bell ringer – use your “major studies in infant and childhood development” chart to match up...

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Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth B. Harry F. Harlow C. Konrad Lorenz 1. he was able to get newborn geese to become attached to him. 2. her study showed that most infants are very attached to their mothers. 3. found that most infants become upset when a stranger approaches them without their mother present. 4. study showed that newborn monkeys spent a greater amount of time with their cloth surrogate mother, than with their wire surrogate mother. 5. helped to prove that the bond between mothers and newborns stems from contact comfort rather than feeding. 6. Illustrated the concept of imprinting – the first moving object met by the newborn bird is somehow stamped immediately into its brain.

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Page 1: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist.

• A. Mary Ainsworth

• B. Harry F. Harlow

• C. Konrad Lorenz

• 1. he was able to get newborn geese to become attached to him.

• 2. her study showed that most infants are very attached to their mothers.

• 3. found that most infants become upset when a stranger approaches them without their mother present.

• 4. study showed that newborn monkeys spent a greater amount of time with their cloth surrogate mother, than with their wire surrogate mother.

• 5. helped to prove that the bond between mothers and newborns stems from contact comfort rather than feeding.

• 6. Illustrated the concept of imprinting – the first moving object met by the newborn bird is somehow stamped immediately into its brain.

Page 2: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Developmental Developmental Psychology-Infancy and Psychology-Infancy and

ChildhoodChildhood

Developmental Developmental Psychology-Infancy and Psychology-Infancy and

ChildhoodChildhoodUnit 7Unit 7

Page 3: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Developmental Psychology

A branch of psychology that A branch of psychology that studies physical, cognitive and studies physical, cognitive and social changes throughout the social changes throughout the

lifespan.lifespan.

Page 4: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Stages of Development• 1. pre-natal: conception – birth• 2. newborn: birth – 1 month• 3. infant: 1 month – 2 years• 4. childhood: 2-12• 5. adolescence: 12-18

Page 5: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Physical Development• Newborn Reflexes

– Grasping reflex – infant’s clinging response to a touch on the palm of the hand

– Rooting reflex – infant’s response in turning towards the source of touching anywhere near the mouth

Page 6: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Physical Development• Maturation – Biological

growth processes that enable orderly changes in behavior, relatively uninfluenced by experience.– A “built-in” plan for growth– Unless severely underfed,

restricted, or deprived of human contact we pretty much have the same schedule . . .

Page 7: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Physical Development: Infant Motor Development• Sequence is the same- but once

again timing varies.• First learn to roll over, sit up

unsupported, crawl, walk etc…

Page 8: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Cognitive Development• As the thought process of children

develop, they begin to think, communicate and relate with others

Page 9: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Cognitive Development• This field is Dominated by

a man named Jean Piaget.• He was developing IQ tests

and noticed that many children got the same answers wrong.

• Thought to himself, “maybe these kids are not stupid, but instead think differently than adults.”

Page 10: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Cognitive Development• Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive

Development– Intelligence & the ability to understand

develops gradually as the child grows– Young children thing differently than

older children and adults– 4 stages

Page 11: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Piaget’s important concepts

• Children are active thinkers, always trying to make sense of the world.

• To make sense of the world, they develop schemas.

• Schema- a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information.

Page 12: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Piaget’s important concepts

• Assimilation- fitting objects and experiences into ones schema to deal with new information

•Accommodation- the process by which a person changes their old methods or schemas to adjust or deal with new situations

Page 13: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive

Development•Sensorimotor•Preoperational•Concrete Operational•Formal Operational

Page 14: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Sensorimotor Stage• The Sensorimotor Stage

is from approximately birth to 2 years of age.

• Babies take in the world purely through their senses- looking, hearing, touching, tasting and grasping.

Page 15: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Sensorimotor Stage•At 4 to 8 months

of age, your child will learn that she can make things move by banging them and shaking them. (Example--shaking a rattle, banging on toys, banging on tray of high chair)

Page 16: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Sensorimotor Stage• Between 12 and 18 months your child

will be able to represent hidden objects in her mind (Object Permanence). In other words, she will be able to “see” objects even when they are out of sight.

• Before Object Permanence- what is out of sight, is gone from the universe forever.

Page 17: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Preoperational Stage•The Preoperational Stage is from approximately 2 to 7 years of age.

Page 18: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Preoperational Stage

• Between the ages of 3 and 4, your child will be able to apply this ability to symbolize with objects, to people (names represent people)

• Can talk about things not present

• Egocentric – inability to understand another persons perspective

Page 19: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Preoperational Stage

• By the end of this stage, the child will understand the concept of conservation.

• Conservation – the principle that a given quantity does not change when its appearance is changed.

Page 20: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Concrete Operational Stage

• 7-11 years old• Understand concept of

conservation.• Can think logically, use

analogies, and perform mathematical transformations (5+9 is the same as 9-5) also known as reversibility.

Page 21: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Formal Operational Stage

• We can reason abstractly.

If John is in school, then Mary is in school. John is in school. What can you say about Mary?

God is love. Love is Blind Stevie Wonder is Blind.Stevie Wonder is god.

Page 22: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Social Development

Page 23: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Social Development•Stranger anxiety - The fear of

strangers that infants commonly display, beginning by about 8 months of age.

Page 24: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Social Development

• Attachment An emotional tie with another person; shown in young children by their seeking closeness to the caregiver and showing distress in separation.

Page 25: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Factors of Attachment

•Body Contact•Familiarity•Responsive Parenting

Page 26: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Social Development

• It was first assumed that infants became attached to those who satisfied their need for nourishment.

Then this guy came along……..

Page 27: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Harry Harlow and his Discovered that monkeys preferred the soft body contact of a cloth mother, over the nourishment of a hard/wirily mother.

Page 28: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Imprinting• The process by

which certain animals form attachments during a critical period very early in life.

Do human’s imprint?

Page 29: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Dad’s Matter Too•We are not just mobile

sperm banks!!!!

•Paternal separation puts children at increased risk for various psychological and social pathologies.

Page 30: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Deprivation of Attachment

• Often withdrawn, frightened and in extreme cases speechless.

•Harlow’s monkeys would either cower in fright or act extremely aggressive. Many could not mate and if they could, the mothers were unresponsive parents.

•Is there a connection between crime and lack of childhood attachment?

Page 31: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Child-Rearing Practices• Parenting styles have been shown to have a positive

correlational effect on a child’s self-concept

Three General Classifications of Parenting Styles:

Page 32: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Self - Concept

•A sense of one’s identity and self-worth.

Page 33: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Authoritarian Parents

• Impose rules and expect obedience.

•“Why, because I said so!!!!”

Page 34: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Permissive Parents•Parents submit

to their children’s desires, make few demands and use little punishment.

Page 35: Bell Ringer – Use your “Major Studies in Infant and Childhood Development” Chart to match up each description to the correct Psychologist. A. Mary Ainsworth

Authoritative Parents

• Parents are both demanding and responsive.

• Exert control by setting rules, but explain reasoning behind the rules.

• Encourage open discussion.