-those who are deprived of touch have trouble forming attachment when they are older
Types of Attachment
- Secure: where your parents can go off to work but you feel comfortable being alone
- Avoidant: when your parents come home and you feel upset that they left you
- Anxious/Ambivalent: excited to see parent come back but ignore them later (or vice versa)
Parenting Styles
- Authoritarian Parents: parents in charge
- Permissive Parents: laissez-faire; kids in charge
- Authoritative Parents: parents and kids compromise
Erik Erikson
-neo-Freudian
-worked with Anna Freud
-thought our personality was influenced by our experiences with others
Stages of Psychosocial Development
each stage centers on a social conflict
- Trust vs. Mistrust: 0-2 yrs. old
- babies want to know if they can trust their caregivers
- Autonomy vs. Shame & Doubt
- toddlers begin to control their bodies (ie: toilet training)
- control temper tantrums
- big word is "NO"
- can they learn control or will they doubt themselves?
- Initiative vs. Guilt: 3-6 yrs. old
- From "NO" to "WHY?"
- inquisitive about the world and ask lots of questions
- Is their curiosity encouraged or scolded?
- Industry vs. Inferiority
- school begins
- Am I successful or am I worthless?
- Do we feel good or bad about our accomplishments?
- We are, for the first time, evaluated by a formal system and our peers
- can lead us to feel bad about ourselves for the rest of our lives (inferiority complex)
- Identity vs. Role Confusion: teenage years
- Who am I?
- try out different roles
- Intimacy vs. Isolation: young adulthood
- balance work and relationships
- sort out priorities
- Generativity vs. Stagnaion: Middle Ages
- Is everything going as planned?
- Am I happy with what I've done?
- Mid-life crisis sometimes occurs at this time
- Integrity vs. Despair: senior citizens
- look back on life
- Was my life meaningful?
-Jean Piaget
-kids learn differently than adults
-it was thought that kids were just stupid versions of adults
-Schemas: ways we interpret the world around us; children view the world through schemas
-Assimilation: incorporating new experiences into existing schemas
-Accomodation: changing an existing schema to adopt to new information
Stages of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor Stage (0-2 yrs. old)
- experience the world through our senses
- do not have object permanence
- Preoperational Stage (2-7 yrs. old)
- 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: the idea that a quantity remains the same despite changes in appearance and is part of logical thinking
- rejecting a sippy cup over the bottle because they think it doesn't have the same content
- Concrete Operational Stage (7-11 yrs. old)
- can demonstrate concept of conservation
- learn to think logically
- Formal Operational Stage (11+ yrs. old)
- abstract reasoning
- manipulate objects in our mind without seeing them
- hypothesis testing
- trial and error
- metacognition
- not every adult gets to this stage
-crystallized intelligence: accumulated knowledge, increaeses with age
-Fluid Intelligence: ability to solve problems quickly and think abstractly, peaks in the 20s and then decreases over time
Moral Development
-Lawrence Kohlberg
- Pre-conventional Morality: based on rewards and punishments
- Conventional Morality: look at morality based on how others see you (if your peers or society thinks it's wrong, then so do you)
- Post-conventional Morality: based on self-defined ethical principles; you behave based on your own set of ethics
Your blog was rally helpful when trying to understand the four stages of development. I wasn't too sure I understand all of them!
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