active play experiences‚ some outside‚ they were not considered free play because I was usually being told what stroke to swim or what drill to do‚ and I obeyed the rules. Obedience is a powerful Christian and American ideology. Many pieces of my microsystem‚ home‚ school‚ and church‚ all worked together towards a common goal: to teach me to be obedient. Every class had “classroom rules” and sunday school taught the Ten Commandments. I felt these expectations of obedience even in the natural world.
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Behaviors and Strategies for the Home and School Setting When children begin to start at a day-care or preschool it is a major change for the child and their family. This is the opening to a whole new beginning for the child. Educators usually choose education as a profession because they love children‚ but being a teacher is more than that. We need to look at children in the context of their family and the family in the context of the community. Teacher would then need to have a connection
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Bronfenbrenner Believed in ecological systems theory. The theory explain how everything in a child’s environment affects how a child grows and develops. A child’s environment influences a child’s development throught these 3 systems: Microsystem Mesosystem Exosystem Kohlberg His theoretical emphasis is on how one decides to respond to a moral dilemma‚ not what one decides or what one does. He formed 6 stages in which he shortens in 3 general levels of moral development and they are the
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Barbara Rogoff studied cultural transmission in several families across different indigenous cultures. Her ethnographic research tries to show that cultural factors combine with biological factors to shape a child’s behavior‚ values‚ and gender identity. She was inspired by the work of Vygotsky‚ who claimed that human activities and skills take place in cultural contexts and that development is mediated by linguistic‚ social‚ and cultural interactions. This made sense to her because humans change
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is best explained in terms of interaction between individuals and the environments in which they live or have lived (Witt and Mossler‚ 2010‚Adult Development and Life Assessment‚ Section 2.9‚ para 1 ). Bronfenbrenner’s theory consists of microsystem‚ mesosystem‚ exosystem‚ macrosystem and chronosystem. The Ecological Theory has been criticized for not recognizing biology enough. I have to agree with the criticism. I feel that genetics has a lot to do with the way a person develops into adulthood
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Part 1: Theory and Research in Human Development Human development ¤ Studying change and constancy throughout the lifespan. Basic Issues in Lifespan ¤ Continuous or discontinuous? ¤ One course of development or many? ¤ Nature or nurture? The Lifespan Perspective: A Balanced Point of View ¤ Development as lifelong. ¤ Development as multidimensional and multidirectional. ¤ Development as plastic. ¤ Development as embedded in multiple context: ¤ age-graded influences
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Klebold’s story. The Bronfenbrenner model is a theoretical model of gene-environment interactions. This model explores the human and how it reacts with others and its environment which is broken into four sections: Microsystem‚ Mesosystem‚ Exosystem‚ and Macrosystem. First is the Microsystem‚ which is the contact that people have with their immediate surroundings (Sigelman and Rider 51). Sue Klebold speaks on the topic of how her son became more distant in the home environment‚ often staying in his room
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506 1.2 Analyse the difference between sequence of development and rate of development and why the distinction is important It is important that this is monitored closely and the distinction between sequence and rate is defined as it can help to distinguish if a child has Special‚ educational needs. If the sequence and rate of development are not followed it can help professionals to identify that a child might be presenting as having difficulties which could lead to SEN so it is important
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the temperament of infants as an example of this concept stating that a calm child will be treated differently than a child who is constantly crying (1986). Context involves the consideration of all systems from the bioecological model (microsystem‚ mesosystem‚ exosystem‚ macrosystem‚ and chronosystem) and their effects on proximal processes (Bronfenbrenner‚
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p. 172). These findings are in line with Ecological Systems theory. Where the child experiencing grief is at the center of the environment‚ the child’s Microsystem (family‚ peers‚ school) will have the strongest impact on them. While the other systems- Mesosystem‚ Exosystem‚ Macrosystem- still have some impact on the child’s life the Microsystem will serve as a buffer to these outer systems. It is important that the surviving parent has open and supportive communication with the grieving child. “Mothers
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