Locke introduced a new way of thinking about children and
their development. Locke rejected the idea that children are born with fixed knowledge or
sinful tendencies. Instead, he proposed that a child’s mind at birth is like a tabula rasa,
meaning a blank slate. According to Locke, knowledge and behaviour are shaped primarily
through experience and interaction with the environment (Louw & Louw, 2022).
Locke believed that children learn through sensory experiences and reflection on those
experiences. The environment, including family, education, discipline, and social
interactions, plays a central role in shaping personality, values, and intellectual growth. He
emphasised that parents and educators must create supportive and structured environments
to encourage healthy development. Positive reinforcement, consistent discipline, and good
role modelling were seen as essential in guiding a child’s moral and intellectual formation.
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QUESTION 1
In the seventeenth century, John Locke introduced a new way of thinking about
children and their development. Locke rejected the idea that children are born with
fixed knowledge or sinful tendencies. Instead, he proposed that a child’s mind at
birth is like a tabula rasa, meaning a blank slate. According to Locke, knowledge and
behaviour are shaped primarily through experience and interaction with the
environment (Louw & Louw, 2022).
Locke believed that children learn through sensory experiences and reflection on
those experiences. The environment, including family, education, discipline, and
social interactions, plays a central role in shaping personality, values, and intellectual
growth. He emphasised that parents and educators must create supportive and
structured environments to encourage healthy development. Positive reinforcement,
consistent discipline, and good role modelling were seen as essential in guiding a
child’s moral and intellectual formation.
Locke’s views placed strong emphasis on nurture rather than nature. He argued that
differences between individuals are largely the result of environmental influences
rather than innate abilities (Louw & Louw, 2022). His ideas laid the foundation for
later learning theories and significantly influenced modern educational practices.
QUESTION 2
Arnold Gesell proposed one of the earliest biological theories of child development,
known as the maturational theory. This theory is based on the idea that development
unfolds according to a genetically predetermined biological timetable. Gesell
believed that growth and behavioural changes occur in a fixed sequence and are
largely controlled by heredity rather than environmental factors (Louw & Louw,
2022).
According to Gesell, children develop motor skills, language abilities, and social
behaviours at specific ages because their nervous systems mature in a natural and
predictable order. For example, infants sit before they crawl and crawl before they