achievements of the first year

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Achievements of the First Year The Development of Children (5 th ed.) Cole, Cole & Lightfoot Chapter 5

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Achievements of the First Year. The Development of Children (5 th ed.) Cole, Cole & Lightfoot Chapter 5. Overview of the Journey. Biological changes Perceptual-motor development Cognitive changes Relationship with the social world The next bio-social-behavioral shift. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Achievements  of the First Year

Achievements of the First Year

The Development of Children (5th ed.)

Cole, Cole & Lightfoot

Chapter 5

Page 2: Achievements  of the First Year

Overview of the Journey

Biological changes Perceptual-motor

development Cognitive changes Relationship with the

social world The next bio-social-

behavioral shift

Biological changes Perceptual-motor

development Cognitive changes Relationship with the

social world The next bio-social-

behavioral shift

Page 3: Achievements  of the First Year

Biological Changes

Size and Shape

Bone and Muscle

The Brain

Page 4: Achievements  of the First Year

Size and Shape Triple in weight…

(7 21 lbs.) Add 10 inches height…

(20 30 in.) Change in body

proportions… At birth, head is 70% of adult

size and accounts for 25% total body length

Legs at birth are not much longer than their heads; by adulthood, legs account for about half of total height

Result in lowering the center of gravity (balance, walking)

Page 5: Achievements  of the First Year
Page 6: Achievements  of the First Year

Environmental Conditions Influence Growth Rate

Babies born in Malawi face conditions such as widespread mal-nutrition, chronic poverty, disease, and a rising HIV/AIDS infection rate. As a result of this complicated array of factors, Malawian infants grow at a slower rate than their American counterparts.

Babies born in Malawi face conditions such as widespread mal-nutrition, chronic poverty, disease, and a rising HIV/AIDS infection rate. As a result of this complicated array of factors, Malawian infants grow at a slower rate than their American counterparts.

Page 7: Achievements  of the First Year

Where is Malawi?

Info on Malawi Table Talk 1

What kinds of things do infants do in Malawi? What do infants do in our area? What learning opportunities are similar? What learning opportunities are different?

Page 8: Achievements  of the First Year

Changes in Body Proportions

Page 9: Achievements  of the First Year

Bone, Muscle, & Gender

Bone ossification First in hand and wrist (pick up)

Increases in muscle mass Associated with ability to

stand alone and walk Sex differences

Females are ahead 3 weeks prenatal, 6 weeks at birth, 2 years at puberty

Girls get their permanent teeth, start puberty, and reach full size earlier than boys

Page 10: Achievements  of the First Year

Brain Development

Exuberant synaptogenesis (3-12 months) Density of synapses is double what it will be in

early adolescence As a result of this overproduction of synapses,

infants are prepared to establish neural connections for virtually any kind of experience

“Synapses that are regularly used flourish and are strengthened, while those that go unused are gradually ‘pruned away’—that is, they atrophy and die off.” (p. 183)

Page 11: Achievements  of the First Year

Brain Development

2½ - 4 months: Surge in visual cortex 6 months: Spurt in motor cortex 7 - 9 months: Rapid growth

of frontal cortex (used inintegrating information) Prefrontal area plays

a particularly important role in the development of voluntary behavior (e.g., impulse inhibition)

Page 12: Achievements  of the First Year

Table Talk 2

Why is it important for survival that brain synapses are ready to develop as a result of “any kind of experience”?

Page 13: Achievements  of the First Year

Perceptual-Motor Development

Reaching and Grasping

Locomotion

Page 14: Achievements  of the First Year

Reaching and Grasping

Newborns: Perceive an object moving before them and reach for it (i.e., visually initiated reaching)

2 ½ months: Coordination of reach and grasp

5 months: No longer reach for an object beyond their grasp

9 months: Guide movements with a single glance

Page 15: Achievements  of the First Year

Fine Motor Movements

Babies seem to perceive that different objects offer different affordances – properties that lend themselves to particular ways of interacting with them

Page 16: Achievements  of the First Year

Perceptual-Motor Exploration

Contour following(exact shape)

Pressure(hardness)

Enclosure(volume/size)

Unsupported holding(weight)

Static contact(temperature)

Lateral motion(texture)

Page 17: Achievements  of the First Year

Development of Locomotion Development of Locomotion

2. Baby gains control of upper body:

3. Baby coordinatesupper and lower body movements:

1. Baby creeps and uses legs:

4. Baby is mobile!

Page 18: Achievements  of the First Year

What is the Role of Practice?

During the 1930s and 1940s it was commonly believed that learning and experience played little or no role in the development of such motor milestones as sitting and walking.

Recent findings: Motor development can be speeded up by extensive practice or slowed when adults seek to protect the child against danger, depending upon the cultural circumstances.

Page 19: Achievements  of the First Year

Table Talk 3

If motor development is practiced, what should parents do with their babies?

Make a list of 10 things parents should do with their babies to ensure optimal brain and motor development

Page 20: Achievements  of the First Year

Cognitive Changes

Piaget’s Constructivist Explanation

Are Infants Precocious? Challenges to Piaget’s Theory

Categorizing

Growth of Memory

Page 21: Achievements  of the First Year

Piaget: Sensorimotor Stage (Infancy)

Sub Age (months)

Description

1 0 – 1 ½ Reflex schemas exercised

2 1 ½ – 4 Primary circular reactions

3 4 – 8 Secondary circular reactions

4 8 – 12 Coordination of secondary circular reactions

5 12 – 18 Tertiary circular reactions

6 18 – 24 Beginning of symbolic representation

Page 22: Achievements  of the First Year

Piaget: Sensorimotor Stage (Infancy)

Sub Age months

Description

1 0 – 1 ½ Reflex schemas exercised: Involuntary rooting, sucking, grasping, looking

2 1 ½ – 4 Primary circular reactions: Repetition of personal actions that in themselves are pleasurable (e.g., blowing bubbles)

Page 23: Achievements  of the First Year

Piaget: Sensorimotor Stage (Infancy)

Sub Age (months)

Description

3 4 – 8 Secondary circular reactions: Dawning awareness of the effects of one’s own accidental actions on environment, and that extended actions can produce interesting change in the environment

4 8 – 12 Coordination of secondary circular reactions: Combining schemas to achieve a desired effect (inten-tionality; early problem solving)

Page 24: Achievements  of the First Year

Object Permanence is…

Understanding that objects Have substance Maintain their identify when they

change location Continue to exist (ordinarily) when

out of sight – otherwise, “out of sight is out of mind”

An early indicator of the development of representation

For example, an infant younger than 8 months of age does not search for an object that has been removed from sight

For example, an infant younger than 8 months of age does not search for an object that has been removed from sight

Page 25: Achievements  of the First Year

Lack of Representation

Infant does not track the movement of the train in the tunnel, is happy to see the train again, but is not surprised that it is now a different color or shape.

Infant does not track the movement of the train in the tunnel, is happy to see the train again, but is not surprised that it is now a different color or shape.

Page 26: Achievements  of the First Year

Incomplete Object Permanence (8-12 months of age)

After an infant has successfully searched for an object hidden in one location, the object is then hidden in a new location while the infant watches.

The infant will search for the object where it was previously found.

Page 27: Achievements  of the First Year

Developmental Sequence of Object Permanence1. Infant does not search for objects that have been

removed from sight.2. Infant orients to place where objects have been removed

from sight.3. Infant will reach for a partially hidden object but stops if it

disappears.4. Infant will search for a completely hidden object; keeps

searching the original location of the object even if it is moved to another location in full view of the infant.

5. Infant will search for an object after seeing it moved but not if it is moved in secret.

6. Infant will search for a hidden object, certain that it exists somewhere.

Page 28: Achievements  of the First Year

Intermodel Perception Infants held two rings, one in each hand,

under a cloth that prevented them from seeing the rings or their own bodies.

For some infants the rings were connected by a rigid bar and therefore moved together. For others the rings were connected by a flexible cord and therefore moved independently.

All the infants were allowed to hold and feel just one or the other type of rings until they had largely lost interest (habituated).

They were then shown both types of rings.

The babies looked longer at the rings that were different from those they had been exploring with their hands.

Streri & Spelke, 1988

Page 29: Achievements  of the First Year

Infant Arithmetic?

Infants (4 months) looked longer at the end display when there was only one doll,

suggesting that they had mentally calculated the number of dolls

that ought to be behind the screen. [Wynn, 1992]

Page 30: Achievements  of the First Year

Infant Categorizing… Infants (3 months) shown a

sequence of pictures of cats were surprised when they saw a picture of a dog, suggesting that they were sensitive to the category of cats

Similarly, 3- to 4-month-olds, after having been shown a series of pictures of mammals, looked longer at pictures of non-mammals and furniture than at a picture of a new mammal Eimas & Quinn, 1994

Behl-Chadha et al., 1995

Page 31: Achievements  of the First Year

…and how would a baby categorize this?

Page 32: Achievements  of the First Year

Infant Categorizing After three 15-minute

sessions, each with a different-color A block, a 3-month-old baby will kick the mobile with yet a fourth color added.

But if a new shape is inscribed on the blocks used in the fourth session (e.g., B’s), the baby will not kick, indicating that the baby has formed a category and remembered prior experience

Page 33: Achievements  of the First Year

Conceptual Categories Babies (7 months) treated plastic toy birds and airplanes,

which are perceptually similar, as if they were members of the same category

Babies (9 -11 months) treated toy airplanes and birds as members of conceptually different categories, despite the fact that they looked very much alike

Mandler & McDonough, 1993

Page 34: Achievements  of the First Year

Growth of Memory

Page 35: Achievements  of the First Year

Growth of Memory

In one study (Rovee-Collier et al.), a group of 3-month-old babies were trained to activate a mobile by kicking.

The researchers then let an entire month elapse before putting the babies into the experimental situation again.

They knew that this was more than enough time for the babies to forget their training.

Page 36: Achievements  of the First Year

However, 1 day before being retested, the 3-month-olds were shown the mobile as a reminder (without allowing them to kick).

The next day, these infants started kicking as soon as the ribbon was tied to one of their legs.

The mere sight of the mobile a day earlier seemed to remind the babies of what they had learned 1 month earlier.

Table Talk 41. What do you conclude about the ability of babies to think?

2. If babies have memory, what kinds of things are appropriate for parents to “teach” to their child?

Page 37: Achievements  of the First Year

Relationship with the Social World

Imitation

Wariness

New Relationships

Page 38: Achievements  of the First Year

Wariness (begins at 6-9 months)

Infants who are exposed to something new – even a spoonful of cereal from a stranger – display characteristic wariness

Another evidence of recall

Page 39: Achievements  of the First Year

Indicators of New Social RelationshipsZone of Proximal Development (Vygotsky)

Assistance provided by adults goes just slightly beyond the child’s current competence; helps child learn new behaviors

Attachment Seek to be near their primary caregivers and

show distress when they are separated, happy when reunited

Secondary Intersubjectivity Primary: face-to-face

communication (e.g., social smiling)

Secondary: shared communication that refers to objects beyond themselves (e.g., looks when mother points)

Page 40: Achievements  of the First Year

Indicators of New Social Relationships

Social Referencing Tendency to look to the caregiver for an

indication of how one should feel and act (girls will do this more than boys)

Language Development Comprehension: understands words for

highly familiar objects (6 months); identifies phrases (8-9 months)

Babbling: Vocalizing that includes consonant/vowel repetitions (7 months)

Jargoning: Babbling with stress and intonation of actual utterances (12 months)

Page 41: Achievements  of the First Year

A New Bio-Social-Behavioral Shift

7-9 Months7-9 Months

Page 42: Achievements  of the First Year

Characteristics of the Shift

Biological Growth of muscles and hardening of bones Myelination of motor neurons to lower trunk, legs, hands Myelination of cerebellum, hippocampus, frontal lobes New form of EEG activity in cortex

Social Wariness of strangers New emotional response to caregiver (attachment) Secondary intersubjectivity Social referencing

Behavioral Onset of crawling Fear of heights Coordinated reaching and grasping Object permanence displayed in actions Recall memory Babbling and jargoning