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Page 1: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Splash Screen

Page 2: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Chapter Menu

Chapter Introduction

Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2:Cognitive and Emotional Development

Section 3: Parenting Styles and Social Development

Page 3: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Chapter Preview 1

Chapter Objectives · Section 1Physical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Understand that as infants grow physically, they also develop cognitive skills, perceptions, and language.

Page 4: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Chapter Preview 2

Chapter Objectives · Section 2Cognitive and Emotional Development

Discuss how as the thought processes of children develop, they begin to think, communicate and relate with others, and solve problems.

Page 5: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Chapter Preview 3

Chapter Objectives · Section 3Parenting Styles and Social Development

Describe the social decisions children face as they grow and progress through the stages of life.

Page 6: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Chapter Preview-End

Page 7: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1-Main Idea

Main Idea

Infants are born equipped to experience the world. As infants grow physically, they also develop cognitive skills, perceptions, and language.

Page 8: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1-Key Terms

Vocabulary

• developmental psychology

• grasping reflex

• rooting reflex

• maturation

• telegraphic speech

Page 9: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1-Objectives

Objectives

• Describe the physical and perceptual development of newborns and children.

• Discuss the development of language.

Page 10: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1-Polling Question

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

How old are you in your earliest childhood memory?

A. One or two

B. Three or four

C. Five

D. Six or older

Page 11: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

Nature and Nurture

• Developmental psychology—the study of changes that occur as an individual matures.

• Developmental psychologists study:

– Continuity versus stages of development

– Stability versus change

– Nature versus nurture

Page 12: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Do you believe that our behavior is inherited or due to the environment around us?

A. Inherited

B. Environment

C. Both

D. Not sure

Page 13: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

Newborns

• Babies are born with certain reflexes:

– Grasping reflex

– Rooting reflex

Page 14: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Which of the following is NOT typical of a newborn?

A. Crying

B. Talking

C. Sucking

D. Sleeping

Page 15: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

Physical Development

• Within two years an infant transforms into a little boy or girl with many capabilities.

• This is due to:

– Maturation

– Learning—a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience.

Page 16: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

Physical Development (cont.)

• Psychologists have been able to develop an approximate timetable for maturation, which helps doctors and other professionals spot problems.

• Each child is unique, so the age range on some milestones varies.

Physical and Motor Development

Page 17: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 1

At what age would you expect an infant to start crawling?

A. 8–9 months

B. 10–11 months

C. 12 months or more

A B C

0% 0%0%

Page 18: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

Perceptual Development

• Newborns have mature perception skills.

– They prefer human faces and patterned materials.

– They benefit from being held and touched by their parents.

– Infants older than 6 months display depth perception.

The Visual Preferences of Infants

Page 19: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

At what age do newborns display depth perception?

A. 3 months

B. 6 months

C. 9 months

D. 12 months

Page 20: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

The Development of Language

• Chimpanzees develop at least as far as a 2 year-old-human; however, they cannot apply grammatical rules.

• Grammar—a set of rules for combining words into phrases and sentences to express an infinite number of thoughts that can be understood by others.

Page 21: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

The Development of Language (cont.)

• Psychologists argue over whether language is reinforced or inborn.

• Some people also claim that there is a window of opportunity for learning language.

Page 22: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

• Steps to learning language:

– A person must learn to make signs, either by hand or mouth.

– He or she must learn the meaning of the signs.

– Then he or she must learn grammar.

The Development of Language (cont.)

Page 23: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1

• At the age of 2, a child’s language is known as telegraphic speech—the kind of verbal utterances in which words are left out, but the meaning is usually clear.

• Once children begin to learn grammatical rules, they tend to overgeneralize those rules until they truly understand them.

The Development of Language (cont.)

The Flowering of Language

Page 24: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 1

Do you think that language is learned, innate, or both?

A. Learned

B. Innate

C. Both

A B C

0% 0%0%

Page 25: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 1-End

Page 26: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2-Main Idea

Main Idea

As the thought processes of children develop, they begin to think, communicate and relate with others, and solve problems.

Page 27: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2-Key Terms

Vocabulary

• schema

• assimilation

• accommodation

• object permanence

• representational thought

• conservation

• egocentric

• imprinting

• critical period

Page 28: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2-Objectives

Objectives

• Summarize the cognitive-development theory.

• Discuss how children develop emotionally.

Page 29: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2-Polling Question

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

What age do you think babies start communicating?

A. Immediately after birth

B. After 3 months

C. After 6 months

D. After 1 year

Page 30: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

Cognitive Development

• Jean Piaget believed that intelligence, or the ability to understand, develops gradually as the child grows.

• Intellectual development involves:

– Quantitative changes (growth in the amount of information)

– Qualitative changes (differences in the manner of thinking)

Jean Piaget

Page 31: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

Cognitive Development (cont.)

• A schema is a conceptual framework a person uses to make sense of the world.

• Assimilation and accommodation work together to produce intellectual growth.

• When events do not fit into an existing schema, a new one must be formed.

Page 32: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

• Object permanence is a big step in a child’s second year of life.

• Achieving object permanence usually signifies representational thought.

• The realization of conservation occurs between the ages of 5 and 7.

• Before the age of 5, children are egocentric.

Cognitive Development (cont.)

Tasks to Measure Conservation

Page 33: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

• Piaget’s stages of cognitive development:

– Sensorimotor stage—the infant uses schema that primarily involve his body and sensations.

– Preoperational stage—the child begins to use mental images and symbols to understand things.

Cognitive Development (cont.)

Page 34: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

– Concrete operations stage—children are able to use logical schemas, but their understanding is limited to concrete objects.

– Formal operations stage—the person is able to solve abstract problems.

Cognitive Development (cont.)

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development

Page 35: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

At which stage does a child master the concept of conservation?

A. Sensorimotor

B. Preoperational

C. Concrete operations

D. Formal operations

Page 36: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

Emotional Development

• Konrad Lorenz experimented with baby geese.

• He learned that 13 to 16 hours after birth is a critical period in which the animals imprint on the first thing they see (usually their mother).

Page 37: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

Emotional Development (cont.)

• Harry Harlow concluded that monkeys clung to their mothers because of the need for contact comfort, not necessarily food.

• Some psychologist also believe that human babies form an attachment to their mothers around 6 months.

Page 38: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

• Stranger anxiety—the fear of strangers that infants commonly display.

• Separation anxiety—distress that is sometimes experienced by infants when they are separated from their primary caregivers.

Emotional Development (cont.)

Page 39: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

• Mary Ainsworth and John Bowlby devised a technique called the Strange Situation to measure attachment.

Emotional Development (cont.)

Page 40: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2

• Patterns of attachment include:

– Secure attachment

– Avoidant attachment

– Resistant attachment

– Disorganized attachment

Emotional Development (cont.)

Page 41: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Which psychologist studied the relationship between mother and child using monkeys?

A. Lorenz

B. Harlow

C. Ainsworth

D. Piaget

Page 42: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 2-End

Page 43: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3-Main Idea

Main Idea

Children face various social decisions as they grow and progress through the stages of life.

Page 44: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3-Key Terms

Vocabulary

• authoritarian family

• democratic/authoritative family

• permissive/laissez-faire family

• socialization

• identification

• sublimation

• role taking

Page 45: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3-Objectives

Objectives

• Describe theories of social development.

• Outline Kohlberg’s stages of moral reasoning.

Page 46: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

Section 3-Polling Question

Has the style in which you were raised affected you?

A. Yes

B. No

A B

0%0%

Page 47: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Parenting Styles

• Distinct styles of parenting:

– Authoritarian family

– Democratic/authoritative family

– Permissive/laissez-faire family

– Uninvolved parents

Page 48: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Parenting Styles (cont.)

• Children who grow up in the democratic family setting seem to be more confident than other young people.

– The parents establish limits for the child.

– They also respond to the child with warmth and support.

Page 49: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• The results of a democratic family setting include:

– The child is able to assume responsibility gradually.

– The child is more likely to identify with parents who love and respect him or her.

Parenting Styles (cont.)

Page 50: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 3

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Which style of parenting do you think is the most effective?

A. Authoritarian

B. Democratic/authoritative

C. Permissive/laissez-faire

D. Uninvolved

Page 51: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Child Abuse

• Child abuse includes:

– Physical or mental injury

– Sexual abuse

– Negligent treatment

– Mistreatment of children under the age of 18 by adults entrusted with their care

Page 52: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Child Abuse (cont.)

• Reasons for abuse:

– The abusive parents where abused as children.

– Parents are overburdened and stressed.

– The children are high maintenance or mentally/physically challenged.

– Social-cultural stresses present obstacles.

Page 53: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Abuse can have many developmental effects on the victims.

• Every state has social service agencies that intervene when abuse is discovered.

Child Abuse (cont.)

Page 54: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 3

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

What is an effect of abuse on a child?

A. Antisocial behavior

B. Depression

C. Loss of self-esteem

D. All of the above

Page 55: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Social Development

• Socialization is the process of learning the rules of behavior of the culture within which an individual is born and will live.

Page 56: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

Social Development (cont.)

• Freud’s theory of psychosexual development:

– Oral stage

– Anal stage

– Phallic stage

– Latency stage

– Genital stage

Freud’s Stages of Psychosexual Development

Page 57: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

– During the phallic stage, the child wants to claim the parent of the opposite sex for him or herself, but then begins the process of identification (a child adopts the values and principles of the same-sex parent).

– During the latency stage, the child learns the process of sublimation.

Social Development (cont.)

Page 58: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development is based on life periods in which an individual’s goal is to satisfy desires associated with social needs.

Social Development (cont.)

Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development

Page 59: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Freud and Erikson believe that learning social rules is innate.

• Many psychologists believe that that social development is a matter of conditioning and imitation.

Social Development (cont.)

Page 60: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Cognitive theorists view social development as a result of a child’s acting on the environment and trying to make sense out of his experience.

• Game playing is one way that children learn such as role taking.

Social Development (cont.)

Page 61: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Lawrence Kohlberg conducted studies to show how important being able to see other people’s points of view is to social and moral development.

Social Development (cont.)

Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral Development

Page 62: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

• Stages of moral development:

– Stage one—Children are egocentric.

– Stage two—Children have a better idea of how to receive rewards as well as to avoid punishment; they act in terms of consequences.

– Stage three—Children become acutely sensitive to what other people want and think.

Social Development (cont.)

Page 63: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3

– Stage four—Children are concerned with law and order and less with approval of others.

– Stage five—People are concerned with whether the law is fair or just.

– Stage six—People accept ethical principles that apply to everyone.

Social Development (cont.)

Page 64: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 3

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

According to Erikson, which stage does the following question fall under: “Will I succeed in life?”

A. Stage 1—trust vs. mistrust

B. Stage 3—industry vs. inferiority

C. Stage 7—generativity vs. stagnation

D. Stage 8—ego integrity vs. despair

Page 65: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Section 3-End

Page 66: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 1

Physical and Motor DevelopmentAlthough different infants achieve milestones in motor development at slightly different ages, all infants achieve them in essentially the same order. This chart shows the average ages when milestones are usually achieved.

Page 67: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 2

The Visual Preferences of AdultsThree- or four-month-old infants show a strong preference for faces and patterns, suggesting that infants are born with and develop visual preferences.

Page 68: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 3

The Flowering of LanguageBetween the ages of 2 and 5, the typical child learns an average of 10 words a day–nearly one word every hour awake!

Page 69: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 4

Tasks to Measure ConservationThe concept of conservation can be used to show that children think less logically than adults do. Children in the preoperational stage so not understand that the property of a substance remains the same although its appearance may change.

Page 70: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 5

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentPiaget stressed that the active role of the child in gaining knowledge. He also stressed the differences in the way a child thinks during different stages of maturity.

Page 71: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 6

Freud’s Stages of Psychosexual DevelopmentAccording to Freud, there is often conflict between child and parent. The conflict occurs because the child wants immediate gratification of needs while the parent restricts that gratification in some way.

Page 72: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 7

Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial DevelopmentAccording to Erikson, a child encounters a psychosocial challenge at each stage. If the child successfully resolves the issue, the child develops a positive social trait and progresses to the next stage.

Page 73: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Figure 8

Kohlberg’s Stages of Moral DevelopmentEach stage of Kohlberg’s theory is cognitively more complex than the last.

Page 74: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Profile

Jean Piaget1896–1980

“[T]he child no longer tends to approach the state of

adulthood by receiving reason and the rules of right action

ready-made, but by achieving them with his own effort and

personal experience; in return society expects more of its new generations than mere

imitation: it expects enrichment.”

Page 75: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Concept Trans Menu

Chapter Concepts Transparencies

Stages of Language Acquisition

Types of Attachment in Children

Select a transparency to view.

Page 76: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Concept Trans 1

Page 77: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Concept Trans 2

Page 78: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

DFS Trans 1

Page 79: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

DFS Trans 2

Page 80: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

DFS Trans 3

Page 81: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab1

developmental psychology: the study of changes that occur as an individual matures

Page 82: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab2

grasping reflex: an infant’s clinging response to a touch on the palm of his or her hand

Page 83: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab3

rooting reflex: an infant’s response in turning toward the source of touching that occurs anywhere around his or her mouth

Page 84: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab4

maturation: the internally programmed growth of a child

Page 85: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab5

telegraphic speech: the kind of verbal utterances in which words are left out, but the meaning is usually clear

Page 86: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab6

schema: a conceptual frame-work a person uses to make sense of the world

Page 87: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab7

assimilation: the process of fitting objects and experiences into one’s schemas

Page 88: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab8

accommodation: the adjustment of one’s schemas to include newly observed events and experiences

Page 89: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab9

object permanence: a child’s realization that an object exists even when he or she cannot see or touch it

Page 90: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab10

representational thought: the intellectual ability of a child to picture something in his or her mind

Page 91: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab11

conservation: the principle that a given quantity does not change when its appearance is changed

Page 92: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab12

egocentric: a young child’s inability to understand another person’s perspective

Page 93: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab13

imprinting: inherited tendency of some newborn animals to follow the first moving object they see

Page 94: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab14

critical period: a specific time in development when certain skills or abilities are most easily learned

Page 95: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab15

authoritarian family: parents attempt to control, shape, and evaluate the behavior and attitudes of children and adolescents in accordance with a set code of conduct

Page 96: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab16

democratic/authoritarian family: children and adolescents participate in decisions affecting their lives

Page 97: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab17

permissive/laissez-faire family: children and adolescents have the final say; parents are less controlling and have a non-punishing, accepting attitude toward children

Page 98: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab18

socialization: the process of learning the rules of behavior of the culture within which an individual is born and will live

Page 99: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab19

identification: the process by which a child adopts the values and principles of the same-sex parent

Page 100: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab20

sublimation: the process by redirecting sexual impulses into leaning tasks

Page 101: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

Vocab21

role taking: children’s play that involves assuming adult roles, thus enabling the child to experience different points of review

Page 102: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

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Page 103: Splash Screen. Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Physical, Perceptual, and Language DevelopmentPhysical, Perceptual, and Language Development

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