TEST 3 STUDY GUIDE CHAPTER 8 STUDY GUIDE (Define/describe all terms) 1. Developmental psychology - know how to apply the definition 2. Assimilation 3. Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development (including stages – see chart on pg. 251). Pay special attention to object permanence and the stage it occurs in. 4. Personal fable 5. Naïve idealism 6. Kohlberg’s Theory of Moral Development (including levels – see chart on pg. 254) Know how to apply this theory to real-life situations! 7. Erikson’s
Premium Love Triangular theory of love Nervous system
l Is Development Psychology Science? Claudia P. Cisneros Georgia Northwestern Technical College PSYC 1101-Introduction to Psychology Craig Harston‚ Ph.D.‚ MBA September 14‚ 2011 To answer the question is Developmental Psychology science? We will take in consideration some definitions about Development‚ development Psychology‚ how it is studied‚ and the research methods in which this discipline is based. All this information will help us understand‚ analyze‚ and make a conclusion about
Premium Scientific method Psychology Developmental psychology
Developmental Psychology Developmental Psychology • The study of physical‚ cognitive‚ and social changes throughout the life cycle. Three Major Problems • Nature/Nurture: How do genetic inheritance (our nature) and experience (the nurture we receive) influence our development? • Continuity/Stages: Is development a gradual‚ continuous process like riding an escalator or does it proceed through a sequence of separate stages‚ like climbing rungs on a ladder? • Stability/Change:
Premium Psychology Developmental psychology Human nature
2 months 3.Fetal Stage -2 months to birth Prenatal Nutrition: Teratogens Motor Development *Cephalocaudal - Development from head to foot *Proximodistal -Development from center outward *Maturation -Unfolding of genetic blueprint *Developmental Norms –Median age for behaviors to appear Perception 1.Vision -At birth an infant can see in color -At birth child prefers human faces -By age 6 months acuity matches an adults 2.Hearing -Auditory localization‚ distinguish voices and
Premium Jean Piaget Psychology Sigmund Freud
Developmental psychology is the chapter of mental processes and learning of how people nurture and change over the course of a lifetime. “The changes started with newborns and children‚ it prolonged to include teenage years‚ adult development‚ ageing‚ and the entire life expectation.” (Bennett‚ 2010) The theories of human development research examines change through a wide-ranging variety of issues including motor skills and other psychophysiological processes; cognitive development involving areas
Premium Developmental psychology Psychology Childhood
Developmental Issues and Methods – PSYC2061 Week One – Lecture One - Aims o To introduce the major questions/themes that interest developmental psychologists o To illustrate common research designs that are used to answer questions about development o What is developmental psychology? o Developmental psychologists seek to describe (what‚ when: rapid change in skills‚ how) and explain (why: that development and mechanism has occurred) the changes that occur across the life span. o Apply
Premium Psychology Developmental psychology Child development
Understanding Psychology Psychology is everywhere‚ surrounding our daily lives. It helps us‚ humans‚ to overcome difficult challenges and obstacles we come across. I do not know my future‚ but what I plan on looking forward too is working as an accountant. As I get up to becoming an accountant‚ using psychological theories will help me‚ but having a successful career does not necessarily mean a successful life. In my opinion‚ a successful life consists of the job you are happy to work for and the
Premium Developmental psychology Meaning of life Self-esteem
Developmental Psychology 3 major issues: 1. Nature v Nurture (genes v environment) 2. Continuity v Stages (gradual‚ continuous process v sequence of separate stages) 3. Stability v Change ( do personality trais persist throughout life v or change as we age Early development Conception (sperm penetrates the egg) Girls are born with all the immature eggs Only 1 in 5‚000 will mature and be released Boys start producing sperm cells at puberty Prenatal development Zygotes (fertilized
Premium Jean Piaget Developmental psychology Attachment theory
BRONFENBRENNER’S ECOLOGICAL THEYORY OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Urie Bronfenbrenner was a psychologist who was born in 1917‚ and he was regarded as one of the world’s leading scholars in the field of developmental psychology. His ecological systems theory holds that development reflects the influence of several environmental systems‚ and it identifies five environmental systems with which an individual interacts. He analyzed four types of systems that aid in human development‚ they include the microsystem
Free Developmental psychology Ecological Systems Theory Urie Bronfenbrenner
Developmental Psychology Reading Notes Pages 260-230 -children go from knowing no lang in the first year to producing and comprehending complex constructions in their 3rd year -language is a that emerges is a natural language that refers to any lang spoken on a daily basis by a community -acquiring lang is so common it isn’t thought of as a crazy achievement -change in lang and change in how others speak to them -do certain langs guide certain thoughts? -Generativity= producing
Premium Word Learning Thought