Invitation to the Life Span by Kathleen Stassen Berger

Download Report

Transcript Invitation to the Life Span by Kathleen Stassen Berger

The Developing Person
Through the Life Span 8e
by Kathleen Stassen Berger
Chapter 5- The First Two Years:
Biosocial Development
PowerPoint Slides developed by
Martin Wolfger and Michael James
Ivy Tech Community College-Bloomington
Reviewed by Raquel Henry
Lone Star College, Kingwood
Body Changes
Body Size
• Average weight: double the birthweight by
month 4, triple it by age 1, much of it is fat
• Average height: grow 14 inches from birth
to age 2
These numbers are norms, an average
measurement.
Body Changes
Body Size
• Head-sparing- biological mechanism that
protects the brain when malnutrition disrupts
body growth.
– The brain is the last part of the body to be
damaged by malnutrition.
• Percentile- point on a ranking scale of 0 to
100.
– 50th percentile is the midpoint with ½ the sample
being higher and ½ lower.
Sleep
• Average newborn sleeps 16 hours per day
• Specifics vary due to age, characteristics,
and social environment
• Ample sleep correlates with normal brain
maturation, learning, emotional regulation,
academic success and psychological
adjustment
Sleep
• REM Sleep: Rapid eye movement sleep,
dreaming, rapid brain waves
• Slow-wave sleep: quiet sleep, increases at
3-4 months
• Co-sleeping: custom of parents and
children sleeping in same room, more
common in Asia, Africa and Latin America
than in Western cultures
Brain Development
• Neuron- the billions of nerve cells in the
central nervous system.
• Cortex- the outer layers of the brain.
• Axon- a fiber that extends from a
neuron and transmits
electrochemical impulses from
that neuron to the dendrites of
other neurons.
Brain Development
• Dendrite- a fiber that extends from a neuron
and receives electrochemical impulses
transmitted from other neurons via their
axons.
• Synapse- the intersection between the axon
of one neuron and the dendrites of other
neurons.
• Neurotransmitter- a brain chemical that
carries information from the axon of a
sending neuron to the dendrites of a
receiving neuron.
Brain Development
Transient Exuberance
• The great but temporary increase in the
number of dendrites in an infant’s brain
from birth to age 2
• Enables neurons to connect and
communicate with other neurons
• This is followed by pruning where unused
neurons and misconnected dendrites die
Stress and the Brain
• If it produces too many stress hormones in
infants, the brain will not be able to have
normal stress responses.
• Occurs in infants who are terrified and
experience other forms of stress.
• Can continue to occur when the infant is
an adult
Necessary and Possible
Experiences
Experience-related aspects of brain function:
• Experience-expectant : require basic
common experiences in to develop
normally (i.e. people who love them)
• Experience-dependent: these happen to
some infants but not all, not necessary for
brain function (i.e. language baby hears)
Brain Development
• prefrontal cortex: the area for anticipation,
planning, and impulse control
• Shaken baby syndrome- a life-threatening injury
occurring when an infant is forcefully shaken back
and forth, rupturing blood vessels and breaking
neural connections .
• Self-righting- inborn drive to fix a developmental
deficit
– All people have self-righting impulses for physical
and emotional imbalances.
Sensation and Movement
• Sensation- The response of a sensory
system (eyes, ears, skin, tongue, nose)
when it detects a stimulus.
• Perception- The mental processing of
sensory information when the brain
interprets a sensation.
• Sensory development- typically precedes
intellectual and motor development
Sensation and Movement
Hearing develops during the last trimester of
pregnancy and is already quite acute at birth;
the most advanced of the newborn’s senses.
Vision is the least mature sense at birth.
– Newborns focus only on objects between 4
and 30 inches away.
– Binocular vision, the ability to coordinate the
two eyes to see one image, appears at 3
months.
Smelling, Tasting, and Touching
• Function at birth and adapt to social world
• Babies recognize each person’s smell and
handling
• Basic Infant Care differs by culture
– Massage important in some cultures
• Infant senses function to help babies join
the human family
Sensation and Movement
• Gross motor skills- Physical abilities
involving large body movements, such as
walking and jumping.
• Fine motor skills- Physical abilities
involving small body movements,
especially of the hands and fingers, such
as drawing and picking up a coin.
Gross Motor Skills
Ethnic Variations
• Gene differences in different ethnic groups
• Cultural patterns of child rearing affect
sensation, perception, and motor skills
Surviving in Good Health
• About 10 billion babies were born 19502010 worldwide
• More than 2 billion died before age 5
• Immunization has saved many people
– The risks of diseases are far greater than the
risk from immunization.
Surviving in Good Health
Surviving in Good Health
Surviving in Good Health
Nutrition
• For every infant disease (including SIDS),
breast-feeding reduces risk and malnutrition
increases it.
• Breastfed babies are less likely to develop
allergies, asthma, obesity, and heart disease.
• As the infant gets older, the composition of
breast milk adjusts to the baby’s changing
nutritional needs.
Malnutrition
• Protein-calorie: when not enough food of
any kind is consumed
• Stunting: being too short for your age due
to severe and chronic malnutrition
• Wasting: being very underweight due to
malnutrition
Malnutrition
• Marasmus: severe malnutrition during
infancy where child stops growing, tissues
waste away and then usually dies
• Kwashiorkor: disease of chronic
malnutrition during childhood where child
becomes more likely to get other diseases
such as measles, diarrhea and influenza