Name: Shem Blake Course: Child-Adolescent Development Lecturer: Mrs. Kennedy Date: February 19‚ 2013 Discuss how poverty affects the psychosocial‚ cognitive‚ moral and physical development of the adolescent The term poverty is usually used to simply refer to a lack of money‚ but living in a state of financial instability is both physically and emotionally damaging. While an adolescent who grows up in a middle class suburb is taught that he or she can go to college‚ marry‚ have a rewarding
Premium Psychology Poverty Education
1. MEM 505: CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DEVELOPMENT 1 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT OF CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS Theories of Cognitive Development Cognitive Development Cognitive development is gradual‚ systematic changes by which mental process become more complex and refined. Establishment of new schemes is essential in cognitive development. Piaget’s Main Tenet: The Child Actively Seeks Knowledge Jean Piaget viewed children as constructivists‚ meaning they are active seekers who respond to the environment according
Premium Developmental psychology Jean Piaget Psychology
Child and Adolescents Development Theories The first psychologist to make a systematic study of cognitive development was Jean Piaget in the 1920’s. “Piaget believed that human beings organize new information in two ways: through assimilation and through accommodation” (Rathus 241). He showed that children think in dramatically different ways than adults. There are three basic components to Piaget’s Cognitive Theory are schemas‚ the processes of adaption‚ and four stages of development. Piaget
Premium Jean Piaget Theory of cognitive development Kohlberg's stages of moral development
Child and young person development Explain the difference between sequence and rate of development? Sequential development is the sequence of development. This means that you must finish with one area of development before you move onto the next one. The cephalocaudle principle believes that development moves from the head downwards. This is to do with small children and understands that infants get full control of their heads‚ then arms then finally feet ‚ from the top down. This is also
Premium Sequence Observation Childhood
When writing a research paper‚ there are two main patterns that we can choose. The first style‚ MLA (Modern Language Association)‚ is widely used in conducting papers and citing sources within the humanities range and it should be double-spaced. When paraphrasing‚ quoting or summarizing‚ MLA requires citation of the author’s last name‚ the source’s title‚ and the page number. In addition to that‚ the paper must include one’s own name‚ the instructor’s name‚ and course title with the date all inserted
Premium Style guide Parenthetical referencing Citation
Michaela Palmer Understand children and young person development CYP 3.1 Cognitive Development Birth to 3 months Most new-born babies can focus on and will follow a moving object with their eyes. Infants are exploring their world through sucking‚ grasping‚ gazing‚ etc. At 3 months old a baby can recognise faces‚ copy facial expressions and respond to sounds. 6 to 9 months. At 6 months a baby can imitate sounds. They realize that they can pick up an object when it is dropped. They can
Premium Infant Psychology
IntroductionVictoria was born on May 9‚ 2009 at 6:32pm. She is three-fourths Italian and one-fourth Puerto Rican. She is an only child and has few friends her age outside of her daycare that she plays with. Her mother and father are now both living in the same home as Victoria after recently being separated and sharing custody for almost eight months. She seems to really enjoy having both of her parents in the home at the same time. Victoria has a one year old dog whose name is ’’Marley’’ and she
Premium Parenting styles Parent
Role of play in child development. Erikson states that play is a diagnostic tool that tells us about the child‚ he also believes that two of the major functions are to resolve problems‚ and creative expression. Piaget‚s 4 stages of cognitive development are Sensorimotor 0-2 where children begin to act intentionally‚ for example knocks a mobile. Pre-operational 2 – 7 classifies objects by a single feature‚ for example groups together the same colour building blocks. Concerete operational
Premium Psychology Developmental psychology Jean Piaget
THE EFFECTS OF CHILD CARE 1 A variety of changes in the world have demanded an increase in the need for child care. Some of theses changes include migration‚ poverty‚ and urbanization. These economic and societal changes are forcing more and more woman into the workforce. Among these are young women and mothers. From the 1970’s to the 1990’s there was a major increase in the need for child care. In March of 1970‚ 26% of mothers with children under the age of 2 were working outside the home. By
Premium Attachment theory Developmental psychology
1.0 introduction In the study of development‚ nurture is defined as the environmental conditions that influence a child’s development (T. M McDevitt and J. E. Ormrod ‚ 2010). A child ’s home environment‚ friends with whom he spends time with‚ the food that he eats and the types of movies he watches -- not to mention the content and or education background – are all the factors that influence his physical‚ social and cognitive development in both positive and negative perspective. In this paper
Premium Mahathir bin Mohamad Bill Gates Malaysia