Sunday, April 6, 2014

04/01/14 Developmental Psychology Ctd.


  • Reflexes- inborn automatic responses.
    • Rooting reflex- babies tendency when touched on the cheek to open the mouth and search for the nipple. I.e: sucking.
  • Grasping- Trying to reach whats near them.
  • Maturatuon
    • Physical growth, regardless of the environment.
  • Puberty
    • The period of sexual maturation, during which a person becomes capable of reproducing.
  • Primary Sexual Characteristics 
    • Body structures that make reproduction possible,
  • Secondary and Sexual Characteristics.
    • Non- reproductive sexual characteristics.
  • Landmarks of Puberty
    • Menarche for girls.
    • First ejaculation for boys (Spermarche)
  • Physical Milestones
    • Menopause
  • Death (5 Stages of death/ grief)
    1. Denial
    2. Anger
    3. Bargaining
    4. Depression 
    5. Acceptance
  • Social Development
    • Up until a year, infants do nor mind strange people.
    • Stranger Anxiety- Infant encounters a stranger and they exhibit anxiety.
    • Separation Anxiety- Whenever a child is separated from their parents. Ex: Putting kids in a day care.
  • Harry Harlow and his monkeys
    • When you are separated from someone, you tend to be close to someone or something similar to them. 
  • Critical Periods- The optimal period shortly after birth when an organism's exposure to certain stimuli or experiences produce proper development
    • Those who are deprived of touch have trouble forming  attachment when they are older. 
  • Types of Attachment
    1. Secure- When parents go to work and you are comfortable with who you are left with.
    2. Avoidant
    3. Anxious/ Ambivalent- Excited to see them come in, then give them the cold shoulder.
  • Parenting Styles
    • Authoritarian parents- Parents are in charge.
    • Permissive Parents- Kids are in charge.
    • Authoritative Parents- Parents and kids compromise.
  • Erik- Erikson- Social Development
    • A neo- freudian.
    • Worked with Anna Freud.
    • Thought our personality was influenced by our experiences with others.
  • Trust vs. Mistrust- From 0-2 years of age.
    • They trust or mistrust they develop can carry on with the child for the rest of their lives.
  • Autonory v. Shame and Doubt
    • Toddlers begin to control their bodies.
    • Control temper tantrums
    • Big word is No.
  • Inflative v. Guilt- Age 3-6 years of age.
    • Words turns from no to why
    • Want to understand the world and ask questions.
  • Industry v. Inferiority- Age 6-12 years of age.
    • School begins
    • We are for the first time evaluated bu a formal system and our peers.
    • Can lead to us feeling bad about ourselves for the rest of their lives... inferiority complex.
  • Identity V. Role Confusion- Early teens 13-15 years
    • Who am I?
    • In our teenage years we try out different roles.
  • Intimacy v. Isolation
    • Have to balance work and relationships
    • What are my priorities?
  • Generativity v. Stagnation- Middle adult (40's- 50's)
    • Is everything going as planned? 
    • Mid- Life crisis
  • Integrity v. Despair- Older adults, senior citizens
    • Look back on life
    • Was my life meaningful or do I have regret?
  • Cognitive Development
    • It was thought that kids were just stupid versions of adults.
    • Came along Jean Piaget.
    • Kids learn differently than adults.
  • Schemas
    • Children view the world through schemas.
    • Understanding the world around us.
    • Schemas are ways we interpret the world around us.
    • Basically what you picture in your head when you think of anything.
  • Assimilation
    • Incorporating new experiences into existing schemas.
  • Accommodation
    • Changing an existing schema to adopt a new information
  • Stages of Cognitive Development- Jean Piaget
    1. Sensorimotor Stage
      • Experience the world through our senses.
      • Do not have object permanence
      • 0-2 years of age.
    2. Preoperational Stage
      • 2-7 Years of age
      • Have object permanence
      • Begin to use language to represent objects and ideas.
      • Egocentric: Cannot look at the world through anyone's eyes but their own,
        • Conservation: refers to the idea that a quantity remains the same despite changes in appearance and is part of logical thinking.
    3. Concrete Operational Stage
      • Can demonstrate concept of conservation.
      • Learn to think logically. 
    4. Formal Operational Stage
      • Abstract Reasoning
      • Manipulate objects in our minds without seeing them.
      • Hypothesis Testing
      • Trial and Error
      • Metacognition.
      • Nor every adult gets to this stage.
  • Types of Intelligence.
    • Crystalized Intelligence
      • Accumulated knowledge.
      • Increases with age.
    • Fluid Intelligence
      • Ability to solve problems quickly and think abstractly. 
      • Peaks in the 20's and then decreases over time.
  • Moral Development- Three stages by Lawrence Kohlbergh
    1. Pre- Conventional Morality
      • Morality based on rewards and punishments.
      • IF you are rewarded then it is ok.
      • If you are punished, the act must be wrong.
    2. Conventional Morality
      • Look at morality based on how others see you.
      • If your peers, or society, thinks it is wrong, then so do you.
    3. Post- Conventional Morality
      • Based on self- defined ethical principles.
      • Your own personal set of ethics. 

1 comment:

  1. When going over the 5 stages of death I was really appalled at how accurate the expected emotions were. I also think the final stage acceptance is the hardest of them all.

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