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  • July 10, 2023
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PYC2602-Child-and-Adolescent-Development-Study-notes-
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,PYC2602_CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DEVELOPMENT
Unit 1: Basic concepts of child and adolescent development

1.6 Theories of development

 Theories are essential for understanding children’s development because they provide the whyof
development.
 In child development, a theory is an organized set of ideas that is designed to explain and make
predictions about development.
 Function and advantages of theories:
o A theory summarizes and explains the presently known facts
o A theory aims to predict future behavior
o A theory stimulates new research
 5 major theoretical perspectives of child development:
o biological
o psychodynamic
o learning
o cognitive development
o contextual perspectives
1.6.1 The biological perspective
 The biological perspective emphasizes the role of heredity (especially genes), the nervous system
(especially the brain) and the endocrine system (especially the hormones)
 Maturational theory
o Arnold Gesell
o Child development reflects a specific and prearranged scheme or plan within the body
o Theory was regarded to have little say because it did not take the environment into account
 Ethological theory
o Behaviors are adaptive and have survival value
o A critical period is the stage in development when a specific type of learning can take place
before or after the critical period, the same learning is difficult or even impossible
o Konrad Lorenz (Nobel prize) – goslings followed whatever movement they saw first. Behavior
manifestation by goslings is called imprinting.
 Evolutionary theory
o Natural selection
o According to evolutionary psychologists, much of human behavior results from successful
adaptation to the environment.
o Evolution refers to the change in the inherent characteristics over successive generations




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,1.6.2 The psychodynamic perspective
 Freud’s psychosexual theory
o He became convinced that early experiences establish patterns that endure throughout a
person’s life
o Psychoanalysis: holds that development is largely determined by how well people resolve
the unconscious conflicts that they face at different ages
o Id, ego, super ego
 Id: primitive instincts and drive
 Birth: immediate gratification of bodily needs and wants
 Ego: practical, rational component of personality
 First year of life: infant learn they cannot always get what they want
 Ego tries to guide the id’s impulsive demands into socially more acceptable
behavior
 Super ego: moral agent in child’s personality
 Internalize adult standards of right and wrong
o Psychosexual stages
 Child moves in a fixed sequence determined by maturation.
 In each stage, the focus is on a different part of the body called erogenous zones
o Freud noticed that early experiences could have enduring effects on a child’s development,
but he put too much emphasis on the sexual aspects.
 Erikson’s psychosocial theory
o Erik Erikson, Freud’s student, embraced Freud’s idea of unconscious conflict, but he
emphasized the psychological and social aspect of conflict, rather than the biological and
sexual aspects.
o 8 stages




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, 1.6.3.2 Social cognitive theory
 Researchers found that children not only learn from punishment, but also by simply watching those
around them, which is known as imitation, modeling and observational learning
 Albert Bandura called this social-cognitive theory
 He placed more emphasis on children’s ability to decide which behavior to model
 Bandura also argues that children’s self-efficacy (beliefs about their own abilities and potential)
plays a role in their decisions to imitate others.
1.6.4.1 Piaget’s theory of cognitive development
 Jean Piaget believed that children naturally try to make sense of their world
 He believed children acts like scientists in creating their own theories. Children’s theories are tested
daily by experience because their theories lead them to expect certain things to happen.
 Piaget claimed that radical revisions occur 3 times in development: age 2, age 7 and before
adolescents
 4 distinct stages in cognitive development – sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational and
formal operational




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