410 Chapter
12
Development
R E C A P / E V A L U A T E / R E T H I N K
R E C A P
What are the major competencies of newborns?
• Newborns, or neonates, have refl exes—unlearned,
involuntary responses that occur automatically in the
presence of certain stimuli. (p. 393)
• Sensory
abilities also develop rapidly; infants can distin-
guish color, depth, sound, tastes, and smells relatively
soon after birth. (p. 394)
• After birth, physical development is rapid; children
typically triple their birthweight in a year. (p. 397)
What are the milestones of physical
and social development
during childhood?
• Attachment—the positive emotional bond between a
child and a particular individual—marks social develop-
ment in infancy. Measured in the laboratory by means of
the Ainsworth stranger situation, attachment relates to
later social and emotional adjustment. (p. 398)
•
As children become older, the nature of their social inter-
actions with peers changes. Initially play occurs rela-
tively independently, but it becomes increasingly
cooperative. (p. 400)
• The different child-rearing styles include authoritarian,
permissive,
authoritative, and uninvolved. (p. 401)
• According to Erikson, eight stages of psychosocial devel-
opment involve people’s changing interactions and
understanding of themselves and others. During child-
hood, the four stages are trust-versus-mistrust (birth to
1½ years), autonomy-versus-shame-and-doubt (1½ to
3 years), initiative-versus-guilt (3 to 6 years), and industry-
versus-inferiority (6 to 12 years). (p. 403)
How does cognitive development proceed during childhood?
• Piaget’s theory suggests
that cognitive development
proceeds through four stages in which qualitative
changes occur in thinking: the sensorimotor stage (birth
to 2 years), the preoperational stage (2 to 7 years), the
concrete operational stage (7 to 12 years), and the formal
operational stage (12 years to adulthood). (p. 404)
• Information-processing approaches suggest that quanti-
tative changes occur in children’s ability to organize and
manipulate information about the world,
such as signifi -
cant increases in speed of processing, attention span, and
memory. In addition, children advance in metacognition,
the awareness and understanding of one’s own cognitive
processes. (p. 408)
• Vygotsky argued that children’s cognitive development
occurs as a consequence of social interactions in which
children and others work together to solve problems.
(p. 409)
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