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Page 1: Child Development Theorists

Child Development

Theorists

Page 2: Child Development Theorists

Complete the Front of the worksheet

• Worksheet can be found on brown table under the bulletin board

• On the back, identify and explain the five areas of development.

Page 3: Child Development Theorists

Sigmund Freud (1856-1939)

• Findings & Ideas– Believed that

personality develops through a series of stages

– Experiences in childhood profoundly affect adult life

• Significance – Childhood is much

more important than previously thought and its effects are longer lasting

Page 4: Child Development Theorists

Jean Piaget (1896-1980)

• Findings & Ideas– The first to study

children scientifically– Focused on how

children learned– Believed that children

go through four stages of learning

• Significance – Children must be

given learning tasks appropriate to their level of development

Page 5: Child Development Theorists

Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934)

• Findings & Ideas– Wrote that biological

development and cultural experience influence children’s ability to learn

– Social contact is essential to intellectual development

• Significance – Children should be

given the opportunity for frequent social interaction

Page 6: Child Development Theorists

Eric Ericson (1902-1994)

• Findings & Ideas– Like Freud, said that

personality develops in stages

– Thought that each stage includes a unique psychological crisis

– If that crisis is met in a positive way, the individual develops normally

• Significance – Parents and

caregivers must be aware of, and sensitive to, children’s needs at each stage of development and support them through crises.

Page 7: Child Development Theorists

B.F. Skinner (1904-1990)

• Findings & Ideas– Argued that when a

child’s have positive results, they will be repeated.

– Negative results will make the actions stop

• Significance – Parents and other

caregivers can affect a child’s behavior through the use of negative and positive feedback

Page 8: Child Development Theorists

Urie Bronfenbrenner (1917-2005)

• Findings & Ideas– Outlined layers of

environment that affect a child’s development, such as the child’s own biology, family/community environment, and society.

• Significance – Child’s primary

relationship with a caregiver needs to be stable, loving and lasting

Page 9: Child Development Theorists

Albert Bandura (b. 1925)

• Findings & Ideas– Said that children learn

by imitating others– Disagreed with Skinner.– Pointed out that

although the environment shapes behavior, behavior also affects environment

• Significance – Caregivers must

provide good examples for children to follow

Page 10: Child Development Theorists

Educational Video

Page 11: Child Development Theorists

What are the four observation records?

Page 12: Child Development Theorists

Why observe children?• Offers you the chance to see children as individuals• Meeting the challenges of development in their own

way & in their own time– See a child’s personality

• Adapt activities to a child’s needs• Identify children who may have disabilities or require

extra care • Research – early intervention – do better over the long

term • Feedback

Page 13: Child Development Theorists

How to Observe Young Children

• Knowing what to observe & how to analyze it • Observing – more than just watching • Written record – analyze • Separate fact (objective (seen & heard)) from

opinion (subjective) – Assumption – fact taken for granted– You think you know, but do you really??– Do not make judgments

• Smiling does not mean happy

Page 14: Child Development Theorists

Observations

• What down what you see when you see it• Wait – forget • Write down:

– Date, time, # of children, # of adults, names and ages

• Wait down exact ages • 2 year old (is she 2 years and 1 month, 2 years

and 10 months = BIG difference)

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Running Record

• Record of everything for a set period of time

• Useful • Just getting to know the child/children• Concentrating on a certain type of

development/area

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Anecdotal Record

• Report of a child’s actions that concentrates on a specific behavior or area of development

• Ex: adjustment to a new child care center. Every morning (two weeks) the observer could record how a child behaves upon arriving at the center

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Frequency Count • A tally of how often a certain behavior occurs• Useful: when trying to change unwanted

behavior • First – observer find a baseline – a count

made before any steps are taken to try to change behavior

• After attempts to change behavior – additional frequency counts – is it working?

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Developmental Checklists

• List of skills children should master or behaviors they should exhibit at a certain age

Page 22: Child Development Theorists

When observing

• Must keep everything CONFIDENTIAL – protection of another person’s privacy by limiting access to personal information

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