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Developmental Theories

Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

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CC-BY-SA Lesson 2 Slides on Developmental Theories from Laura Overstreet's Lifespan Psychology course from Open Course Learning: https://drive.google.com/folderview?id=0B0b0olJJwIXAcXpiX0N3U0ZfczA&usp=sharing&tid=0B9nrmpuRmC4ENjVGdVo3dVh6NzQ

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Page 1: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Developmental Theories

Page 2: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

The Relationship between and Research What is a theory?

An explanationSuggests what, how, or whyIn development, it explains

changein us over time

A guideline for researchHelps us understand research

It is not a fact.

Page 3: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Theories of Motivation

Psychodynamic Theories

Page 4: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Freud’s Psychosexual Theory: Background Freud: (b.1856-

d.1939) Hysteria “talking cure” early childhood Mental illness

and reality

Page 5: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Defense Mechanisms Repression Regression Rationalization Denial Sublimation Displacement Projection Reaction

Formation

Page 6: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Freud’s Parts of the Self

Id Ego Superego

Page 7: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Psychosexual Development

Oral Stage Anal Stage Phallic Stage Latency Stage Genital Stage

Page 8: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory

Student of Freud’s

Emphasized the Ego

Father of Developmental Psychology

Page 9: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Erikson’s First Four Stages

Trust vs. Mistrust (infancy)

Autonomy vs. Shame and Doubt (toddlers)

Initiative vs. Guilt (early childhood)

Industry vs. Inferiority (middle childhood)

Page 10: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Erikson’s Last Four Stages Identity vs. Role

Confusion (teens) Intimacy vs.

Isolation (early adulthood)

Generativity vs. Stagnation (midlife adults)

Integrity vs. Despair (late adults)

Page 11: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Test Yourself Who is the father of developmental

psychology? According to Freud, which part of

the self are we born with? At what age do we establish a basic

sense of trust, per Erikson? Name and describe one defense

mechanism. When does the ego develop? How would you test Freudian

concepts?

Page 12: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Learning Theories

Focus on how we learn and emphasizes behaviors that can be seen rather than internal motivation

Page 13: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Classical Conditioning Ivan Pavlov Learning through

association Feelings or

emotions Gut level reactions

of the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems

Page 14: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Pavlov’s DogsOne of Pavlov’s Dogs(Robert K. Lawton)

Page 15: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Classical Conditioning Terms

Before conditioning Unconditioned stimulus Unconditioned response

After conditioning Conditioned stimulus Conditioned response

Page 16: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

WHO CARES ABOUT PAVLOV’S DOGS?

Page 17: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Watson and Behaviorism Watson built on

Pavlov’s work Parenting

expert in the 1920s

Kids can be taught to love or hate anything!

Little Albert

Page 18: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Who Else Cares?

ADVERTIZERS

Page 19: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Operant Conditioning Why repeat

actions? Law of Effect Reinforcement

not criticism

Page 20: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Reinforcers

Reinforcer defined Intrinsic or primary reinforcers Extrinsic or secondary

reinforcers

Page 21: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Primary or Secondary?

Food College Degree

Money

Big House Hug Car

Job Compliment Award

Page 22: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Positive Reinforcers

Adding An example? How do you positively

reinforce others?

Page 23: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Negative Reinforcers

Subtraction An example? How do you negatively

reinforce others?

Page 24: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Punishment

Stopping behavior Less effective than reinforcers. Suppresses rather than stops Doesn’t indicate desired

behavior. Leads to a focus on mistakes.

Page 25: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY

Page 26: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Social Learning Theory

Learn from others without conditioning

Modeling Albert Bandura and the Bobo

Doll Experiment on Aggression

Page 27: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

How did you learn?

To kiss? To drive? To be afraid of the dark? To do your job?

Page 28: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Cognitive Theories

How thinking changes over time

Page 29: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development “father of

cognitive psychology”

how children think and reason

Maturation

Page 30: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Principles: Equilibrium

Cognitive Equilibrium:

A balance between what we see and what we know

Page 31: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Principles: Schema

Schema: Mental box containing a concept

Page 32: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Principles: Assimilation

Assimilation:

Similarity between what we see and what we already know

Page 33: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Principles: Accommodation

Accommodation:

Changing our mind to adjust to new people, objects, experiences, etc.

Page 34: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development Sensorimotor (birth to 2) Preoperational (early childhood) Concrete operational (middle

childhood) Formal Operational (adolescence or

adulthood)

Page 35: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Sociocultural Theory: Vygotsky Cognitive

abilities change with guidance

Scaffolding Zone of

Proximal Development: potential

Page 36: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological Systems Model

A focus on context

Page 37: Lifespan Development Lesson 2: Developmental Theories

The Ecological Systems Model Microsystems Mesosystems Exosystems Macrosystems Chronosystems