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Samenvatting

Summary Developmental psychology / Samenvatting Ontwikkelingspsychologie (boek) RUG

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An extensive summary of all key terms and their descriptions/explanations of chapters 1-19 of the book. Written for the course Developmental psychology / Ontwikkelingspsychologie from the RUG.

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Ontwikkelingspsychologie
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1 The Study of Human Development

Human Development: An Ever-Evolving Field
human development:
Scientific study of processes of change and stability throughout the human life span.
life-span development:
Concept of human development as a lifelong process, which can be studied scientifically.

The Study of Human Development: Basic Concepts
physical development:
Growth of body and brain, including patterns of change in sensory capacities, motor skills, and health.
cognitive development:
Pattern of change in mental abilities, such as learning, attention, memory, language, thinking,
reasoning, and creativity.
psychosocial development:
Pattern of change in emotions, personality, and social relationships.

social construction:
A concept or practice that may appear natural and obvious to those who accept it, but that in reality is
an invention of a particular culture or society.

Influences on Development
individual differences:
Differences in characteristics, influences, or developmental outcomes.

heredity:
Inborn traits or characteristics inherited from the biological parents.
environment:
Totality of nonhereditary, or experiential, influences on development.
maturation:
Unfolding of a natural sequence of physical and behavioral changes.

nuclear family:
Two-generational kinship, economic, and household unit consisting of one or two parents and their
biological children, adopted children, or stepchildren.
extended family:
Multigenerational kinship network of parents, children, and other relatives, sometimes living together
in an extended-family household.
socioeconomic status (SES):
Combination of economic and social factors describing an individual or family, including income,
education, and occupation.
risk factors:
Conditions that increase the likelihood of a negative developmental outcome.
culture:
A society’s or group’s total way of life, including customs, traditions, beliefs, values, language, and
physical products - all learned behavior, passed on from parents to children.

,ethnic group:
A group united by ancestry, race, religion, language, or national origins, which contribute to a sense of
shared identity.
ethnic gloss:
Overgeneralization about an ethnic or cultural group that obscures differences within the group.

normative (influence):
Characteristic of an event that occurs in a similar way for most people in a group.
historical generation:
A group of people strongly influenced by a major historical event during their formative period.
cohort:
A group of people born at about the same time.
nonnormative (influence):
Characteristic of an unusual event that happens to a particular person or a typical event that happens
at an unusual time of life.

imprinting:
Instinctive form of learning in which, during a critical period in early development, a young animal
forms an attachment to the first moving object it sees, usually the mother.
critical period:
Specific time when a given event or its absence has a specific impact on development.
plasticity:
Range of modifiability of performance.
sensitive periods:
Times in development when a person is particularly open to certain kinds of experiences.

The Life-Span Developmental Approach
The principles of the life-span developmental approach:
1) development is lifelong; 2) development is multidimensional; 3) development is multidirectional; 4)
the relative influences of biology and culture shift over the life span; 5) development involves changing
resource allocations; 6) development shows plasticity; 7) development is influenced by the historical
and cultural context.



2 Theory and Research

Basic Theoretical Issues
1) Is development active or reactive?
2) Is development continuous or discontinuous?
theory:
Coherent set of logically related concepts that seeks to organize, explain, and predict data.
hypotheses:
Possible explanations for phenomena, used to predict the outcome of research.

mechanistic model:
Model that views human development as a series of predictable responses to stimuli.
organismic model:
Model that views human development as internally initiated by an active organism and as occurring in
a sequence of qualitatively different stages.

,quantitative change:
Changes in number or amount, such as in height, weight, size of vocabulary, or frequency of
communication.
qualitative change:
Discontinuous changes in kind, structure, or organization.

Theoretical Perspectives
1) Psychoanalytic:
Freud’s psychosexual theory; Erikson’s psychosocial theory.
2) Learning:
Behaviorism, or traditional learning theory (Pavlov, Skinner, Watson); Social learning (social
cognitive theory (Bandura)).
3) Cognitive:
Piaget’s cognitive-stage theory; Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory; Information-processing
theory.
4) Contextual:
Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological theory.
5) Evolutionary/sociobiological:
Evolutionary psychology; Bowlby’s attachment theory.

psychoanalytic perspective:
View of human development as shaped by unconscious forces that motivate human behavior.
psychosexual development:
In Freudian theory, an unvarying sequence of stages of childhood personality development in which
gratification shifts from the mouth to the anus and then to the genitals. (=oral->anal->phallic->latency-
>genital).
psychosocial development:
In Erikson’s eight-stage theory, the socially and culturally influenced process of development of the
ego, or self.
(= 1) basic trust vs mistrust; 2) autonomy vs shame and doubt; 3) initiative vs guilt; 4) industry vs
inferiority; 5) identity vs identity confusion; 6) intimacy vs isolation; 7) generativity vs stagnation; 8)
integrity vs despair).

learning perspective:
View of human development that holds that changes in behavior result from experience or from
adaptation to the environment.
behaviorism:
Learning theory that emphasizes the predictable role of environment in causing observable behavior.
classical conditioning:
Learning based on associating a stimulus that does not ordinarily elicit a response with another
stimulus that does elicit the response.
operant conditioning:
Learning based on association of behavior with its consequences.
reinforcement:
The process by which a behavior is strengthened, increasing the likelihood that the behavior will be
repeated.
punishment:
The process by which a behavior is weakened, decreasing the likelihood of repetition.
social learning theory (or “social cognitive theory”):
Theory that behaviors are learned by observing and imitating models.
reciprocal determinism:
Bandura’s term for bidirectional forces that affect development.

, observational learning (or “modeling”):
Learning through watching the behavior of others.
self-efficacy:
Sense of one’s capability to master challenges and achieve goals.

cognitive perspective:
View that thought processes are central to development.
cognitive-stage theory:
Piaget’s theory that children’s cognitive development advances in a series of four stages involving
qualitatively distinct types of mental operations.
(= sensorimotor->preoperational->concrete operations->formal operations).
According to Piaget, cognitive growth occurs through three interrelated processes:
1) organization:
The creation of categories or systems of knowledge.
schemes: organized patterns of thought and behavior used in particular situations.
2) adaptation:
Adjustment to new information about the environment, achieved through processes of assimilation (:
the incorporation of new information into an existing cognitive structure) and accommodation (:
changes in a cognitive structure to include new information).
3) equilibration:
The tendency to seek a stable balance among cognitive elements; achieved through a balance
between assimilation and accommodation.
sociocultural theory:
Vygotsky’s theory of how contextual factors affect children’s development.
zone of proximal development (ZPD):
Vygotsky’s term for the difference between what a child can do alone and what the child can do with
help.
scaffolding:
Temporary support to help a child master a task.
information-processing approach:
Approach to the study of cognitive development by observing and analyzing the mental processes
involved in perceiving and handling information.

contextual perspective:
View of human development that sees the individual as inseparable from the social context.
bioecological theory:
Bronfenbrenner’s approach to understanding processes and contexts of human development that
identifies five levels of environmental influence.
(= microsystem-mesosystem-exosystem-macrosystem-chronosystem).

evolutionary/sociobiological perspective:
View of human development that focuses on evolutionary and biological bases of behavior.
ethology:
Study of distinctive adaptive behaviors of species of animals that have evolved to increase survival of
the species.
evolutionary psychology:
Application of Darwinian principles of natural selection and survival of the fittest to individual behavior.

Research Methods
quantitative research:
Research that deals with objectively measurable data.

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Hoi! Welkom op mijn pagina. Hier zijn allerlei samenvattingen te koop die ik tijdens het volgen van de vakken voor mijn studie heb gemaakt. Ik deel ze hier in de hoop anderen er ook mee te kunnen helpen die het boek niet zelf hebben of willen lezen. Succes!

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