HYPOTHESIS-is A Specific Assumption or Prediction That Can Be Tested To Determine
HYPOTHESIS-is A Specific Assumption or Prediction That Can Be Tested To Determine
Psychoanalytic Ethological
Theories Theory
Cognitive Ecological
Theories Theory
PSYCHOANALYTICAL THEORY
Mental life is primarily unconscious— beyond awareness.
Mental life is heavily colored by emotion.
Early experiences with parents extensively shape behavior.
Freud’s Structures of Personality:
Id
Ego
Superego
PSYCHOSEXUAL DEVELOPMENT
Five stages
Each stage focuses on a part of the body for experiencing pleasure.
How conflicts between sources of pleasure are resolved determines adult
personality.
(cont’d)
Crises are not catastrophes but rather turning points of increased vulnerability
and enhanced potential.
The more an individual resolves the crises successfully, the healthier
development will be.
COGNITIVE THEORIES
Piaget’s cognitive development theory
Vygotsky’s sociocultural cognitive theory
The information-processing approach
Mechanisms of Development
Organization- tendency for parts of a system to form and to be integrated into
a whole.
Adaptation
Assimilation: Incorporating new information into one’s existing
knowledge
Accommodation: Adapting one’s existing knowledge to new information
Equilibration- every organism tends towards equilibrium with the environment
and equilibrium within itself.
Ethological Theory
Behavior is strongly influenced by biology.
Behavior is tied to evolution.
Behavior is characterized by critical periods.
Austrian zoologist Konrad Lorenz (1903-1989) identified imprinting.
John Bowlby theorizes about attachment.
Critical Period- A fixed time period very early in development during which
certain behaviors optimally emerge.
Imprinting- the rapid, innate learning within a limited critical period that involves
attachment to the first moving object seen
Attachment
A concept based on principles of ethological theory.
Attachment to a caregiver over the first year of life has important
consequences:
Positive and secure attachment results in positive development.
Negative and insecure attachment results in problematic development.
Methods
Developmental designs
The Cross-Sectional Approach
The Longitudinal Approach
The Sequential Approach
Correlational versus experimental research
(cont’d)
Complex, expensive, and time consuming.
Provides information not obtainable through using either the cross-sectional or
longitudinal designs alone.
Especially helpful in examining cohort effects in life-span development.
Cohort effects -are due to a person’s time of birth or generation, but not to actual
age.
Experimental Research
This allows researchers to determine the causes of behavior.
It uses experimentation: carefully regulated procedures in which one or more
significant factors is manipulated, and all others held constant.
Experimental research involves independent and dependent variables,
experimental groups, control groups, and random assignment.
KOHLBERG'S SIX STAGES OF MORAL DEVELOPMENT
• Stage 5 subjects,- then, talk about "morality" and "rights" that take some priority
over particular laws. Kohlberg insists, however, that we do not judge people to be
at stage 5 merely from their verbal labels. We need to look at their social
perspective and mode of reasoning.
Russian psychologist
Worked in post-revolutionary Soviet Union to rebuild psychology along Marxist
lines
Applied psych. to problems confronting the new state, especially in the field of
ed psych.
Worked to create theories of cognitive development
Conducted research & writing during the same time as Piaget (1920’s &
1930’s)
His writings were banned in the Soviet Union in 1936 & only became available
in the west in the 1960’s
He died of tuberculosis at the age of 38.
Everything is social
Explained things that are taught rather than discovered (reading, writing
etc.)
A mother sitting with her toddler singing, “Baa, baa black sheep have you any
wool, yes sir, yes sir ….” at this point the mother pauses and the child sings
loudly, “THREE BAGS FULL!”.
o How is this guided participation?
A 6-year old lost a toy & asks her father for help. The father asks her where
she last saw the toy; the child says , “I can’t remember.” He asks a series of
questions – “Did you have it in your room? Outside?” To each question the
child answers “No”. When he asks, “In the car?”, she says “I think so” and
finds the toy in the car.
o In this story, who found the toy?
We can often complete harder tasks with someone else than we could
alone.
Ex: Children want to learn to read & write to become members of the
“literary club”, to be able to participate and interact with the written world
Vygotsky’s Words…
(ERIK ERIKSON)
In each stage a person faces certain conflicts and challenges.
People must modify their personalities in order to adjust successfully to their
social environments
Begin in childhood
A child’s success in the early stages depends largely on their parents
An ongoing process that is never final