Infancy & Childhood. Nature vs. Nurture Heredity: characteristics obtained directly from the genes...
Transcript of Infancy & Childhood. Nature vs. Nurture Heredity: characteristics obtained directly from the genes...
Nature vs. Nurture
• Heredity: characteristics obtained directly from the genes
• Environment: a person’s surroundings, which influence their characteristics and development
• Nature/ Nurture Controversy: contrasting views of how we gain certain characteristics
Experiment: Infant Sucking Patterns
• Infants given earphones• Specially designed nipples registered to
earphones• If sucked in a certain pattern, got to hear
own mother’s voice, otherwise, another mother
• The infants varied their sucking in order to hear their own mother’s voice
• These infants were less than 72 hrs. old!
Genes
• The basic unit of heredity.
• They contain directions for many characteristics: eye color, body type, height, etc.
Chromosomes & Zygote
• Structures containing genes
• All human cells have 46 except the reproductive cells which have 23
• When the female egg with 23 chromosomes and male sperm with 23 chromosomes unite in conception, the fertilized egg (ZYGOTE) has the 46 necessary for proper development
Nurture must work with Nature
• One may inherit the potential to be a great swimmer, but only with environmental training will he or she actually perfect this skill.
Twins
• Monozygotic twins: developed from one egg, identical• Dizygotic twins: developed from different eggs and
different sperm– no more similar than other siblings
Twin Studies
• Experiments: Monozygotic twins meet for first time in late 40’s. One raised as a German Nazi, the other as a Jew in the Caribbean. Have same mustache, glasses, like same foods, read magazines back to front, store rubber bands on wrists, like to scare people with loud sneeze, etc.
How important is Genetics?
• Most researchers believe that approximately 50% of our personality traits and intelligence are a result of genetic factors.
Developmental Patterns
• Development within a species is orderly and specific.
• Development takes longer in species that ultimately have a more complex maturity.
• Humans have the longest developmental process of all creatures because they reach a higher level of intelligence and skills.
Maturational Process
• Maturation: the automatic, orderly, sequential process of physical and mental development (how long each takes will differ between individuals but happen in the same sequence)
• Example: Walking will occur regardless of teaching or environment
The Myth of Educational Toys
• Maturation occurs based on the development and growth of nerve cells
• Stimulation is necessary to proceed at your own internal pace, but without it your development may slow.
• However, you cannot speed it up.
Growth Cycles
Growth cycles are orderly patterns of development.
There are different aspects of human development.
At age 8; brain is about 90% developed, body about 45%, and reproductive system about 10%.
Critical Periods
• A specific period of development that is the only time when a particular skill can begin to develop or an association occur.
• Examples: smiling occurs in the first 2 months and learning a foreign language by age 12.
Imprinting
• A biological process in which the young of certain species follow and become attached to their mothers. It occurs during a critical period.
• Ducks and other species accept a mother at a specific time in development. If no “real” mother, they will accept alternatives, as long as they move.
Developmental Theorists
• Piaget– Sequence of Cognitive Development
• Erikson– Sequence of Emotional Development
• Kohlberg– Sequence of Moral Development
Sensorimotor 0-2
• Birth: Raw Sensation--Lights, Sounds, Tastes, Smells
• 3 Months: Movement and Reaching
• 5-8 Months: No object permanence yet
• 9-12 Months: Object permanence appears, and separation anxiety
• 2 years: Move from world of sensation and movement to world of thought
Preoperational (2-7)
• 2 years: Object Permanence well established, no reversibility or conservation skills, cannot view world from other’s perspectives
• 3-7 years: Growing awareness of reversibility and conservation
Concrete Operations (7-11)
• 7 years: reversibility well established
• 8 years: Some conservation skills well established
• 9-11 years: Able to view world more and more from another’s point of view
Erikson
Trust vs. Mistrust (0-1) Identity vs. Role Confusion (12-18)
Autonomy vs. Shame (1-3) Intimacy vs. Isolation (19-40)
Initiative vs. Guilt (4-6) Generativity vs. Stagnation (41-69)
Industry vs. Inferiority (7-11) Integrity vs. Despair (70+)
Identity vs. Role Confusion (12-18)
• Who do your parents want you to be?• Who do your friends want you to be?• Who does you boy/ girlfriend want you to be?• Who do your coaches, teachers, mentors want
you to be?• Who do your teammates want you to be?• Who does your brother/ sister/ aunt/ uncle/
grandparents want you to be?• Can you please them? Do you want to?
Conventional Level (7-11)
“If I cheat, no one gets hurt and I get an A.”Or
“If I cheat, I may get caught and get in trouble.”