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Theories of child psychology

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THEORIES OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY
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Page 1: Theories of child psychology

THEORIES OF CHILD

PSYCHOLOGY

Page 2: Theories of child psychology

CONTENTS

1. DEFINITIONS

2. THEORIES OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY Psychodynamic theories

Psychosexual theory-FreudPsycho social theory-Eric Erickson Cognitive theory-piaget

Behavioral TheoriesHierarchy of needs-Maslow Social learning theory-Bandura Classical conditioning-Pavlov Operant conditioning-Skinner

Page 3: Theories of child psychology

DEFINITIONS

PSYCHOLOGY: is the science dealing with human nature, function and phenomenon of his soul in the main.

CHILD PSYCHOLOGY: is the science that deals with the mental power or an interaction between the conscious and subconscious element in a child.

BEHAVIOUR MANAGEMENT: The means by which dental health team effectively and efficiently performs treatment for a child and simultaneously instills a positive dental attitude in the child.

THEORIES OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY

It is classified into two groups

Psychodynamic theories:

Psychosexual theory-FreudPsycho social theory-Eric Erickson Cognitive theory-piaget

Behavioral Theories:

Hierarchy of needs-Maslow Social learning theory-Bandura Classical conditioning-Pavlov Operant conditioning-Skinner

Page 4: Theories of child psychology

Psychoanalytical theory (Sigmond Freud) :

He described the five psychosexual stages.

Psychic structure proposed by freud in psycho dynamic theory composed of three parts

1. Id: It is the basic structure of personality, which serves as a reservoir of instincts or their mental representative. It is present at birth , impulse ridden and strives for immediate pleasure and gratification(pleasure principle)

2. Ego: It develops out of Id in the second to sixth month of life when the infant begins to distinguish between itself and the outside world. It is the mediation between Id and super Ego. Unlike Id, Ego is governed by the reality principle. It is concerned with memory and judgment. It is developed after birth, expands with age and it delays ,modifies and controls Id impulses on a realistic level

3. Super Ego: it is the prohibition learned from environment. It acts as a censor of acceptability of thoughts, feelings and behaviour.It is determined by regulations imposed upon the child by parents society, and culture. It is the internalized control which produces the feeling of shame and guilt.

Page 5: Theories of child psychology

Freud’s stages of development:

• Birth

• Oral stage

• Anal stage

• Uretheral stage

• Phallic stage

• Latency stage

• Genital stage

Classical Conditioning (Pavlov)

The more frequent pairing of the conditioned and unconditioned stimulus, the stronger is the conditioning.

The principles involved in the process are:

1. Generalization where in the process of conditioning is evoked by a band of stimuli centered around a specific conditioned stimulus e.g., a child who has had a painful experience with a doctor in white coat always associates any doctor in white coat with pain.

2. Extinction of the conditioned behavior results if the association between the conditioned and the unconditioned response is not reinforced.

Page 6: Theories of child psychology

3. Discrimination is the opposite of generalization

Skinner described four basic types of operant conditioning

1. Positive reinforcement: occurs if a pleasant consequence follows the response e.g., a child rewarded for good behavior following dental treatment

2. Negative Reinforcement: involves removal of unpleasant stimuli following a response e.g., if the parent gives into the temper tantrums thrown by the child , he reinforces this behavior

3. Omission: refers to removal of the pleasant response of a particular response e.g., if the child misbehaves during the dental procedure, his favorite toy is taken away for a short time resulting in the omission of the undesirable behavior

4. Punishment: involves introduction of on aversive stimulus into a situation to decrease the undesirable behavior e.g., use of palatal rake in correction of tongue thrusting habit.

Page 7: Theories of child psychology

Cognitive theory (Piaget)

Piaget formulated his theory on how children and adolescents think and acquire knowledge. The process of adaptation is made up of 3 functional variants-

1. Assimilation

2. Accommodation

3. Equilibration

The sequence of development has been categorized into 4 major stages

1. Sensory motor stage (0 to 2 years): Every child is born with certain strategies for interacting with environment

2. Pre-operational stage (2 to 6 years): Primitive strategies change as a child assimilates new experiences and accommodates original strategies

3. Concrete operation stage (6 to 12 years): The thinking process become logical

4. Formal operation stage (11 to 15 years): The child now a teenager is able to think still more abstractly

Page 8: Theories of child psychology

Hierarchy of Needs (Masler)

Masler believed in the self-actualization theory, i.e., the need to understand the totality of a person.

Page 9: Theories of child psychology

Psychosocial theory (Eric Erickson)

Erickson concentrated on child’s development covering the entire span of life cycle from infancy to childhood through old age.

Erickson’s psychological stages:-

Basic trust versus mistrust (0 to 1 yr)

Autonomy versus shame ,doubt (2 to 3 yrs)

Initiative versus guilt (4 to 5 yr)

Industry versus inferiority (6 to 12 yrs)

Identity versus role confusion (13 to 18 yrs)

Intimacy versus isolation (19 to 25 yrs)

Generativity versus stagnation (26 to 50 yrs)

Ego integrity versus despair (50 +yrs)

Page 10: Theories of child psychology

Social learning theory (Bandura)

It is the most complete, clinically useful and theoretically a sophisticated form of behavior therapy. As compared to operant and classical conditioning this theory is

• Less reductionistic

• Provides more explanatory concepts

• Encompasses a broader range of phenomena

The learning of behavior is affected by four principle elements

1. Antecedent determinants

2. Consequent determinants

3. Modeling

It involves four processes which are

• Attention process

• Retention process

• Reproduction process

• Motivation

4. Self-regulation

Page 11: Theories of child psychology

REFERENCE

SHOBHA TANDON


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