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Increased Competenceand more responsible and independent. The Child's Emotions and Concerns. Freud: Latencyemotional drives quieter, psychosexual needs repressed, unconscious conflicts submergedErikson: Industry vs. Inferioritychildren try to master skills valuable in own culturesocial worlds b
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1. Chapter Thirteen The School Years:
Psychosocial Development
2. Increased Competence
and more responsible and independent The Child’s Emotions and Concerns
3. Freud: Latency
emotional drives quieter, psychosexual needs repressed, unconscious conflicts submerged
Erikson: Industry vs. Inferiority
children try to master skills valuable in own culture
social worlds beyond family contribute to sense of industry or inferiority Theories of Development During Middle Childhood
4. Social cognitive theory—the perspective that highlights how school-age children advance in learning, cognition, and culture, building on maturation and experience to become more articulate, insightful, and competent Theories of Development During Middle Childhood, cont.
5. Sociocultural theory looks at cultures and subcultures
Epigenetic theory considers how inherited impulses lead to social maturity Theories of Development During Middle Childhood, cont.
6. All 5 major theories describe the child of ages 7 to 11 as competent, eager, manageable outside the home
Worldwide, cultures recognize this maturity and give the child more independence and responsibility Theories of Development During Middle Childhood, cont.
7. Middle childhood is the time when children learn whatever skills they will need as adults
Self-understanding comes at a price
lower self-esteem
greater self-criticism and self-consciousness
Self-development affected by relationships with parents and peers Understanding Self and Others
8. Social comparison—the tendency to assess one’s abilities, achievements, social status, and other attributes by measuring them against those of other people, especially one’s peers
children often feel personally at fault for their shortcomings
Cultural influences are reflected
many social groups teach children not to be “too outstanding” Understanding Self and Others, cont.
9. Peer group—aggregate of individuals of roughly the same age and social status who play, work, or learn together The Peer Group
10. Peers become increasingly important
developmentalists believe that getting along with peers is crucial during middle childhood
being rejected is a precursor for other problems
children depend on each other for companionship, advice, self-validation
peer partners must learn to negotiate, share, compromise, and defend each other and themselves
certain amount of aggression, counter-aggression, and reconciliation expected The Peer Group, cont.
11. Developmentalists are troubled if children have no free time to spend with each other
child may have to come straight home from school
child may be in after-school programs due to parents work
children prefer to choose their own activities with their own friends The Peer Group, cont.
12. Peer Group Subculture
special vocabulary, rules of behavior, dress codes
an “in” group and an “out” group Friendship
13. Friendships become more important
forum for self disclosure ? Mutual dependency
become more choosy in picking friends
best friends likely to be same in sex, age, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status
more intense, intimate, and demanding Friendship, cont.
14. Unpopular Children
neglected children
receive little attention, but not necessarily disliked by peers
aggressive-rejected—rejected by peers because of confrontational behavior
withdrawn-rejected—rejected by peers because they are timid and anxious
for rejected, situation can worsen over time Friendship, cont.
15. Bullying is universal
Bullies are not necessarily rejected, and victims are not always odd in appearance or background, although they are always rejected Bullies and Their Victims
16. Bullying—repeated, systematic effort to inflict harm
physical attack, taunting, teasing, name calling
Bullying once thought to be a normal part of children’s play with few long-term consequences Types of Bullying
17. Bully-victims—bullies who are or have been victims of bullying; also called provocative victims, they are minority of victims
can be aggressive-rejected children
Bullies and victims usually of same gender
Types of Bullying, cont.
18. Boys vs. Girls
male bullies
above average in size
female bullies
above average in assertiveness
victims tend to be less assertive and physically weaker (boys) or shyer (girls) Types of Bullying, cont.
19. Studies show that bullying is widespread and serious in all nations
Norway, Britain, Japan, Italy, U.S.
Bullying occurs in all cultures
rural areas, suburbs, inner cities; well-to-do, poor; all races and religions
more where many adults are engaged in violence
Palestine, Ethiopia, South Africa Bullying in Many Nations
20. Families and Children Nature vs. Nurture debate continues
particulars of family practice
shared environmental influences
nonshared environmental influences
21. Family Function How a family works to meet the needs of its members
provides food, clothing and shelter
encourages learning
develops self-esteem
nurtures friendships with peers
provides harmony and stability
22. Family Structure How a family is legally constructed and its members genetically constructed
nuclear family—two parents and their biological children
still most common type
one-parent family—one parent and his or her biological children
23. Structure influences function
structure alone is not a total measure
genetic connection increases if families live together Connecting Structure and Function
24. Well-to-do families can easily provide (which explains why family income strongly correlates with optimal child development)
better schools
more material things to help children feel accepted accepted
bigger houses in safer neighborhoods
calmer home environment as parents need not disagree over money Family Income
25. Well-educated wage earners raise more successful children than do large, multigenerational families on public assistance Family Income, cont.
26. Harmony at Home Warmth or conflict that characterizes family interaction
children are handicapped if parents verbally or physically abuse each other
parental alliance—cooperative relationship, in which each parent supports the other’s parenting practices
27. The Single-Parent Family
numbers have increased markedly over past two decades
single parent is likely to work hard to fill dual role of provider and caregiver
single parent tends to be younger (and less mature?) than married parents Harmony at Home, cont.
28. Harmony at Home, cont. Ethnic differences
Outcome affected byincome, conflict at home, parental age and education, family support, number of children, social isolation, community support
29. Problems of middle childhood are often exacerbated by long-standing problems
living with violent, emotionally disturbed, drug-addicted, or imprisoned parent
living in decaying, violent, high-crime community
growing up in a chronically poor household
Children develop coping mechanisms Coping with Problems
30. Resilience
dynamic process, not a stable trait
positive adaptation to stress
adversity must be significant
Determining significance of stress
how many stressors?
how does the stress affect daily life?
how does child interpret the stress? Resilience and the Assessment of Stress
31. Daily routines are crucial
If child’s daily routines include the following, stress is overwhelming
manage own daily care and school attendance
contend directly with parent’s mental state
supervise and discipline younger siblings
keep friends away from house The Impact of Stress
32. Strong bond with loving parent can see children through many difficulties
supportive family
Community influences can counteract negative effects
cultural differences in seeking support must be respected
network of friends
Child’s own attitude is crucial Social Support
33. Religious Faith and Coping Powerful source of support
School-age children develop their own theology
34. How well children cope with the problems in their lives depends on the following:
nature of stresses they experience
strengths of their various competencies
social support they receive
neighborhoods where everyone is seen as responsible for all children can improve behavior