Chapter 9 PowerPoint
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MIDDLE CHILDHOOD:
Physical and cognitive development
Physical Development
Growth and Body Changes
Motor Development
More
Skill in controlling Body
Physical Growth Slows Temporarily
Brain Development
Dyslexia:
Disorder in which an otherwise
normally intelligent, healthy child or adult
has extreme difficulty learning to read
Genius and Giftedness:
Pull-out programs, in-class enrichment,
advancing a grade
Health and Fitness Issues
Obesity:
BMI greater than the 85th
percentile for age and gender
Eating Disorders
Role of Play and Exercise
Cognitive Development
Cognitive Sophistication
Piaget’s
Period of Concrete Operations
Integration of the powerful, abstract, internal
schemas such as identity, reversibility,
classification and serial ordering
Conservation Tasks
Require recognition that the quantity of
something stays the same despite changes in
appearance
Horizontal Decalage
Sequential
development, with each skill
dependent on the acquisition of earlier skills
Post-Piagetian Criticism
Cross-Cultural Evidence:
Cultural and social factors play a role in
children’s cognitive development
Information Processing
Individual
Differences
Children’s Perceptions of Others
Under 8: Children describe people in terms of
external attributes; global descriptive terms.
Over 8: More specific, precise. Inner qualities
are noticed.
Language Development
Vocabulary
Syntax
and Pragmatics: Grammar and
sentence structure
Bilingual Education in the United States
Educating Children Whose Reading and
Speaking Skills Are Below Standard
Limited English Proficiency
Students
whose native language is not
English and who cannot participate
effectively in the regular school curriculum
because of difficulty speaking,
understanding, reading and writing English.
3.2 million LEP students nationwide.
Education
Reading
and speaking skills are below
standard
English as a Second Language (ESL)
Teaching English as Foreign Language
Bilingual Education
Bilingualism:
Provides instruction in both
languages by teachers proficient in both.
Total Immersion
Children placed in regular classrooms and
English is used for all instruction
Assessment of Intelligence
Intelligence:
Ability of individuals to
understand and express complex ideas,
adapt effectively to their environment, learn
from experience, and solve problems.
Types of Intelligence Tests
Verbal
intelligence, inductive reasoning,
spatial ability
The EQ Factor: Emotional Intelligence
Limitations of IQ Tests
Some abilities cannot be measured.
Individual
Cognitive Styles:
Differences in how individuals organize and
process information.
The EQ Factor
Emotional
Intelligence
Mind-Blindness
Temporary Insanity
Self-Regulatory Behaviors
Learning Disabilities (LDs)
Umbrella
concept to refer to children,
adolescents, and college students who
encounter difficulty with school-related
material despite the fact they appear to have
normal intelligence and lack demonstrable
physical, emotional, or social impairment.
ADHD
Collection
of vague and global symptoms.
Causes are unknown
Individual Education Plans
(IEPs):
Legal
document that ensures that the child
with special learning needs will receive the
needed educational support services in the
least restrictive environment.
Inclusion
The
integration of students with special
needs within the regular classroom
programs of the school, in some cases with
an additional aide in the classroom
What Do We Know About
Effective Schools
Teachers
care about lesson plans
High achievement is expected
High proportion of time spent on instruction
and learning
Effective Schools
Homework
is important
Students encouraged to use library
Schools foster respect for students and high
expectations for behavior
Moral Development
The
process by which children adopt
principles that lead them to evaluate given
behaviors as right and others as wrong and
to govern their own actions in terms of
these principles.
Cognitive Learning Theory
Bandura
et.al.
Moral development is a cumulative process
that builds on itself gradually and
continuously, without any abrupt changes.
Cognitive Developmental
Theory
Piaget,
Kohlberg
Moral development takes place in stages,
with clear-cut changes between them.
Piaget: two-stage theory of moral
development
Heteronomous morality
Autonomous morality
Lawrence Kohlberg
Heinz’s
ethical dilemma: 3 levels of
development
1. Preconventional
2. Conventional
3. Postconventional
Carol Gilligan
Men
and women have different conceptions
of morality
Men: justice
Women: care
Correlates of Moral Conduct
Intelligence
Age
(-)
(-)
Sex (-)
Group Norms (+)
Motivational Factors (-)
Prosocial Behaviors
Ways
of responding to other people through
sympathetic, cooperative, helpful, rescuing,
comforting and giving acts.
Empathy: Feelings of emotional arousal that
lead an individual to take another
perspective and to experience an event as
the other person experiences it.