THE STUDY OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT January 9, 2023 Overview I. II. III. IV. Developmental Science A Historical Perspective The Central Issues of Developmental Science Ways of Gathering Data I. Developmental Science • an interdisciplinary field of study that focuses on the changes that children undergo from conception onward. • Five periods: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. The Prenatal Period (conception to birth) Infancy (birth - age 2) Early Childhood (ages 2 - 6) Middle Childhood (ages 6 - 12) Adolescence (ages 12 - 18) Domains of Development 1. 2. 3. 4. Social Emotional Cognitive (intellectual) Physical Developmental Science • Goals: 1. To understand the basic biological and cultural processes that account for the complexities of development. 2. To devise ways of safeguarding / improving children’s health and well-being. Who Benefits from Developmental Psychology? • 1. Parents • 2. Teachers & Educators • 3. Social Policy Makers II. Historical Perspectives of Childhood Development A Historical Perspective Childhood in Premodern Times • children had few rights • viewed as family possessions whom parents could exploit as saw fit • Medieval law: children culpable for criminal offences A Historical Perspective Early Philosophical Perspectives: • Issue: are children inherently good or bad? • Hobbes (1651): original sin – Children inherently selfish; must be restrained by society • Rousseau (1752): innate purity – Children born with intuitive sense of right / wrong; often corrupted by society A Historical Perspective • Issue: Nature vs. nurture • John Locke (1690): tabula rasa • Children have no inborn tendencies; how they turn out depends on experiences • Parents can mould child in any way they wish A Historical Perspective • Charles Darwin: understood development of human species by studying child development • Baby biography • Problem: often based on single case; highly subjective A Historical Perspective • G. Stanley Hall – a founder of dev. psychology • identified norms, the average ages at which milestones happen • Identified adolescence as unique phase Theoretical Perspectives • I’m not going to cover theories of development here, as the textbook does a sufficient job of this in Module 1.2, with a summary table on page 18; make sure that you are familiar with these theories, and the major figures associated with them • We will be looking at several of these theories in greater depth in upcoming chapters III. RECURRING THEMES OF DEVELOPMENT SCIENCE 1. Sources of Development • Nature: – Refers to the individual’s inherited biological predispositions • Nurture: – Refers to the influences on the individual of the social and cultural environment and of the individual’s experience. 2. Plasticity – To what degree, and under what conditions, is development open to change and intervention? 2. Plasticity • Critical Periods: – A period during which specific biological or environmental events are required for normal development to occur. • E.g., Imprinting 3. Continuity/Discontinuity • Continuous Development: – Involves gradual accumulation of small changes • • Quantitative Changes Discontinuity: – Involves a series of abrupt, radical transformations • Qualitative Changes 3. Continuity/Discontinuity Ex. of Discontinuity in Thinking • 4-5 year-olds have many improbable beliefs (e.g., a person on TV could jump out into living room) • 6-7 year-olds certain this couldn’t happen 4. Active vs. Passive • To what extent do children’s actions shape their own development? • How responsible are parents for their children’s actions? 5. Individual Differences – What combination of nature and nurture makes individuals different from one another? – Siblings often have very different personalities! Case Study: Genie • Extreme social isolation • Locked in bedroom for first 13 years of life • Very limited verbal ability • Watch video at this link: • https://www.youtube.com/wa tch?v=VjZolHCrC8E • Fundamental issue: What are the implications for child development? Case Study: Genie • Conclusion: humans have a critical period for language development • Won’t develop properly without adequate stimulation from child’s environment IV. WAYS OF GATHERING DATA Ways of Gathering Data • A. Systematic Observation • Involves watching people and carefully recording what they do or say • i. naturalistic observation – takes place in natural environment (e.g., at school, on a playground) – E.g., Haskett & Kistner (1991) – Social behaviours of abused vs. non-abused preschool children during playtime Ways of Gathering Data • A. Systematic Observation • Involves watching people and carefully recording what they do or say • ii. structured observation – researcher creates setting designed to elicit behaviour of interest – E.g., Mischel’s “marshmallow experiment” Ways of Gathering Data • B. Sampling Behaviour with Tasks • Used when a behaviour is not directly observable • E.g., Williams et al. (1975), gender stereotypes in children Ways of Gathering Data • C. Self-Reports • Questionnaires or interviews • E.g., reasoning about moral dilemmas • Convenient, but may not always be accurate Studying Age-Related Changes • In cross-sectional designs, groups of subjects are selected at each of a series of ages at one point in time • • • • E.g., Evans et al. (2011) Development of lying in children 3 groups (aged 3, 4, 5) Lies of 5-yr-olds were more clever than those of 3-yr-olds Studying Age-Related Changes • In cross-sectional designs, groups of subjects are selected at each of a series of ages at one point in time • Advantages: – – • Quick and easy Allows for immediate comparisons Disadvantages: – – Fails to gather information on individual patterns of development Confounds age with cohort Studying Age-Related Changes • Longitudinal designs follow the individual(s) over a period of time. same • E.g., Brendgen et al., 2001 • Tracked children’s popularity with classmates over 5 years (age 7 to 12) • Most children were stable; idiosyncratic patterns of change some showed Studying Age-Related Changes • Longitudinal designs follow the individual(s) over a period of time. same • Advantages: – Establishes patterns of individual growth and change • Disadvantages: – Costly, time-consuming – attrition Studying Age-Related Changes • A sequential design begins with at least two age groups and follows each over a number of years 1.age-group comparisons 2.comparisons of each group to itself at an earlier testing point Studying Age-Related Changes • Multiple approaches to studying developmental changes • Each method comes with its own strengths and drawbacks