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Module 1
Human Development: Meaning,
Concepts and Approaches

Chapter 1: Introduction
Meaning
 Development: the pattern of movement or change
that begins at conception and continues through the
human life span
 Scientificstudy of processes of change and stability
throughout the human lifespan.
 Involves growth and decline (negative or positive
development)

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Some Major Principles of Human Development

 Development is relatively orderly.


 Cephalocaudal pattern
 Proximodistal pattern

 While the pattern of development is likely to be


SIMILAR, the OUTCOMES of development
processes and the RATE of development are likely
to vary among individuals
 Heredity and Environment

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Some Major Principles of Human Development

 Development takes place gradually


 More often it takes weeks, months or years for a
person to undergo changes that result in the display of
developmental characteristics.
 Development as a process is complex because it is
the product of biological, cognitive and
socioemotional processes. (Santrock, 2002)
 Biological, Cognitive and Socioemotional processes

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Some Major Principles of Human Development

 Development is the product of biological,


cognitive, and socioemotional processes
 Biological: changes in an individual’s physical nature
 Cognitive: changes in thought, intelligence, and
language
 Socioemotional: changes in relationships with other
people, changes in emotions, and changes in
personality

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Developmental Changes Are a Result of Biological,
Cognitive, and Socioemotional Processes

Biological
processes

Cognitive Socioemotional
processes processes

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2 Approaches to Human Development

 Traditional Approach: emphasizes extensive


change from birth to adolescence, little to no
change in adulthood, and decline in old age

 Life-Span Approach: emphasizes developmental


change throughout childhood and adulthood

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The Life-Span Perspective
 Life-Span Perspective views development as:

 Lifelong
 Multidimensional
 Plastic
 Contextual
 Development is a process that involves growth,
maintenance, and regulation of loss

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The Life-Span Perspective
 Development is Lifelong
 Earlyadulthood is not the endpoint of development
 No age period dominates

 Development is Multidimensional
 Consists
of biological, cognitive, and socioemotional
dimensions
 Multiple components within each dimension

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The Life-Span Perspective
 Development is Plastic
 Plasticity: capacity for change and adaptation

 Development involves Growth, Maintenance, and


Regulation of Loss

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The Life-Span Perspective
 Development is Contextual
 All development occurs within a context (setting)
 Each setting is influenced by historical, economic, social, and
cultural factors
 Contexts exert three types of influences:
 Normative age-graded influences: similar for individuals in a
particular age group
 Normative history-graded influences: common to people of a
particular generation because of historical circumstances
 Non-normative life events: unusual occurrences that have a major
impact on the individual’s life

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Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 All the domains of development and learning –


physical, social and emotional, and cognitive – are
important, and they are closely related.

 Many aspects of children’s learning and


development follow well documented sequences,
with later abilities, skills and knowledge building
on those already acquired.

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 Development and learning proceed at varying rates


from child to child, as well as uneven rates across
different areas of a child’s individual functioning.

 Development and learning result from a dynamic


and continuous interaction of biological maturation
and experience.

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 Early experiences have profound effects, both


cumulative and delayed on a child’s development
and learning; and optimal period exists for certain
types of development and learning to occur.

 Development proceeds toward greater complexity,


self-regulation, and symbolic or representational
capacities.

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 Children develop best when they have secure,


consistent relationships with responsive adults and
opportunities for positive relationships with peers.

 Development and learning occur in and are


influenced by multiple social and cultural contexts

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 Always mentally active in seeking to understand


the world around them, children learn in a variety
of ways; a wide range of teaching strategies and
interactions are effective in supporting all these
kinds of learning.

 Play is an important vehicle for developing, self-


regulating as well as for promoting language,
cognition, and social competence.

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


Principles of Child development and
learning that inform practice

 Development and learning advance when children


are challenged to achieve at a level just beyond their
current mastery, and also when they have many
opportunities to practice newly acquired skills.

 Children’s experiences shape their motivation and


approaches to learning, such persistence, initiative,
and flexibility; in turn, these dispositions and
behaviors affect their learning and development

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MODULE 3: ISSUES ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights


reserved.
The Nature of Development
 Developmental Period: a time frame in a person’s
life that is characterized by certain features
 Prenatal period: conception to birth (9 months)
 Tremendous growth
 Infancy: birth to 18-24 months
 Dependenceupon adults
 Development of many psychological activities

 Early childhood: end of infancy to 5-6 years


 Preschool years
 Self-sufficiency and increased play

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The Nature of Development
 Developmental Period (continued)
 Middle and late childhood: 6-11 years
 Reading, writing, and arithmetic
 Focus on achievement and self-control

 Adolescence: varying endpoints; from 10-12 to 18-22 years


 Rapid physical changes
 Pursuit of independence and identity

 Early adulthood: late teens to early 30’s


 Personal and economic independence
 Selecting a mate

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The Nature of Development
 Developmental Period (continued)
 Middle adulthood: 40-60 years
 Social involvement and responsibility
 Assisting the next generation

 Late adulthood: 60’s-70’s to death


 Lifereview
 Adjustment to new social roles
 Longest developmental span
 “youngest old” vs. “oldest old”

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Developmental Issues
 Nature and Nurture: the extent to which
development is influenced by biological inheritance
and/or environmental experiences
 Nature proponents argue that an evolutionary and
genetic foundation produces commonalities in growth
and development
 Nurture proponents emphasize the importance of both
the biological and social environment

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Developmental Issues
 Stability and Change: the degree to which early
traits and characteristics persist through life or
change
 Stability/Constancy: traits and characteristics are seen
as the result of heredity and early life experiences
 10-15% of children are consistently shy
 10-15% are bold/expressive

 Change: traits and characteristics can be altered by


later experiences
 Role of early and later experiences is hotly debated

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Developmental Issues
 Continuity and Discontinuity: focuses on whether
development is either:
 A process of gradual, cumulative change (continuous)
 A set of distinct stages (discontinuous)

 Evaluating Developmental Issues:


 Most developmentalists acknowledge that
development is not all-or-nothing
 There is debate regarding how strongly each of these
issues influences development

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Developmental Issues
 Continuity
 The typical 18-month-old child might have between 10
and 50 words to speak (1y.o and 6 mo.)
 but by the time children reach kindergarten age, they have
a very mature sounding vocabulary of about 2000 words
 Discontinuity
 Development appear rather ABRUPTLY rather than
GRADUALLY
 We see discontinuity when children hit “milestones”

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Developmental Issues

The interaction of heredity and environment is so


extensive that to ask which is more important, nature or
nurture, is like asking which is more important to a
rectangle, height or weight.
William Greenough

©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.


©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

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