chapter 9 middle childhood: physical and cognitive development
TRANSCRIPT
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CHAPTER 9CHAPTER 9
Middle Childhood: Physical and Middle Childhood: Physical and Cognitive DevelopmentCognitive Development
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Growth PatternsGrowth Patterns
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Growth Patterns
• Middle childhood growth– Defined from ages 6 to 12 – Child’s body weight doubles
• Middle childhood nutrition– 4- to 6-year-olds need 1,400 to 1,800 calories per day– Healthful to eat fruits, vegetables, fish, poultry, and
whole grains– Limit intake of fats, sugar, and starches
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Gender Similarities and Differences in Physical Growth
• Boys – Slightly heavier and taller than girls through the age of
9 or 10– Develop more muscle– Spurt and grow taller and heavier than girls after
about 13 or 14
• Girls – Have adolescent growth spurt and surpass boys in
height and weight until about 13 or 14– Develop more fat
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Physical development
• Health Problems– Obesity
• Causes of obesity• Consequences of obesity• What can we do?
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Overweight in Children
• Between 16% and 25% of children and adolescents in the United States are overweight or obese.
• Most overweight children become overweight adults.
• Overweight children rejected by peers, poor at sports, and less likely to be seen as attractive in adolescence
• At greater risk of health problems throughout life
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Causes of Being Overweight
• Heredity contributes to being overweight.
• Overweight parents may have poor exercise habits, encourage overeating, and keep unhealthful food in the home.
• Children who watch TV extensively burn fewer calories and are more likely to be overweight adolescents.
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Motor DevelopmentMotor Development
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Gross Motor Skills
• Age 6 or 7, children – hop, jump, climb, pedal, and balance bicycle
• Age 8 to 10, children– develop balance, coordination, and strength, which
allows them to engage in gymnastics and team sports
• Myelination – Neural pathways that connect the cerebellum to the
cortex are more myelinated
• Reaction time – Improves (decreases) from early childhood to about
age 18, but there are individual differences
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Fine Motor Skills
• At 6 to 7 years, children can tie shoelaces and hold pencils like adults do.
• At 6 to 7 years, children can fasten buttons, zip zippers, brush teeth, wash themselves, coordinate a knife and fork, and use chopsticks.
• Fine motor skills improve throughout childhood.
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Gender Differences
• Boys – More forearm strength, which is good for swinging a
bat or throwing a ball – At puberty, sex differences favoring boys increases
• Girls– Greater limb coordination and overall flexibility aiding
them in dancing, gymnastics, and balancing
• Between middle childhood and adolescence– Physical activities become increasingly stereotyped
by children as being masculine or feminine
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Exercise and Fitness
• Physically active adolescents have better self-image and coping skills than those who are inactive.
• Cardiac and muscular fitness is developed by participating in running, walking quickly, swimming laps, bicycling, or jumping rope for several minutes at a time.
• Schools and parents tend to focus on sports such as baseball and football, which are less apt to promote fitness.
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Children with DisabilitiesChildren with Disabilities
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Children with Disabilities
• Children with disabilities identified during middle childhood years when child enters school
• Attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)– Child shows excessive inattention, impulsivity, and
hyperactivity– The degree of hyperactivity is crucial– Typically occurs by age 7– Impairs ability to function at school– Sometimes overdiagnosed to encourage better
behavior at school
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Causes of ADHD
• Genetic component to ADHD involving the brain chemical dopamine
• Brain imaging has shown differences in the brain chemistry of children with ADHD.
• ADHD may be due to lack of executive control of the brain over motor and more primitive functions.
• Stimulants are effective with ADHD because they promote the activity of the brain chemicals dopamine and noradrenaline, stimulating the “executive center” of the brain to control more primitive areas of the brain.
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Learning Disabilities
• Some children who are intelligent and provided with enriched home environments cannot learn how to read (dyslexia) or do simple math problems.
• Children are diagnosed with a learning disability when performing below the level expected for their age and intelligence, and when there is no evidence of other handicaps such as vision or hearing problems, retardation, or socioeconomic disadvantage.
• The younger the child when remediation occurs, the better the chances of compensating for the disability.
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Origins of Dyslexia
• Dyslexic individuals– Sensory and neurological problems may contribute to reading
problems.– Genetic factors may give rise to neurological problems or
circulation problems in the left hemisphere of the brain.– Problems in the angular gyrus may give rise to reading
problems.
• Dyslexic statistics– 25% to 65% of children who have one dyslexic parent are
dyslexic themselves.– About 40% of the siblings of children with dyslexia are dyslexic.
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Educating Children with Disabilities
• Treatment for dyslexia focuses on remediation.• Given highly structured exercises to help them
become aware of how to blend sounds to form words
• Evidence is mixed on whether placing disabled children in separate classes can also stigmatize them and segregate them from other children.
• Mainstreaming: disabled children are placed in regular classrooms that have been adapted to their needs
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Cognitive DevelopmentCognitive Development
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Cognitive Development
• Children make enormous strides in their cognitive development during middle childhood as their thought processes and language become more logical and complex.
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Cognitive Development
• The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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The innocence of a child…
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Piaget: The Concrete-Operational Stage
• Child enters concrete-operational stage around age 7• Concrete-operational thought is reversible and flexible• Children can reverse mathematical operations (e.g., 2 +
3 = 5 can be reversed to 5 – 3 = 2)• Children less egocentric and are able to engage in
decentration (focus on multiple parts of a problem at once)
• At age 7, children understand law of conservation
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Piaget: The Concrete-Operational Stage (cont’d)
• Transitivity– If A exceeds B in some property and B exceeds C,
then A must also exceed C
• Seriation– Ability to place objects in a series by age, height,
weight– Children can seriate two dimensions at once
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Fig. 9-4, p. 185
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Piaget: The Concrete-Operational Stage (cont’d)
• Class inclusion– Focusing on two subclasses and larger subclass at
the same time– Concrete-operational children understand class
inclusion.
• Piaget’s theory applied to education– Learning involves active discovery.– Instruction should be geared to the child’s level of
development.– Learning to take into account the perspectives of
others to develop cognition and morality
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Moral Development: The Child as JudgeMoral Development: The Child as Judge
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Moral Development: The Child as a Judge
• On a cognitive level, moral development concerns the basis on which children make judgments that an act is right or wrong.
• May be influenced by the values of the cultural settings in which they are reared, but also reflect the orderly unfolding of cognitive processes
• Moral reasoning is related to the child’s overall cognitive development.
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Piaget’s Theory of Moral Development
• Piaget believed children’s moral judgments develop in two overlapping stages: moral realism and autonomous morality.
• Moral realism– Behavior is considered to be correct when it conforms
to authority or to the rules of the game– Immanent justice or automatic retribution
• Thinking that negative experiences are punishment for prior misdeeds, even when realistic causal links are absent
• Ages 9 to 11, children show autonomous morality – Moral judgments become self-governed
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The Kohlberg Stages
• Based on Piaget, Kohlberg proposed six stages of moral development which he believed were universal– Preconventional reasoning -- children interpret good
and bad in terms of external rewards and punishments
– Conventional reasoning -- individuals apply certain standards, but they are the standards set by others, such as parents or the government
– Postconventional reasoning -- individuals recognize alternative moral courses, explore the options, and then decide on a personal moral code
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Emotional Development
• Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development– Preconventional morality
• Stage 1 – Avoid punishment• Stage 2 – Gain reward
– Conventional morality• Stage 3 – Gain social approval and care for others• Stage 4 – Uphold laws and rules
– Postconventional morality• Stage 5 – Morality affirms everyone’s agreed upon rights• Stage 6 – Reflects more abstract principles for all
humanity
– Moral Reasoning– Moral Dilemma
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Moral Dilemma
• Three weeks before their developmental psychology term papers are due, Jennifer and two classmates visit the campus library to conduct online literature searches on their topics. After 30 minutes of surfing the web, Blake announces that he has found a website that offers inexpensive term papers on a variety of subjects, including the topic of his paper.
• Jennifer, who has never cheated in her academic career, says nothing and maintains her concentration on her own research.
• Sharon, who is appalled by Blake’s intention to cheat, vows she will report Blake to the professor.
• In choosing their selected course of action, Blake, Sharon and Jennifer each made a moral decision. However, behavior alone does not indicate moral thinking. Give a justification that each of these students might use at each of Kohlberg’s stages.
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Information Processing: Learning, Information Processing: Learning, Remembering, Problem SolvingRemembering, Problem Solving
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Development of Selective Attention
• Ability to focus one’s attention and screen out distractions advances steadily
• Preoperational children– Engaged in problem solving – Tend to focus their attention on one element of the problem at a
time• Major reason they lack conservation
• Concrete-operational children– Attend to multiple aspects of the problem at once
• Permits them to conserve number and volume
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Developments in The Storage and Retrieval of Information
• Sensory memory – Visual impression of an object lasting for a fraction of
a second
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Working Memory (Short-Term Memory)
• Focus on a stimulus in the sensory register– Tends to be retained in working memory for up to 30 seconds
after the trace of the stimulus decays
• Memory function in middle childhood – Similar to adult-like organization and strategies– Quantitative improvement through adolescence
• Auditory stimuli can be maintained longer in short-term memory than can visual stimuli
• Promoting memory – Encode visual stimuli as sounds– Rehearsing sounds that can be repeated out loud or mentally
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Long-Term Memory
• Vast storehouse of information containing names, dates, places
• May last days, years, or a lifetime• No known limit to the amount of information that
can be stored in long-term memory• Older children more likely than younger children
to use rote rehearsal, or repetition, to remember• Elaborative strategy
– Relating new material to known material
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Organization in Long-Term Memory
• Knowledge of concepts advances• Storehouse of long-term memory becomes
organized according to categories• Preschoolers tend to organize their memories by
grouping objects that share the same function.• Children are more likely to recall accurate
information.• Knowledge in a particular area increases the
capacity to store and retrieve related information.
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Development of Metacognition and Metamemory
• Metacognition – Children’s knowledge and control of their cognitive abilities– Shown by ability to formulate problems, awareness of the
processes required to solve a problem, activation of cognitive strategies, maintaining focus on the problem, and checking answers
• Metamemory – Aspect of metacognition that refers to children’s awareness of
the functioning of their memory– Store and retrieve information more effectively– Show more knowledge of strategies that can be used to facilitate
memory
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Intellectual Development, Creativity, and Intellectual Development, Creativity, and AchievementAchievement
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Intellectual Development, Creativity, and Achievement
• Intelligence – Child’s underlying competence or learning ability
• Achievement – Child’s acquired competencies or performance
• Competencies underlying intelligence manifest themselves during middle childhood when children are exposed to formal schooling.
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Theories of Intelligence
• Spearman – Intelligence has a common underlying factor, “g”
(general intelligence), which represents broad reasoning and problem-solving abilities.
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Theories of Intelligence (cont’d)
• Sternberg – Constructed a three-part, or “triarchic,” theory of
intelligence– Part 1: analytical intelligence
• Academic ability
– Part 2: creative intelligence• Ability to cope with novel situations and to profit from
experience
– Part 3: practical intelligence• Adapt to the demands of their environment, including the
social environment
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Theories of Intelligence (cont’d)
• Gardner – Believed intelligence reflects more than academic
ability
– Theory based on multiple intelligences
– Multiple intelligences can include verbal ability, logical-mathematical reasoning, spatial intelligence, bodily-kinesthetic, musical, interpersonal, and personal knowledge.
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Measurement of Intellectual Development
• Binet-Simon scale– Yields a score called a mental age (MA)– MA shows the intellectual level at which a child is
functioning
• Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale – Yields an intelligence quotient, or IQ– IQ states the relationship between a child’s mental
age and his/her actual or chronological age (CA)– IQ equals MA divided by CA times 100
• IQ today is compared to those performances of other people of the same age
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Measurement of Intellectual Development(cont’d)
• Wechsler scales– Developed for use with school-aged children (WISC),
younger children (WPPSI), and adults (WAIS)
– Groups test questions in subtests that measure different intellectual tasks
– Suggests children’s strengths and weakness as well as provide overall measures of intellectual functioning
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The Testing Controversy
• Cultural bias – Scoring well on intelligence test requires a certain
type of cultural experience
• Culture-free – Evaluates reasoning ability through the child’s
comprehension of the rules that govern a progression of geometric designs
– Middle-class children still outperform lower-class children
– Tests do not predict academic success as well as other tests
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Patterns of Intellectual Development
• School may help crystallize intellectual functioning around age 6.
• Middle childhood– Undergo more stable patterns of gains in intellectual
functioning– Intelligence tests gain greater predictive power– Individual differences still exist
• Changes in the home, socioeconomic circumstances, and education influence changes in IQ scores.
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Intellectual Disability
• Mental retardation (MR) – Disability characterized by significant limitations both
in intellectual functioning and in adaptive behavior as expressed in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills
– Involves IQ score of no more than 70 to 75
• Down syndrome children – More likely to be moderately retarded– Can learn to speak, dress, feed, clean themselves,
and eventually engage in useful work
• Cultural-familial retardation– Biologically normal children that do not develop
normally due to impoverished home environment
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Giftedness
• Involves more than excellence on the tasks provided by standard intelligence tests
• Educators’ criteria for intelligence– Outstanding abilities – Capable of high performance in a specific academic
area, such as language or mathematics– Show creativity, leadership, distinction in the visual or
performing arts, or bodily talents, as in gymnastics and dancing
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Socioeconomic and Ethnic Differences in IQ
• Lower-class African-American children obtain IQ scores between 10 and 15 points lower than those obtained by middle- and upper-class children.
• African-American, Latino- and Latina-American, and Native-American children all tend to score below the norms for European Americans.
• Youths of Asian descent frequently outscore youths of European backgrounds on achievement tests in math and science, including the math portion of the SAT.
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Creativity and Intellectual Development
• Creativity – Ability to do things that are novel and useful– Creative children and adults solve problems where
there is no tried and true solution.– Take chances and appreciate art and music– Challenge social norms– Moderate relationship between IQ score and creativity
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Determinants of Intellectual Development
• MZ twins have a high concordance rate on IQ scores (+0.85)
• MZ twins reared apart still show +0.67 correlation• Correlation between children and natural parents vary
from about +0.40 to +0.59 • Heritability between 40% and 60%• Stronger correlation of adoptive parents and adopted
children when IQ of adoptive parents was similar to IQ of natural parents
• Environmental stimulation increases IQ whether child is adopted, biological, or low SES.
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Language Development and LiteracyLanguage Development and Literacy
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Vocabulary and Grammar
• By age 6, vocabulary at 10,000 words• Semantic sophistication by 7 to 9 years old• Subtle advances made in articulation during
middle childhood• Children use connectives (conjunctions) and can
form indirect object-direct object constructions
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Methods of Teaching Reading
• Word-recognition method – Associates visual stimuli with the sound combinations
that produce spoken words
• Phonetic method – Children first learn to associate written letters and
letter combinations with the sounds they indicate– Helps with decoding
• Sight vocabulary – Recognizing useful words such as one’s name, and
such signs as danger, stop, and poison
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Bilingualism: Linguistic Perspectives on the World
• Approximately 50 million of Americans speak a different language than English at home.
• Bilingual children not cognitively delayed• Half of Spanish-speaking children at home are
proficient in both languages• Bilingualism contributes to the complexity of the
child’s cognitive processes.• Bilingual children understand symbols used in
language are arbitrary