child and adolescent individual changes

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Factors Affecting Development By: Rohema G. Maguad

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Page 1: Child and adolescent individual changes

Factors Affecting Development

By: Rohema G. Maguad

Page 2: Child and adolescent individual changes

SummaryUNIVERSAL CHANGES

GROUP-SPECIFIC CHANGES

Page 3: Child and adolescent individual changes

INDIVIDUAL CHANGES“Every individuals is unique”

We’re Born an ORIGINAL. Don’t die a COPY.

We’re the product of unique combination GENES.

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MOM DAD BABY

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Genetic difference

Personalities

Skin color

IntelligenceFacial contours

Page 5: Child and adolescent individual changes

Individuals development according to child development theorist are the result of the

timing of a development event.

CRITICAL PERIOD

SENSITIVE PERIOD

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CRITICAL PERIODIndividual is most sensitive to the presence or

absence of some particular experience.a limited time in which an event can occur, usually

to result in some kind of transformation.

refers to the brain’s ability to CHANGE through out life. The brain has the amazing ability to reorganize itself by form ing new connections between brain cells .

Other studies have looked at children deprived of certain experiences due to illness (such as temporary blindness), or social isolation (such as feral children). Many of the studies investigating a critical period for language acquisition have focused on deaf children of hearing parents.

Page 7: Child and adolescent individual changes

Genie is the pseudonym for a feral child who spent nearly all of the first

thirteen years of her life locked inside a bedroom strapped to a potty chair. She was a victim of one of the most severe cases of social isolation in

American history. Genie was discovered by Los Angeles authorities

on November 4, 1970.Psychologists, linguists and other

scientists exhibited great interest in the case due to its perceived ability to

reveal insights into the development of language and linguistic critical periods.Genie spent the next 12 years of her

life locked in her bedroom.

Page 8: Child and adolescent individual changes

During the day, she was tied to a child’s potty chair in diapers; some nights, when she hadn’t been completely forgotten, she was bound in a sleeping bag and placed in an enclosed crib with a cover made of metal screening. Indications are that Genie’s father beat her with a large stick if she vocalized, and he barked and growled at her like a dog in order to keep her quiet. He also rarely allowed his wife and son to leave the house or even to speak, and he expressly forbade them to speak to Genie.By the age of 13, Genie was almost entirely mute, commanding a vocabulary of about 20 words and a few short phrases (nearly all negative, such as “stop it” and “no more”). Genie had developed a characteristic “bunny walk”, in which she held her hands up in front, like paws. Although she was almost entirely silent, she constantly sniffed, spat, and clawed. 

Page 9: Child and adolescent individual changes

SENSITIVE PERIODStage at which a child may be particularly responsive to specific forms of experience or particularly influenced by their absence

Child between 6 to 12 months under care of a nanny in the absence of working mother.

Page 10: Child and adolescent individual changes

ATYPHICAL DEVELOPMENTKind of Individual ChangesHarmful to individualInfluenced by environment & Genes

Alcoholic

Drug Addict

Mentally- Retarted

Page 11: Child and adolescent individual changes

Theoretical Perspective on Development

2 functions:

•Explain the knowledge about how children develop•Encourage further researches anchored on predictions about behaviour that can be tested and evaluated.

PSYCHODYNAMICS - also known as dynamic psychology is the study of the interrelationship of various parts of the mind, personality, or psyche as they relate to mental, emotional, or motivational forces especially at the unconscious level.

Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development is one of the best-known theories of personality in psychology. Much like Sigmund Freud, Erikson believed that personality develops in a series of stages. Unlike Freud’s theory of psychosexual stages, Erikson’s theory describes the impact of social experience across the whole lifespan.

Sigmund Freud

Erik Erikson 

Page 12: Child and adolescent individual changes

A comprehensive theory about the nature and development of human intelligence first developed by Jean Piaget. It is primarily known as a developmental stage theory, but in fact, it deals with the nature of knowledge itself and how humans come gradually to acquire it, construct it, and use it.

Cognitive social theory - His theory added a social element, arguing that people can learn new information and behaviours by watching other people. Known as observational learning (or modelling), this type of learning can be used to explain a wide variety of behaviours.

Jean Piaget.

Albert Bandura

Information processing theoryDevelopmental psychologists who adopt the information-processing perspective account for mental development in terms of maturational changes in basic components of a child’s mind. The theory is based on the idea that humans process the information they receive, rather than merely responding to stimuli.

ADDICTION

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Contextual PerspectiveThe contextual perspective, as defined by Papalia, Olds, and Feldman (2004) is the view of development that sees "the individual, not as a separate entity interacting with the environment, but as an inseparable part of it“ Regardless of how hard we try to avoid the role our surroundings play on our and our children's development, we cannot.

Historical ApproachesThe process of learning and understanding the background and growth of a chosen field of study or profession can offer insight into organizational culture, current trends, and future possibilities. The historical method of research applies to all fields of study because it encompasses their: origins, growth, theories, personalities, crisis, etc. 

RUNAWAY CHILD

GRADUATION

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ETHOLOGICAL THEORYThe heart or essence of it is "defining each behaviour of interest in terms of the behaviours of the same organism surrounding it." This gives one a self-correcting mechanism in ones approach to understanding -- the most important contribution of classical ethnology. Add to it the basic knowledge we have of emotions and emotional development and you can have an outline of a meaningful perspective on learning and meaningful concept of "learning" 

Human Societies and Culture

Ecological systems theory is an approach to study of human development that consists of the 'scientific study of the progressive, mutual accommodation, throughout the life course, between an active, growing human being, and the changing properties of the immediate settings in which the developing person lives.

Page 15: Child and adolescent individual changes

MicrosystemsChild is at center; includes the immediate social settings that involve the child. Activities and relationships with others in a person's immediate environment that affect development. each child has MULTIPLE Microsystems.

FAMILY

PEERS

SCHOOL

Page 16: Child and adolescent individual changes

MesosystemHow the Microsystems relate; Linkages and interrelationships between two or more of a person's immediate social settings (or Microsystems) that affect development.

NEIGHBORHOOD

RELIGIOUS AFFILITIONS

WORKPLACE

Page 17: Child and adolescent individual changes

ExosystemSocial settings in which a person is not an active participant, but that affect the person's development indirectly.

COMMUNITY

MASS MEDIA

HEALTH AGENCIES

Page 18: Child and adolescent individual changes

MacrosystemDoesn't include child but nonetheless affects the child. Societal and cultural values, laws, customs and resources.

VALUES

CULTURES

LAW OF SOCIETY

Page 19: Child and adolescent individual changes

ChronosystemThis involves the patterning of environmental events and transitions over the life course, as well as socio-historical circumstances. The chronosystem’s affects on the minority child is also a big determiner in his future achievements.

Page 20: Child and adolescent individual changes

THANK YOU.

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