Prepared by Debbie Laffranchini, Instructor Child Growth and Development Authors: Papalia, Olds and Feldman   Scientific study  Looks at change and stability  Developmental scientists  Quantitative change  Qualitative change  Changes in number or amount  Height  Weight  Size of vocabulary  Frequency of communication  Change in kind  Change in structure  Change in organization  Example: going from not talking to talking  John Locke: English philosopher, forerunner of , 1600’s  Saw infant as “blank slate”  Jean-Jacques Rousseau: French philosopher, 1700’s  Saw infant as “innately good”  Charles Darwin, English naturalist, 1800’s  Originated of  Species develop through , survival of the fittest, adaptation to the environment  G. Stanley Hall, late 1800’s  Father of child study, first to write about adolescence

 Alfred Binet, French , late 1800’s  First test  , American philosopher, 1900’s  First to study children in their social environment  James Mark Baldwin, American psychologist, 1900’s  Established journals and university departments, interaction of nature and nurture  Maria Montessori, Italian physician, 1900’s  Early childhood education  Based on self-chosen activities Maria Montessori  In carefully prepared environment  Tasks go simple to complex  John B. Watson, American psychologist, 1900’s  Father of behaviorism  are trainable  Arnold Gesell, American psychologist, 1900’s  Normative changes  Interdependence of domains of development

John B. Watson  Shifts in knowledge reflect progress in understanding  Reflect changing cultural context  Reflect changing technology  New, sensitive instruments to measure behaviors such as eye movements  New tests, brain imaging, MRI  Basic research: undertaken in the spirit of intellectual inquiry  Applied research: to address a practical problem  Less meaningful (?) 1. Domains of Development  Physical development  Sensory capacities, motor development, health  Cognitive development  Mental abilities, learning, memory, , thinking, moral reasoning, creativity  Psychosocial development  Personality, emotions, social relationships  All interrelated, all affect each other 2. Periods of development  Social construction: shared idea accepted by society  Adolescence  Prenatal  Infancy and toddlerhood to age 3  Early childhood: 3 – 6 years  Middle childhood: 6 – 12 years  Adolescence: 11/12 – 20  Ages are approximate and arbitrary

, Environment, Maturation  Contexts of Development  Family  Nuclear  Step parenting  Single  Childless  Unmarried  Gay and lesbian  Extended

and Race/Ethnicity  Culture: way of life, customs, traditions, laws, knowledge, beliefs, values, language, products, behaviors, attitudes  Ethnicity: united by a distinctive culture, ancestry, religion, language, and/or national origin, shared identity, shared attitudes, beliefs, values  Historical Context  Normative and Nonnormative Influences  Normative age-graded: puberty, education  Normative history-graded: Depression, Viet Nam  Cohort: born at the same time  Nonnormative: major impact on individuals  Timing of Influences: Critical or Sensitive Periods  Imprinting: automatic and irreversible  Critical period: has specific impact on development, must occur  Plasticity  Sensitive periods, especially responsive to certain experiences

 Studying the Life Course: Growing Up in Hard Times  What major cultural event in your lifetime shaped the lives of families and children?

 Is there a critical period for language acquisition?  Victor, the Wild Boy of Aveyron, 1800  Found around 12 years of age, possibly abandoned  Itard studied him for 5 years, sensory awareness, socialization, emotional training, moral and social behavior, language, thought  Never learned to speak  Remained focused on wants and needs  Genie, 1970  Abusive father, malnourished , no bowel control, two words: her name and sorry  National Institute of Mental Health researchers  Never learned normal language  Abusive foster homes, regressed into total silence

“Children are beings to whom respect is due, superior to us by reason of their innocence and of the greater possibilities of their future.” Maria Montessori