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Developmental Psychology: Children and Adolescents

Explore the processes and outcomes of physical, cognitive, social, and emotional growth and development in children and adolescents. Understand the effects of genetic and environmental influences and the interaction between children-adolescents and their environment.

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Developmental Psychology: Children and Adolescents

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  1. FEM 3101SEMESTER1 -2012-2013 PJJ F2F 108-09-2012 Developmental Psychology: Children and Adolescents

  2. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE SYNOPSIS Processes of physical, cognitive, social and emotional growth and development from conception through adolescence. Emphasis on the major aspects at each stage of development. Processes and outcomes of interaction between the child-adolescent and the environment. SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  3. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE OBJECTIVES By the end of the course students will be able to: • Identify ecological processes of physical, socio-emotional and cognitive development of children and adolescents. • Explain the effects of genetic, environment, and genetic-environment interactions influences on children-adolescent development. • Explain the effects of children-adolescent interactions with the environment on children-adolescent growth and development. SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  4. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE CONTENT – 5 UNITS Unit 1: Introduces major concepts, principles and theories of child and adolescent development. Unit 1 also covers various alternative methods researchers use to explore questions or obtain information on child and adolescent development. Unit 2: Highlights the prenatal development of the unborn child. SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  5. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE CONTENT – 5 UNITS Unit 3: Infancy Unit 4: Covers physical, intellectual, language and socio-emotional development of children (early – late childhood). SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  6. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE CONTENT – 5 UNITS Unit 5: Covers significant aspects of adolescent development such as physical, cognitive, personality, moral and vocational planning. Specific developmental problems during adolescence are highlighted. SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  7. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly COURSE EVALUATION SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  8. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly LAB TOPICS SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  9. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly LAB REQUIREMENTS • Students are required to: • observe and/or conduct tests and compile a Case Study portfolio for one preschool age child and one primary school age child. • write a paper related to any aspects of adolescent development. SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  10. Business Driven • Technology Oriented • Sustainable Development • Environmental Friendly REFERENCES Bee, H. 2000. The Developing Child. New York: Harper & Row Berk, L.E. 2005. Child Development. Boston, MA:Allyn & Bacon Berk, L.E. 2001. Infants, Children and Adolescents. Boston, MA:Allyn & Bacon Rohani, A. 2001. PerkembanganKanak-kanak:PenilaianSecara Portfolio. Serdang, Selangor:Penerbit UPM Santrock, J.W. 2008. Adolescence.Boston:McGraw-Hill Steinberg, L. 1999. Adolescence. Boston:McGraw-Hill SITINOR/FEM3101/SEPTEMBER 2012/PJJ

  11. Assessments

  12. DEFINITION OF CONCEPT What is Growth (Pertumbuhan)? What is Development (Perkembangan)?

  13. GROWTH • Growth is a quantitative process of change • ex. change in weight/height – i.e. changes in saiz and structure, physical and mental aspects. • Changes can be measured & assess - from one stage to the other. • Growth will reach its peak once a person mature.

  14. DEFINITION • “Growth is an individual development in body size, for ex. changes in muscles, bones, hair, skin & glands. [Karl E. Garrison] • “Growth is a change that can be measured from one stage to the other, and from time to time” [Atan Long] • “Growth as an increment in a person external attributes. For examples in terms of size, height and body weight” [D.S Wright & Ann Taylor]

  15. DEVELOPMENT • Developmental is defined as change. • Human development refers to a particular type of change or the pattern of change that begins at conception and continue through the life span. • Development occurs in the context of the significant social environment of life process (family, school, peer group, community).

  16. Thus….Child Development is…. A scientific study of understanding all aspects of human constancy and change from conception through adolescence A part of a larger discipline known as developmental psychology or human development, which includes all changes experienced throughout the lifespan

  17. Behavioral change as a developmental change • Three general condition/criteria: • The change is orderly or sequential. • The change results in a permanent alteration of behavior. • The change results in a new behavior or mode of functioning that is more advanced, adaptive or useful than prior behaviors.

  18. The study of childhood: Basic Concepts • Developmental Processes: Changes and Stability • Quantitative change (growth) refers to the easily measurable and sometimes obvious aspects of development. e.g: Involve changes in size or amount, such as height, weight.

  19. Developmental Processes: Changes and Stability • Qualitative change refers to variations and modifications in functioning. • E.g ability of a newborn & 5 months old baby • Stability – constancy or enduring characteristics • Changes in development is continues  from one stage to the other  but maintaining a pattern • Specific characteristics  Cephalacaudal, proximodistal, mass to specific

  20. Developmental stages • Prenatal • Infancy (0-2 years) & Toddlerhood (2-3 years) • Early childhood(3-6 years) • Middle childhood (6-10 years) • Adolescence (11-19 years) • Early (11-14 years) • Middle (15-17 years) • Late (18-19 years) • Adulthood(≥ 20 years) • Early (20-30 years) • Middle (40-50 years) • Late (60 years and above)

  21. Domains of development • Physical development • Body, brain, senses, motor skills • Cognitive development • Learning, memory, language, thinking, moral reasoning • Psychosocial development • Personality, emotions, social relationships • Interrelated throughout development

  22. Domains of Development (con’t)

  23. Influences on Development: • Factors that can influence development are:- • Nature (sejadi) • Genetic (Warisan/baka/genetik) • Nurture (Asuhan) • Environment (Persekitaran) • Food intake (Pemakanan) • Health (Kesihatan)

  24. Major Contextual Influences • Normative Influences • Normative age-graded influences/event, i..e. biological or social • Example = puberty or entry into formal schooling • Normative history-graded event, i.e. cohort (a group of people who share a similar experience) • Example = living during the Great Depression/Tsunami • i.e. Atypical events, e.g. having a birth defect • Non-normative Influences • Individual events that impact the person • Events can be traumatic or happy

  25. Historical foundation: How the study of childhood has evolved? • Early Approaches • Medieval times • The Reformation • The Enlightenment • John Locke • John Jacques Rousseau • Darwin

  26. Scientific Beginnings • Baby biographies • Charles Darwin • G. Stanley Hall • Normative Period of Child Study • Mental Testing Movement

  27. An emerging consensus All domains are interrelated. Normal development includes a wide range of individual differences. Children help to shape their own development and influence others’ responses to them. Historical and cultural contexts strongly influence development. Early experience is important, but children can be remarkably resilient. Development in childhood is connected to development throughout the rest of the lifespan.

  28. Theories in Developmental Psychology

  29. What is a theory? A theory is a set of logically related concepts or statements, which seeks to describe and explain development and predict what kinds of behavior may occur under certain conditions. Hypotheses are tentative explanations or predictions that can be tested by research.

  30. Theory An orderly, integrated set of statements that Describes Explains behavior Predicts

  31. Benefits of theories in Developmental Psychology Explain the meaning of an event/facts Able to relate these facts

  32. Theories • Psychoanalytic • Psychosexual (S. Freud) • Psychosocial (E. Erickson) • Learning • Behavioral Learning • Classical Conditioning (Pavlov) • Operant Conditioning (Skinner) • Social Learning (A. Bandura) • Cognitive • Cognitive Developmental Theory (J. Piaget) • Socio-cultural (L. Vygotsky) • Moral Development (Reasoning) (Kohlberg) • Human Ecology System (U. Bronfenbrenner)

  33. Freud’s Three Parts of the Personality

  34. Psychoanalytic • Trust versus mistrust • Autonomy vs shame • Initiative vs guilt • Industry vs Inferiority • Identity vs Identity Confusion • Intimacy versus isolation • Generativity vs stagnation • Integrity vs despair • Oral stage • Anal stage • Phallic • Latency • Genital Psychosexual (S. Freud)*Psychosexual stages Psychosocial (E. Erickson)* 8 stages of dev.

  35. Psychoanalytic • Psychoanalytic theory proposes that morality develops through humans' conflict between their instinctual drives and the demands of society. • Freud identified three parts of the personality that become integrated during five stages of development • Id • Ego • Superego

  36. Personality Structure superego ego ID

  37. Personality Structures • ID (unconscious element) • the largest portion  is the source of basic biological needs and desires. • EGO (semi-conscious element) • the conscious  rational part of the personality, emerges in early infancy to redirect the id’s impulses so they are discharged in acceptable ways • SUPEREGO (The conscious element that function on the basis of morality). • the conscience that develops between ages 3 and 6 through interactions with parents, who insist that the child conform to the values of society.

  38. Freud Psychosexual stages: • Oral stage [0- 1 year] – • Mouth is the focus of stimulation & interaction. Feeding & weaning are central • Anal stage [1-3 year] – • Anus as the focus of stimulation & interaction. Elimination & toilet training is central

  39. Freud Psychosexual stages: • Phallic [3-6year] • The genital is the focus of stimulation. Gender role & moral development are central. • Conflict between id & superego • Children interested to know more different sexes, babies etc. • 2 main conflict: • Oedipus Conflict  son attracted to mother • Electra Conflict  daughter attracted to father • Penis envy

  40. Freud Psychosexual stages: • Latency [6-12 year] • A period of suspended sexual activities; Energy shift to physical and intellectual activities. Focus on achievement • Genital [Adolescent – adulthood (12 & above)] • Genital are the focus of stimulation with the onset of puberty • Mature sexual relationship develop

  41. Erikson’s Psychosocial stages

  42. Behaviorism & Social Learning

  43. Behavioral Theory • Learning based on reinforcement (punishment) or punishment • Positive reinforcement • Negative reinforcement • Punishment • Behavior modification • Stimulus & Response • Learning based on association of a stimulus that does not ordinarily elicit a response with another stimulus that does elicit the response. • Classical Conditioning • Ivan Pavlov Operant Conditioning (B.F. Skinner)

  44. Behavioral Theory • Social Learning Theory • Albert Bandura • Modelling (Role model) • Theory that behaviors are learned by observing and imitating models • Observational learning • Models • Importance of values and thoughts in imitating behavior of a model • Practical implications?

  45. Behaviorism & Social Learning • Development results from learning • Behaviorism – a mechanistic theory • Continuous change • Quantitative change • Importance of the environment • Associative learning

  46. Cognitive Theory • Community & culture influence on development  Focus is the social, cultural, and historical complex of which the child is part. • Social Interaction • Zone of proximal development – The difference between what a child can do alone and with help • Scaffolding – Temporary support to help a child master a task. • Sensorimotor (0-2) • Preoperational (2-6) • Concrete Operational (6-11) • Formal Operation (11-adulthood) Jean Piaget Cognitive Development • Socio-Cultural Theory • L. Vygotsky

  47. Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory Transmission of culture to new generation Beliefs, customs, skills Social interaction necessary to learn culture Cooperative dialogue with more knowledgeable members of society Zone of proximal Scaffolding

  48. Cognitive Theory Moral Development Kohlberg • Paras 1: Moraliti Pra- konvensional (4-9 tahun) • Orientasi dendaan dan patuh/taat • Hedonisme Instrumental/Orientasi Egoistik • Paras 2:Peringkat Konvensional (10-15 tahun) • Moraliti “budak baik” • Moraliti mengekalkan susunan sosial & autoriti • Paras 3:Peringkat Pasca Konvensional • Moraliti kontrak, hak individu dan undang-undang secara demokrasi • Orientasi prinsip-prinsip moral yang universal dan beretika

  49. THE ECOLOGICAL-SYSTEMS APPROACH • Human Ecological System • U. Bronfenbrenner • View of development that sees the individual as inseparable from the social context • Urie Bronfenbrenner’s bio-ecological theory • Understanding processes and contexts of development Micro system Meso system Exosystem Macrosystem Chronosystem

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