Slide 1:1 Welcome to
Psychology 112
Human Growth and
Development
Instructor: Evette Samaan
Book: Craig, G. J. & Baucum, D. (2001). Human Development, 9th Edition.
E-mail: Giseladora@AOL.com
History of Psychology :2 History of Psychology Psychology is a fairly new science.
Until the 19th century it was not recognized as a separate field of study.
The birth of psychology as a formal science can be traced back to 1879.
It was founded by Wilhelm Wundt in Leipzig, Germany.
The use of introspection
Defining Psychology :3 Defining Psychology Psychology is the scientific study of behavior and mental processes and how they are affected by an organism’s physical state, mental state, and external environment.
What Mom Knows :4 What Mom Knows 4 years of age – Mommy can do any thing!
8 years of age – My mom knows a lot!
12 years of age – My mother doesn’t really know quite everything!
14 years of age – Naturally, Mother doesn’t know that either!
16 years of age – Mother? She’s hopelessly old-fashioned!
What Mom Knows :5 What Mom Knows 18 years of age – That old woman? She’s way out of date!
25 years of age – Well, she might know a little bit about it!
35 years of age – Before we decide, let’s get Mom’s opinion!
45 years of age – Wonder what Mom would have thought about it!
65 years of age – Wish I could talk it over with Mom!
Defining Lifespan Psychology :6 Defining Lifespan Psychology Lifespan psychology is the field of study that examines patterns of growth, change, and stability in behavior that occur throughout the entire life span.
Age Groups in the Lifespan :7 Age Groups in the Lifespan Prenatal
Infancy (0-2)
Early Childhood (3-6 years)
Middle Childhood (6-11) Adolescence (12-19)
Early Adulthood (20-30’s)
Middle Adulthood (35-45)
Late Adulthood (60s-death)
What Constitutes a Good Theory :8 What Constitutes a Good Theory Provides a framework for unmanageable collections of information and then organizes around it, offering explanations
Provides testable predictions:
If we can predict with accuracy, we become more confident that we understand ourselves
Predictions give rise to further research that can refine or extend the theory.
Issues Relevant to Theories of Human Development :9 Issues Relevant to Theories of Human Development 1- Active Versus Passive Development
2- Stages Verses Continuity in Development
1- Active Versus Passive Development :10 1- Active Versus Passive Development 1- Organismic Theorists
Emphasize active development. Argue that we are active participants in our own development
2- Mechanistic Theorists
Emphasize passive development. We are driven primarily by our internal drives and motivations in conjunction with external pressures produced by the environment.
What Is the Best Answer? :11 What Is the Best Answer? Our active human minds interact with the forces of society and nature, and that interaction determines what we do and who we become.
2- Stages Versus Continuity in Development :12 2- Stages Versus Continuity in Development 1-Stages
Development occurs “stepwise” in stages that are qualitatively different, so we achieve new ways of understanding our world quite abruptly.
2- Continuity
Some changes are gradual and cumulative.
Lifespan PsychologyTheoretical Perspectives :13 Lifespan PsychologyTheoretical Perspectives 1- Psychodynamic Theories
2- Behavioral Perspective
3- Cognitive Perspective
4- Biological Approaches
5- Systems Approaches
6- Humanistic Approach
1-The Psychodynamic Theories(You Are What You Were) :14 1-The Psychodynamic Theories(You Are What You Were) Freud
Psychoanalysis
a- The Structure of Personality
b- Psychosexual Stages
c- Defense Mechanisms
Freud, Psychoanalysis :15 Freud, Psychoanalysis
Structure of Personality :16 Structure of Personality Id:
Pleasure principle
Life & death instincts
Immediate gratification
Ego
Reality Principle
Superego
Ego Ideal: moral and social standards
Conscience: the inner voice
Structure of Personality :17 Structure of Personality
Psychosexual Stages :18 Psychosexual Stages 1- Oral Stage (0-2)
2- Anal Stage (2-3)
3- The Phallic Stage (3-6)
4- The Latency Stage (6-12)
5- The Genital Stage (12-18)
Examine the life of a rapist in light of Freud’s Psychosexual stages and structure of personality. :19 Examine the life of a rapist in light of Freud’s Psychosexual stages and structure of personality. What happened during each stage?
Was he fixated at any stage?
What principle does he operate by?
What structure of personality is dominant?
What is his famous sentence?
Describe him in one word.
Is there a balance between the function of the id and the superego? Why?
Defense Mechanisms :20 Defense Mechanisms 1- Repression
2- Projection
3- Displacement
4- Regression
5- Denial
6- Sublimation
7- Reaction Formation
Slide 21:21 Describe the condition this person is in, in terms of:
Defense mechanisms
The condition he/she is in
Whether he/she is liberated
Whether he/she has a clear understanding of the concept of salvation and the new birth in Christ
I Like It Here :22 I Like It Here They told me on the other side
Of the raging River of Change,
There is nowhere to hide.
But it sounds a bit strange,
Here my feelings are inside,
My heart has a guarded gate, what’s in can’t go outside,
And no one can investigate.
Slide 23:23 They told me on the other side
Everything will seem clear, turning on the light inside
Will make the dark disappear.
But it is a long , long ride,
No, thank you my dear,
I need a place to hide.
So, since I like it here,
It’s here where I’ll reside.
Slide 24:24 Change, I truly don’t know,
Why would I go to neverland
Just that I may grow?
Here I know where I stand,
I know how things will go.
Why must I leave my land
Drop my act for a new show?
Change is not drawing near,
’Cause I certainly like it here.
Erik Erikson (1909-1994)Psychosocial Stages :25 Erik Erikson (1909-1994)Psychosocial Stages 1- Trust vs. Mistrust (birth to 1 ½)
2- Autonomy vs. Shame & Doubt (1 ½ -3)
3- Initiative vs. Guilt (3-6)
4- Competence vs. Inferiority (6-12)
5- Identity vs. role confusion (12-18)
6- Intimacy vs. Isolation (young adulthood)
7- Generativity vs. Stagnation (middle adulthood)
8- Ego Integrity vs. Despair (older adulthood)
Freud Erikson :26 Freud Erikson Psychosexual stages
5 stages of development
Sexual motivation
If issues aren’t resolved, fixation occurs
End: sexually mature adult (adolescence) Psychosocial stages
8 developmental stages
Psychological and social motivation
At each stage there is a crisis that must be resolved
Development is an ongoing process
Slide 27:27 What happened to these people? In which stage did the crisis occur?
Someone who is insecure
Someone with low self-esteem
Someone with an inferiority complex
Someone who’s shy
Someone who is insecure about his sexual orientation
Someone who has difficulty establishing healthy relationships
Someone with a midlife crisis
Someone who’s terrified of death
2- Behaviorism and Learning Theories :28 2- Behaviorism and Learning Theories 1- Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov
2- Operant Conditioning B.F. Skinner
3- Law of Effect Thorndike
4- Social-Learning Theory A. Bandura
J. Rotter
Tolman
BehaviorismClassical Conditioning :29 BehaviorismClassical Conditioning Pavlov
The environmental impact on behavior
Classical Conditioning
Stimulus/Response
Slide 30:30
Classical Conditioning :31 Classical Conditioning
Classical Conditioning in Real Life :32 Classical Conditioning in Real Life Learning to like
Learning to fear
Accounting for Taste
Reacting to Medical Treatment
Operant Conditioning :33 Operant Conditioning The behavior is more likely or less likely to occur based on its consequences.
B. F. Skinner modified Pavlov’s concept.
Skinner used reinforcement and punishment to enhance learning.
Operant ConditioningSkinner :34 Operant ConditioningSkinner
Behavioral Techniques :35 Behavioral Techniques Learning
Conditioning
Association between
Environmental Stimuli + Response
Classical Conditioning Operant Conditioning
Association Reinforcement/
Stimulus-Response Punishment
BehaviorismThorndike’s Law of Effect :36 BehaviorismThorndike’s Law of Effect Puzzle boxes and cats
Law of Effect
A principle of learning theory stating that a behavior’s consequences determine the probability of its being repeated
The Social-Learning School(You Are What You Think & Observe) :37 The Social-Learning School(You Are What You Think & Observe) 1- Locus of Control
Julian Rotter
2- Self-efficacy
Albert Bandura
3- Latent Learning
Edward Tolman
Julian RotterLocus of Control :38 Julian RotterLocus of Control Internal (Internals)
Tend to believe they are responsible for what happens to them External (Externals)
Tend to believe that they are victims of luck, fate, or others
Choose Your Locus of Control :39 Choose Your Locus of Control 1- a. Many of the unhappy situations are partly due to bad luck.
b. People’s misfortunes result from mistakes they make.
2- a. Becoming a success is a matter of hard work; luck has little or nothing to do with it.
b. Getting a job depends mainly on being in the right place at the right time.
Reciprocal Determinism in Locus of Control :40 Reciprocal Determinism in Locus of Control Expectations
Affect
What happens (environment & behavior) What happens
Affect
Expectations
Albert BanduraSelf-efficacy Is Derived from: :41 Albert BanduraSelf-efficacy Is Derived from: Experiences in mastering new skills
Vicarious experiences provided by successful people
Encouragement and persuasion
Physiological and emotional state
Self-efficacy :42 Self-efficacy
Reciprocal Determinism in Self-efficacy :43 Reciprocal Determinism in Self-efficacy Belief in your abilities
Affects
What happens to you (Behavior & environment) What happens to you
Affects
Your belief in your abilities
Social-Cognitive School :44 Social-Cognitive School
Slide 45:45 Which comes first, the biology or the belief?
Biology Belief :46 Biology Belief Genesists
You will be disposed to seek out situations that let you express your biologically influenced trait.
You are an active person then you play sports Social Cognitive Theory
You will seek situations in which you believe you can behave a certain way.
You believe you’re good in sports then you play sports
3- The Cognitive Perspective :47 3- The Cognitive Perspective Piaget Cognitive Development
Vygotski Social-Cognitive
Information Processing Theory
PiagetConstructivism :48 PiagetConstructivism Children think and learn in ways different from adults.
They process information in quantity and quality
All that we know of reality is based on our mental constructions or ideas
We don’t passively discover ready-made knowledge, we actively construct knowledge
Piaget :49 Piaget 1- Knowledge = motor behavior
2- Universal stages in a fixed order
3- Qualitative and quantitative acquisition of knowledge
4- Mental Structures or schemes
5- Two Principles:
Assimilation
Accommodation
PiagetMental functioning :50 PiagetMental functioning Assimilation
What you do when you fit new information into your present system of knowledge or mental schemas (categories of things and people)
Accommodation
Changing and modifying your new schemas
Piaget’s Cognitive Stages of Development :51 Piaget’s Cognitive Stages of Development 1- Sensorimotor Stage
2- Preoperational Stage
3- Concrete Operations
4- Formal Operations
VygotskiSocial-Cognitive Theory :52 VygotskiSocial-Cognitive Theory We understand the world only by learning the shared meanings of others around us.
Guided participation enables us to understand more and more about the world.
2 Levels of Cognitive Development
a. The child’s actual developmental level
b. The child level of potential development
VygotskiZone of Proximal Development :53 VygotskiZone of Proximal Development The distance between what a child can do alone and what a child can do with the help of others
Children develop through participation in activities slightly beyond their competence with the help of adults or older children
Information-Processing Theory :54 Information-Processing Theory A theory of human development that uses the computer as an analogy for the way the human mind receives, analyzes, and stores information
Information-Processing Theory :55 Information-Processing Theory Encoding Recorded in memory
(Keyboard)
Storage Saved in memory
(on hard drive)
Retrieved Brought into awareness
(on screen)
4- The Biological Perspective(You Are What You’re Born) :56 4- The Biological Perspective(You Are What You’re Born) 1- Ethology
2- Evolutionary Psychology
3- Developmental Neuroscience
Ethological TheoriesKonrad Lorenz :57 Ethological TheoriesKonrad Lorenz Behavior is influenced by biology.
Imprinting is the rapid, innate learning within a limited period of time that involves attachment to the first moving object.
Critical period is a very early period in development in which certain behaviors optimally occur.
Slide 58:58
Evolutionary PsychologyE. O. Wilson :59 Evolutionary PsychologyE. O. Wilson Inclusive Fitness
Survival of the fittest comes in two ways
1- Direct Fitness
The survival of the individual long enough to pass adaptive characteristics to the next generation
2- Indirect Fitness
Biological relatedness, parents and children, etc.
Evolutionary Psychology :60 Evolutionary Psychology Dates back to Darwin and The Origin of Species and was extensive in the writings of the ethologists
Evolution: The process through which species change across generations
Pinker noted that it is a blend of cognitive psychology and evolutionary biology with emphasis on the human mind as an organ that has evolved like any other.
Developmental Neuroscience :61 Developmental Neuroscience The study of the development of brain structures and the relations between brain structures and functions and behavior
5- Systems Approaches :62 5- Systems Approaches How systems evolve and change
The family is a complex interacting system in which each member influences each member with regard to functioning and development.
Contextualism
Ecological Systems Theories
Ecological Approach :63 Ecological Approach 4 levels of environment that simultaneously influence individuals
1- Microsystem
2- Mesosystem
3- Exsosystem
4- Macrosystem
Contextualism :64 Contextualism The view that environmental, social, psychological, and historical factors interact to determine development
6- The Humanist & Existentialist Theories :65 6- The Humanist & Existentialist Theories Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)
Carl Rogers (1902-1987)
Rollo May (1909-1994)
Abraham Maslow :66 Abraham Maslow Hierarchy of Needs
1- Safety & Physiological Needs
2- Emotional & Psychological Needs
3- Self-acctulization
Slide 67:67
Carl Rogers :68 Carl Rogers Congruence
Relationship between self and organism
Unconditional Positive Regard
Self-fulfillment
CongruenceSelf = Organism :69 CongruenceSelf = Organism Self
Your conscious view of yourself
The way you want to be based on peer, parental, and societal pressures Organism
Sum of all of your experiences
Who we really are
Others and the environment give us feedback on who we really are
ExistentialismRollo May :70 ExistentialismRollo May Difficult and Tragic Aspects of the Human Condition
Freedom of Choice
Absence of any obvious meaning or sense to life
Which Approach is Right? :71 Consider the behavior of an alcoholic person.
What led to this lifestyle?
What are the factors to be considered?
Biological cultural
Social/family cognitive
Emotions personality Which Approach is Right?
SongThe Greatest Love of All :72 SongThe Greatest Love of All I believe the children are our future;
Teach them well and let them lead the way.
Show them all the beauty they possess inside.
Give them a sense of pride
to make it easier;
Let the children’s laughter
remind us how we used to be.
Slide 73:73 Everybody is looking for a hero;
People need someone to look up to.
I never found anyone who fulfilled my needs;
A lonely place to be
And so I learned to depend on me.
I decided long ago
Never to walk in anyone’s shadow.
is happening to me.
Slide 74:74 If I fail, if I succeed,
At least I lived as I believe.
No matter what they take from me,
They can’t take away my dignity;
Because the greatest love of all
Is happening to me
I found the greatest love of all
inside of me.
The greatest love of all
is easy to achieve.
Learning to love yourself
Is the greatest love of all.
What theory does the song represent? :75 What theory does the song represent? Is she self-actualized?
Did she have unconditional positive regard?
Where her psychological needs met?
What did she do with her free will?
What is her locus of control?
Describe her self-efficacy now.
Is she on her way to self-actualization, or she is stuck somewhere in the hierarchy of needs?
Who or Which Theory would most likely State the Following Statements :76 Who or Which Theory would most likely State the Following Statements Choose from the following:
Freud, Wilhelm Wundt, Psychodynamic psychologist, Jean Piaget, Carl Rogers, Abraham Maslow, Bandura, Rotter, Lorenz, existentialism, humanism, ecological, Erikson, Skinner, Pavlov, social-learning, Thorndike
Slide 77:77 1- My theory emphasizes the unconscious dynamics within the individual.
2- I reject that behavior is determined by unconscious dynamics or the environment.
3- I say that people have freedom of choice, but this freedom entails anxiety.
4- I believe that people can reach their full potential when treated with unconditional positive regard.
5- I would like to call my psychology the “third force.”
6- My psychology compares the human brain to a computer.
7- I believe that fully functioning people show congruence or harmony between self and organism.
8- According to me, sexuality is very important in development.
9- I believe that people develop over the life span in 8 stages
Slide 78:78 10-I talk about the hierarchy of needs.
11-I talk about imprinting.
12-People learn by observation and insight.
13-I talk about the locus of control.
14-I talk about the reciprocal determinism in self-efficacy.
15-I believe that the structure of personality consists of the id, ego, and superego.
16-There are 4 levels of the environment: microsystem, mesosystem, exosystem, and macrosystem.
17-The study of the relations between brain structures and functions and behavior.
18-I established the first psychological lab.
Slide 79:79 19-I talk about the law of effect.
20-I coined the expression “classical conditioning.”
21-I coined the expression “operant conditioning.”
22-Learning occurs in the environment in which stimuli elicit responses.
23-I experimented with dogs to measure the amount of saliva they produced when listening to the sound of a bell.
24-I talk about 4 stages of cognitive development.
25-Children acquire knowledge in a quantitative as well as qualitative manner.