Physical Growth and Development in Infants

 
Lifespan Development
 
Module 4; Infancy
 
Module Learning Outcomes
 
Describe human development during infancy
4.1 Describe physical growth and development in infants and
toddlers
4.2 Explain cognitive development in infants and toddlers
 
4.3 Explain emotional and social development during infancy
 
Physical Growth & Development in Infants
 
Learning Outcomes: Physical Growth &
Development in Infants
 
4.1
 
Describe physical growth and development in infants and
toddlers
4.1.1: Summarize overall physical growth patterns during infancy
4.1.2: Describe the growth of the brain during infancy
4.1.3 Explain gross and fine motor skills in infants
4.1.4 Explain newborn perceptual abilities
4.1.5 Explain the merits of breastfeeding
4.1.6 Discuss the importance of nutrition to early physical growth, including
nutritional concerns for infants and toddlers such as marasmus and
kwashiorkor
 4.1.7 Describe sleep concerns for infants
4.1.8 Explain the vaccination debate and its consequences
 
Overall Physical Growth
 
Birth weight & length
Normal weight range ~ 5lb 8 oz to 8lb 13oz
Normal length range ~ 19.5 inches
Babies lose approx. 5% of body weight in first few days
Normal adjustment to life outside womb- waste
elimination, feeding
Physical proportions
Head-to-body ratio: head comprises 25% of total length
at birth
Percentiles: 1-100
Failure to thrive: a child born in normal ranges falls below
20
th
 percentile
Detection is key to medical intervention
 
Photo credit: modification of
work by Kerry Ceszyk
 
Physical growth, continued
 
Weight:
At 4 months old, weight typically doubles
At one year, weight has tripled
By age 2, weight has quadrupled.
Length:
Average length at 12 months ~28.5-30.5 inches
Average length at 24 months ~33.2-35.4 inches (CDC, 2010).
 
Children experience rapid physical changes through infancy and early childhood.
 
Brain Growth- The First Two Years
 
Growth
Physical size of brain increases
At birth, brain is 25% adult weight
At 2-years-old, 75%
Neural development
Most neurons are present at birth, not fully
developed
Transient exuberance: period of prolific dendritic
connections
Myelination: myelin sheath (fatty cells) protects
axons, speeds neural transmissions
Pruning: unused connections eliminated in favor of
much-used connections
Prefrontal cortex
Least-developed portion of brain at birth;
substantial growth
 
During transient
exuberance, a single
neuron may have
thousands of dendrites
 
Motor Development
 
Reflexes are inborn
Some are necessary for survival
Rooting reflex, breathing, sucking reflex
Some signify health, development
Moro reflex, stepping reflex, palmar grasp
Motor development is orderly
Follows cephalocaudal (head-down)
proximodistal (center-out) principles
Gross Motor Skills
Large muscle groups
Fine Motor Skills
Small, coordinated muscle movements
Pinching, grasping
 
 This baby is working on his pincer grasp.
 
Motor & Sensory Development
 
Sensation & Perception
Sensation: interaction with sensory receptors
Perception: interpreting information sensed
Sensory Development
Sight- least developed at birth
Newborns see ~8-16 inches in front of them
Preference for faces, unusual, interesting, exciting images
Hearing: most developed at birth
In the womb, babies know the sound of mother’s voice
Touch/pain
Physiological reactions indicate sensation of pain- circumcision
Touch- necessary and comforting
Taste/smell
Ability to distinguish flavors: sweet, salty, sour, bitter (prefer sweet tastes)
Identify mother’s smell easily
 
Nutrition
 
Breastfeeding- “breast is best”
Colostrum: “liquid gold,” nutrient-dense, first days of life
Breastmilk has iron, fats, proteins, for proper development
Alternatives to breastfeeding
Formula feeding may be necessary in various conditions
(mother doesn’t produce enough milk, adoptive or two-
father family, mother has communicable disease, etc.)
Introducing solid foods
Start simple: one at a time is best, spaced days apart to ID
allergies
Malnutrition & clean water access
Kwashiorkor: “displaced child’s disease”- lack of sufficient
nutrition
Marasmus: starvation from lack of calories, protein
Milk anemia: Lack of iron from drinking cow’s milk in place of
more nutritive foods
Clean water makes clean formula
 
Breastmilk changes in composition
with a newborn’s development and
needs.
 
Sleep & Health
 
Infant sleep requirements
From 0-2 years, average 12.8 hrs/day
Newborns sleep 14-17 hrs
SIDS: many risk factors, many unknowns
Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths (SUID): some identified causes
“Back to Sleep”
Back-sleeping recommended for every sleep
No soft bedding, blankets, potential hazards
Co-sleeping
Benefit of skin-to-skin contact
Risk of child suffocation, increased risk w/ parental drug/alcohol use
Sleep schedules
Nighttime waking is common
Many infants sleep 6 hrs during night by 6 months
Not doing so does not indicate a serious problem, but individual differences
 
Vaccinations
 
Immunizations: the debate
Personal beliefs, opt-out programs, religious beliefs
Need for community protection, prevent
resurgence of diseases
Herd immunity
 90%+ of population is vaccinated, population is
protected
Approx. 1 in 14 children isn’t vaccinated
Outbreaks
More frequent as fewer opt to vaccinate
 
Children in communities throughout
the world can benefit from
immunizations and herd immunity.
 
Practice Question 1
 
Which nutrient found in breast milk is essential to myelination?
 
A.
Calcium
B.
Iron
C.
Fat
D.
Proteins
 
Class Activity: Vaccinations
 
Break into small groups to discuss vaccinations and public health.
What is your opinion on vaccinations?
Should they be mandatory?
Should individuals have the opt-out choice?
Write a resource paper, citing scholarly sources, supporting your arguments.
 
Cognitive Development in Infants & Toddlers
 
Learning Outcomes: 
Cognitive Development in
Infants & Toddlers
 
4.2 Explain cognitive development in infants and toddlers
4.2.1 Describe each of Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor
intelligence
4.1.2: Describe the growth of the brain during infancy
4.2.2 Explain learning and memory abilities in infants and toddlers
4.2.3 Describe stages of language development during infancy
4.2.4 Compare theories of language development in toddlers
4.2.5 Explain the procedure, results, and implications of Hamlin and Wynn's
research on moral reasoning in infants
 
Cognitive Development:
Piaget & Sensorimotor Intelligence
 
Schemas: mental representations used to understand the world
Assimilation: modification of new information to fit into our existing schemas
Accommodation: reorganizing what we know to fit new information
Six stages of sensorimotor intelligence
Stage 1- Reflexes (Birth- 6 weeks)
Stage 2- Primary Circular Reactions (6 weeks- 4 mo.)
Stage 3- Secondary Circular Reactions (4-8 mo.)
Stage 4- Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions (8-12 mo.)
Stage 5- Tertiary Circular Reactions (12-18 mo.)
Stage 6- Mental Representation (18-24 mo.)
Object Permanence
Knowledge something exists when out of sight (understanding ~8 mos/ mastery
~12-24 mos)
 
Learning & Memory Abilities in Infants
 
Piaget underestimated infant memory ability
Lacking in language to express memory
Experiments: preferential looking
Infantile amnesia
Infants and toddlers form memories, remember them weeks, months later
Lack of memory years later
Encoding/ retrieval failures
Older children, adults use linguistic retrieval methods
Misalignment between encoding and new memory organization
 
Language Development
 
Phonemes
 
are basic units of speech, which make 
morphemes
, the smallest
meaningful
 units of speech
When a child starts vocalizing, they produce 
all
 phonemes
With specialization, only native phonemes are easy to reproduce
Stages of language development:
Stage 1: Reflexive Communication
Stage 2: Reflexive communication; interest in others
Stage 3: Intentional communication
Stage 4: First words
Stage 5: Simple sentences (two words)
Stage 6: Sentences of three or more words
Stage 7: Complex sentences; has conversations
 
This 8-month old baby boy is likely
babbling and gesturing to
communicate
 
Language Development, cont.
 
Intentional vocalizations
: gurgling, cooing, learn conversational cadences
Babbling, gesturing
: syllable repetition, gesturing, sign language
Babies understand more language than they can produce
Holophrasic speech
: partial words convey thoughts
People close to the child often interpret correctly
Underextension
: a word may only be used for one specific think
Example: 
“Mommy” is my mother, so I shout for her in the grocery store when I am lost
Overextension
 is more common- generalizing
First words, cultural influences
Nouns, verbs, relationships- parts of speech vary by language & culture
Vocabulary growth spurt/ naming explosion: 
rapid vocabulary expansion
Many new words are nouns; child can name things around them & in the world
Two-word sentences, telegraphic speech: 
Lacks complete grammar, yet conveys
meaning (like text messages)
Child-directed speech:
 captures children’s attention, articulates sounds
 
Theories of Language Development
 
Nativism- Noam Chomsky
Language Acquisition Device- innate ability to learn language, understand
conventions and syntax
Children learn language through exposure, can learn any language
Critical periods- during these times learning is most important
Behaviorism- B.F. Skinner
Language is taught through reinforcement
Social Pragmatics- Tomasello & Hermann
Communication develops from need to communicate, join social world
All have components of truth and help explain language learning
 
Moral Reasoning in Infants
 
Kohllberg
Methodology relies on asking questions to determine moral
justification
Infants & toddlers can’t communicate this with limited
vocabulary
Hamlin & Wynn devised experiments to test babies’ morality
 
Hamlin & Wynn experiments: the bottom line
Children refer prosocial behavior
Prefer others like themselves
Do children have just world belief and revenge motives?
 
How do we know what this little one
is thinking? Perhaps preferential
looking or reaching can lend insight
into infant morality.
 
Practice Question 2
 
Why is the stage of rapid vocabulary growth in toddlerhood often called the
“naming explosion?”
A.
The child learns mostly people’s names in his/her expanding vocabulary.
B.
Words the child adds to their repertoire are mostly nouns: people, places,
and things.
C.
Pronouns are an important part of vocabulary growth, as children learn how
to properly refer to other people.
D.
The child usually enters pre-school programs at this age and revels in reciting
names of classmates.
 
Class Activity: Earliest memories
 
Childhood memories are ephemeral, but some have lasting impact. Think of
your earliest childhood memory and try to describe it in as much detail as
possible.
Note the retrieval cues you used and recall anything you can about your
surroundings at the time the memory occurred.
Share your memories in small groups and discuss any commonalities
between your earliest memories.
 
Emotional & Social Development During
Infancy
 
Learning Outcomes: Emotional & Social
Development During Infancy
 
4.3 Explain emotional and social development during infancy
4.3.1 Describe self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety
4.3.2 Contrast styles of attachment
4.3.3 Describe temperament and the goodness-of-fit model
4.3.4 Use Erikson’s theory to characterize psychosocial development during
infancy
 
Emotional Development
 
Attraction & withdrawal
Social smiling- appears ~2 months, laughter at 3-5 months
Displeasure- frustration is normal, sadness can indicate
withdrawal
Stranger wariness- appears ~6-15 months
Indicator of memory- familiar and unfamiliar
Separation anxiety
Shows cognitive development: “where has my caregiver gone?”
Peaks around 8-10 months, declines later w/ healthy attachment
Emotional regulation
Co-regulation: parents help manage amount of stimuli, soothe and
comfort
 
A parent may help this child
regulate his/her emotions by
soothing the child or removing
extra stimulus.
 
Self-awareness
 
Self-awareness: “I, me, my, etc.”
Develops around 15-24 months
Understanding of self as an object
“Rouge test” or mirror test: does the baby touch their own nose or
the mirror?
Rochat’s stages
Differentiation: self vs. non-self awareness (from birth)
Situation: Imitation, reaching for objects away from self (by 2 months)
Identification: Self-referential language, pass rogue test (by 2 years)
(Later stages:)
Permanence: One’s sense of self persists through time & space
Self-awareness/ meta-self-awareness: Third-person perspective
 
Attachment
 
Emotional needs vs. physical needs- 
Harlow’s monkey test
Comfort over sustenance
Ainsworth’s strange situation test- 
tested attachment styles w/ reactions
Four main types of attachment:
Secure
 
(~65% of babies): parent serves as secure base of exploration
Insecure- avoidant: 
toddler reacts to parent like a stranger; unresponsive to
parent, slow to show positive feelings
Insecure- resistant/ambivalent: 
clings to parent when they leave, reject
affectionate attempts on caregiver return
Does not explore the new environment
Disorganized
Lease secure attachment; often unpredictable parental behavior, may be from
abuse
Child has not learned emotional regulation from this model
 
Psychosocial Development
 
Temperament: Chess & Thomas- 9
dimensions
Activity level
Rhythmicity or Regularity
Approach-Withdrawal
Adaptability
Responsiveness
Reaction Intensity
Mood Quality
Distractibility
Persistence & Attention Span
 
From these dimensions, 4 main
categories:
Easy babies (40%): overall positive
disposition
Slow-to-warm (15%): relatively calm, slow to
adapt, withdraw from new situations
difficult babies (10%): negative moods, slow
to adapt to new situations
Undifferentiated (35%): combination/variety
of dispositional factors
Goodness-of-fit model
Children’s adjustment largely depends on
how well their environment is suited to meet
their needs
Parenting/communication style matches
 
Erikson’s stages- Infants & Toddlers
 
Trust vs. mistrust
Resolution: Learning the world is a safe place
Unresolved: The world is an untrustworthy or dangerous
place
Autonomy vs. shame & doubt
Resolution: Taking initiative and trying to do things one’s self
is desirable
Unresolved: One’s autonomy is thwarted and discouraged.
The child learns to doubt their instincts and feel shame at
taking initiative
 
Discovery and experimentation are vital
parts of learning autonomy
 
Practice Question 3
 
Ainsworth’s “Strange Situation” test was designed to test what construct?
A.
Self- awareness
B.
Moral development
C.
Object permanence
D.
Attachment style
 
Practice Question 4
 
Which of the following statements regarding temperament is TRUE?
 
A.
An undifferentiated temperament is fairly common, and means a child does
not neatly fit into one category.
B.
Undifferentiated temperament means a child’s temperament is
disorganized and likely stems from abusive parental relationships.
C.
An easy baby never displays negative emotion.
D.
A slow-to-warm baby becomes an easy baby under the right conditions of
nurturing and attachment.
 
Quick Review
 
What are Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor intelligence?
How does the brain grow during infancy?
What learning and memory abilities do infants and toddlers display?
How does language develop in stages during infancy?
What are the major theories of language development in toddlers, and how do they
compare and contrast?
How did Hamlin and Wynn conduct their research on moral reasoning in infants, what
were their results, and what did their research reveal?
What role do self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety in infancy?
What styles of attachment did Ainsworth describe and test, and how do they compare?
How do a child’s temperament and the goodness-of-fit model for parenting relate?
How did Erikson characterize psychosocial development during infancy?
 
Quick Review - continued
 
What are Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor intelligence?
How does the brain grow during infancy?
What learning and memory abilities do infants and toddlers display?
How does language develop in stages during infancy?
What are the major theories of language development in toddlers, and how do they
compare and contrast?
How did Hamlin and Wynn conduct their research on moral reasoning in infants, what
were their results, and what did their research reveal?
What role do self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety in infancy?
What styles of attachment did Ainsworth describe and test, and how do they compare?
How do a child’s temperament and the goodness-of-fit model for parenting relate?
How did Erikson characterize psychosocial development during infancy?
Slide Note

Cover Image: U.S. Air Force photo. Authored by Senior Airman Mercedes Taylor is in the Public Domain. Located at:https://www.airforcemedicine.af.mil/News/Display/Article/1228681/genuine-care-for-our-smallest-patients/

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Human development during infancy involves significant physical, cognitive, emotional, and social growth. This module explores the physical growth patterns, brain development, motor skills, perceptual abilities, and nutritional needs of infants. It also discusses the impact of breastfeeding, sleep concerns, vaccination debates, and consequences of failure to thrive. Rapid changes in weight, length, and brain size occur during the first two years, highlighting the importance of early childhood development.

  • Infants
  • Physical Growth
  • Brain Development
  • Nutrition
  • Early Childhood

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  1. Lifespan Development Module 4; Infancy

  2. Module Learning Outcomes Describe human development during infancy 4.1 Describe physical growth and development in infants and toddlers 4.2 Explain cognitive development in infants and toddlers 4.3 Explain emotional and social development during infancy

  3. Physical Growth & Development in Infants

  4. Learning Outcomes: Physical Growth & Development in Infants 4.1 Describe physical growth and development in infants and toddlers 4.1.1: Summarize overall physical growth patterns during infancy 4.1.2: Describe the growth of the brain during infancy 4.1.3 Explain gross and fine motor skills in infants 4.1.4 Explain newborn perceptual abilities 4.1.5 Explain the merits of breastfeeding 4.1.6 Discuss the importance of nutrition to early physical growth, including nutritional concerns for infants and toddlers such as marasmus and kwashiorkor 4.1.7 Describe sleep concerns for infants 4.1.8 Explain the vaccination debate and its consequences

  5. Overall Physical Growth Birth weight & length Normal weight range ~ 5lb 8 oz to 8lb 13oz Normal length range ~ 19.5 inches Babies lose approx. 5% of body weight in first few days Normal adjustment to life outside womb- waste elimination, feeding Physical proportions Head-to-body ratio: head comprises 25% of total length at birth Percentiles: 1-100 Failure to thrive: a child born in normal ranges falls below 20thpercentile Detection is key to medical intervention Photo credit: modification of work by Kerry Ceszyk

  6. Physical growth, continued Weight: At 4 months old, weight typically doubles At one year, weight has tripled By age 2, weight has quadrupled. Length: Average length at 12 months ~28.5-30.5 inches Average length at 24 months ~33.2-35.4 inches (CDC, 2010). Children experience rapid physical changes through infancy and early childhood.

  7. Brain Growth- The First Two Years Growth Physical size of brain increases At birth, brain is 25% adult weight At 2-years-old, 75% Neural development Most neurons are present at birth, not fully developed Transient exuberance: period of prolific dendritic connections Myelination: myelin sheath (fatty cells) protects axons, speeds neural transmissions Pruning: unused connections eliminated in favor of much-used connections Prefrontal cortex Least-developed portion of brain at birth; substantial growth During transient exuberance, a single neuron may have thousands of dendrites

  8. Motor Development Reflexes are inborn Some are necessary for survival Rooting reflex, breathing, sucking reflex Some signify health, development Moro reflex, stepping reflex, palmar grasp Motor development is orderly Follows cephalocaudal (head-down) proximodistal (center-out) principles Gross Motor Skills Large muscle groups Fine Motor Skills Small, coordinated muscle movements Pinching, grasping This baby is working on his pincer grasp.

  9. Motor & Sensory Development Sensation & Perception Sensation: interaction with sensory receptors Perception: interpreting information sensed Sensory Development Sight- least developed at birth Newborns see ~8-16 inches in front of them Preference for faces, unusual, interesting, exciting images Hearing: most developed at birth In the womb, babies know the sound of mother s voice Touch/pain Physiological reactions indicate sensation of pain- circumcision Touch- necessary and comforting Taste/smell Ability to distinguish flavors: sweet, salty, sour, bitter (prefer sweet tastes) Identify mother s smell easily

  10. Nutrition Breastfeeding- breast is best Colostrum: liquid gold, nutrient-dense, first days of life Breastmilk has iron, fats, proteins, for proper development Alternatives to breastfeeding Formula feeding may be necessary in various conditions (mother doesn t produce enough milk, adoptive or two- father family, mother has communicable disease, etc.) Introducing solid foods Start simple: one at a time is best, spaced days apart to ID allergies Malnutrition & clean water access Kwashiorkor: displaced child s disease - lack of sufficient nutrition Marasmus: starvation from lack of calories, protein Milk anemia: Lack of iron from drinking cow s milk in place of more nutritive foods Clean water makes clean formula Breastmilk changes in composition with a newborn s development and needs.

  11. Sleep & Health Infant sleep requirements From 0-2 years, average 12.8 hrs/day Newborns sleep 14-17 hrs SIDS: many risk factors, many unknowns Sudden Unexpected Infant Deaths (SUID): some identified causes Back to Sleep Back-sleeping recommended for every sleep No soft bedding, blankets, potential hazards Co-sleeping Benefit of skin-to-skin contact Risk of child suffocation, increased risk w/ parental drug/alcohol use Sleep schedules Nighttime waking is common Many infants sleep 6 hrs during night by 6 months Not doing so does not indicate a serious problem, but individual differences

  12. Vaccinations Immunizations: the debate Personal beliefs, opt-out programs, religious beliefs Need for community protection, prevent resurgence of diseases Herd immunity 90%+ of population is vaccinated, population is protected Approx. 1 in 14 children isn t vaccinated Outbreaks More frequent as fewer opt to vaccinate Children in communities throughout the world can benefit from immunizations and herd immunity.

  13. Practice Question 1 Which nutrient found in breast milk is essential to myelination? A. Calcium B. Iron C. Fat D. Proteins

  14. Class Activity: Vaccinations Break into small groups to discuss vaccinations and public health. What is your opinion on vaccinations? Should they be mandatory? Should individuals have the opt-out choice? Write a resource paper, citing scholarly sources, supporting your arguments.

  15. Cognitive Development in Infants & Toddlers

  16. Learning Outcomes: Cognitive Development in Infants & Toddlers 4.2 Explain cognitive development in infants and toddlers 4.2.1 Describe each of Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor intelligence 4.1.2: Describe the growth of the brain during infancy 4.2.2 Explain learning and memory abilities in infants and toddlers 4.2.3 Describe stages of language development during infancy 4.2.4 Compare theories of language development in toddlers 4.2.5 Explain the procedure, results, and implications of Hamlin and Wynn's research on moral reasoning in infants

  17. Cognitive Development: Piaget & Sensorimotor Intelligence Schemas: mental representations used to understand the world Assimilation: modification of new information to fit into our existing schemas Accommodation: reorganizing what we know to fit new information Six stages of sensorimotor intelligence Stage 1- Reflexes (Birth- 6 weeks) Stage 2- Primary Circular Reactions (6 weeks- 4 mo.) Stage 3- Secondary Circular Reactions (4-8 mo.) Stage 4- Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions (8-12 mo.) Stage 5- Tertiary Circular Reactions (12-18 mo.) Stage 6- Mental Representation (18-24 mo.) Object Permanence Knowledge something exists when out of sight (understanding ~8 mos/ mastery ~12-24 mos)

  18. Learning & Memory Abilities in Infants Piaget underestimated infant memory ability Lacking in language to express memory Experiments: preferential looking Infantile amnesia Infants and toddlers form memories, remember them weeks, months later Lack of memory years later Encoding/ retrieval failures Older children, adults use linguistic retrieval methods Misalignment between encoding and new memory organization

  19. Language Development Phonemes are basic units of speech, which make morphemes, the smallest meaningful units of speech When a child starts vocalizing, they produce all phonemes With specialization, only native phonemes are easy to reproduce Stages of language development: Stage 1: Reflexive Communication Stage 2: Reflexive communication; interest in others Stage 3: Intentional communication Stage 4: First words Stage 5: Simple sentences (two words) Stage 6: Sentences of three or more words Stage 7: Complex sentences; has conversations This 8-month old baby boy is likely babbling and gesturing to communicate

  20. Language Development, cont. Intentional vocalizations: gurgling, cooing, learn conversational cadences Babbling, gesturing: syllable repetition, gesturing, sign language Babies understand more language than they can produce Holophrasic speech: partial words convey thoughts People close to the child often interpret correctly Underextension: a word may only be used for one specific think Example: Mommy is my mother, so I shout for her in the grocery store when I am lost Overextension is more common- generalizing First words, cultural influences Nouns, verbs, relationships- parts of speech vary by language & culture Vocabulary growth spurt/ naming explosion: rapid vocabulary expansion Many new words are nouns; child can name things around them & in the world Two-word sentences, telegraphic speech: Lacks complete grammar, yet conveys meaning (like text messages) Child-directed speech: captures children s attention, articulates sounds

  21. Theories of Language Development Nativism- Noam Chomsky Language Acquisition Device- innate ability to learn language, understand conventions and syntax Children learn language through exposure, can learn any language Critical periods- during these times learning is most important Behaviorism- B.F. Skinner Language is taught through reinforcement Social Pragmatics- Tomasello & Hermann Communication develops from need to communicate, join social world All have components of truth and help explain language learning

  22. Moral Reasoning in Infants Kohllberg Methodology relies on asking questions to determine moral justification Infants & toddlers can t communicate this with limited vocabulary Hamlin & Wynn devised experiments to test babies morality Hamlin & Wynn experiments: the bottom line Children refer prosocial behavior Prefer others like themselves Do children have just world belief and revenge motives? How do we know what this little one is thinking? Perhaps preferential looking or reaching can lend insight into infant morality.

  23. Practice Question 2 Why is the stage of rapid vocabulary growth in toddlerhood often called the naming explosion? A. The child learns mostly people s names in his/her expanding vocabulary. B. Words the child adds to their repertoire are mostly nouns: people, places, and things. C. Pronouns are an important part of vocabulary growth, as children learn how to properly refer to other people. D. The child usually enters pre-school programs at this age and revels in reciting names of classmates.

  24. Class Activity: Earliest memories Childhood memories are ephemeral, but some have lasting impact. Think of your earliest childhood memory and try to describe it in as much detail as possible. Note the retrieval cues you used and recall anything you can about your surroundings at the time the memory occurred. Share your memories in small groups and discuss any commonalities between your earliest memories.

  25. Emotional & Social Development During Infancy

  26. Learning Outcomes: Emotional & Social Development During Infancy 4.3 Explain emotional and social development during infancy 4.3.1 Describe self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety 4.3.2 Contrast styles of attachment 4.3.3 Describe temperament and the goodness-of-fit model 4.3.4 Use Erikson s theory to characterize psychosocial development during infancy

  27. Emotional Development Attraction & withdrawal Social smiling- appears ~2 months, laughter at 3-5 months Displeasure- frustration is normal, sadness can indicate withdrawal Stranger wariness- appears ~6-15 months Indicator of memory- familiar and unfamiliar Separation anxiety Shows cognitive development: where has my caregiver gone? Peaks around 8-10 months, declines later w/ healthy attachment Emotional regulation Co-regulation: parents help manage amount of stimuli, soothe and comfort A parent may help this child regulate his/her emotions by soothing the child or removing extra stimulus.

  28. Self-awareness Self-awareness: I, me, my, etc. Develops around 15-24 months Understanding of self as an object Rouge test or mirror test: does the baby touch their own nose or the mirror? Rochat s stages Differentiation: self vs. non-self awareness (from birth) Situation: Imitation, reaching for objects away from self (by 2 months) Identification: Self-referential language, pass rogue test (by 2 years) (Later stages:) Permanence: One s sense of self persists through time & space Self-awareness/ meta-self-awareness: Third-person perspective

  29. Attachment Emotional needs vs. physical needs- Harlow s monkey test Comfort over sustenance Ainsworth s strange situation test- tested attachment styles w/ reactions Four main types of attachment: Secure (~65% of babies): parent serves as secure base of exploration Insecure- avoidant: toddler reacts to parent like a stranger; unresponsive to parent, slow to show positive feelings Insecure- resistant/ambivalent: clings to parent when they leave, reject affectionate attempts on caregiver return Does not explore the new environment Disorganized Lease secure attachment; often unpredictable parental behavior, may be from abuse Child has not learned emotional regulation from this model

  30. Psychosocial Development Temperament: Chess & Thomas- 9 dimensions Activity level Rhythmicity or Regularity Approach-Withdrawal Adaptability Responsiveness Reaction Intensity Mood Quality Distractibility Persistence & Attention Span From these dimensions, 4 main categories: Easy babies (40%): overall positive disposition Slow-to-warm (15%): relatively calm, slow to adapt, withdraw from new situations difficult babies (10%): negative moods, slow to adapt to new situations Undifferentiated (35%): combination/variety of dispositional factors Goodness-of-fit model Children s adjustment largely depends on how well their environment is suited to meet their needs Parenting/communication style matches

  31. Eriksons stages- Infants & Toddlers Trust vs. mistrust Resolution: Learning the world is a safe place Unresolved: The world is an untrustworthy or dangerous place Autonomy vs. shame & doubt Resolution: Taking initiative and trying to do things one s self is desirable Unresolved: One s autonomy is thwarted and discouraged. The child learns to doubt their instincts and feel shame at taking initiative Discovery and experimentation are vital parts of learning autonomy

  32. Practice Question 3 Ainsworth s Strange Situation test was designed to test what construct? A. Self- awareness B. Moral development C. Object permanence D. Attachment style

  33. Practice Question 4 Which of the following statements regarding temperament is TRUE? A. An undifferentiated temperament is fairly common, and means a child does not neatly fit into one category. B. Undifferentiated temperament means a child s temperament is disorganized and likely stems from abusive parental relationships. C. An easy baby never displays negative emotion. D. A slow-to-warm baby becomes an easy baby under the right conditions of nurturing and attachment.

  34. Quick Review What are Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor intelligence? How does the brain grow during infancy? What learning and memory abilities do infants and toddlers display? How does language develop in stages during infancy? What are the major theories of language development in toddlers, and how do they compare and contrast? How did Hamlin and Wynn conduct their research on moral reasoning in infants, what were their results, and what did their research reveal? What role do self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety in infancy? What styles of attachment did Ainsworth describe and test, and how do they compare? How do a child s temperament and the goodness-of-fit model for parenting relate? How did Erikson characterize psychosocial development during infancy?

  35. Quick Review - continued What are Piaget's theories and stages of sensorimotor intelligence? How does the brain grow during infancy? What learning and memory abilities do infants and toddlers display? How does language develop in stages during infancy? What are the major theories of language development in toddlers, and how do they compare and contrast? How did Hamlin and Wynn conduct their research on moral reasoning in infants, what were their results, and what did their research reveal? What role do self-awareness, stranger wariness, and separation anxiety in infancy? What styles of attachment did Ainsworth describe and test, and how do they compare? How do a child s temperament and the goodness-of-fit model for parenting relate? How did Erikson characterize psychosocial development during infancy?

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