THE GROWING YEARS
THE GROWING YEARS A insight into childrens minds
CONTENTS PAGE Timeline
1-2
The Infant Brain
3-4
Jean Piaget
5-10
Children’s Drawings
11-12
Lev Vycogsky
13-18
Children’s Drawings
19-20
John Bowlby
21-26
Children’s Drawings
27-28
Albert Bandura
29-34
Children’s Drawings
35-36
Noam Chomsky
37-40
Recent Research
41-44
TIMELINE Over the last century, the psychology of early childhood has become a major subject of study. Many theorists argue different things. Researchers have argued that children develop skills only gradually, others that many of our mental attributes are innate. The timeline shows a handful of theorists studing the infant mind.
1896
1896
John Bowlby Attachment Theory
Jean Piaget Cognitive Theory
Lev Vycogsky Social Development Theory
1
1907
1925
1928
1950
Noam Chomsky Acquisition Theory
Albert Bandura Social Learning Theory
Recent Research
2
Parietal Lobe
Occipital Lobe
Cerebellum
Brainstem
3
Cerebrum
THE INFANT BRAIN Frontal Lobe
Temporal Lobe
Every baby suffers from something we call Infantile Amnesia. The brain erases everything from the mind meaning we don’t have any memories from when we were a baby. The first two years of a baby’s life are described as formative. The baby’s brain changes the most between 12 and 24 months.
Pons
Medulla
The brain can be both simple and complex. Building blocks are cells called neurons, which transmit information in terms of electrical pulses down the cable. This is the simple side of the brain. The complexity comes in with the number of neurons and connections we have. There are about ten thousand billion neuron’s, which connect to the brain. These are not present at birth. They help determine the different functions on the brain.
Spinal Cord
4
Stage one
Stage four
JEAN PIAGET 1896 - 1980
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Stage three
COGNITIVE THEORY
Jean Piaget was a French-speaking, Swiss developmental psychologist. Piaget was known for studying the hidden side of children’s minds. Before Jean Piaget was born in 1896, people thought that a child’s mind was a blank slate. They thought they learnt anything they were taught. Piaget was a wonderful observer of children. He believed that children construct their own intelligence and their own brain. He believed that when children interact with the world, they change the way their brains are structured. The brain adapts to the world around them. Piaget didn’t have the knowledge to understand the child’s brain. He studied only the mind.
Stage two
To understand his theory he completed a number of experiments. His son was playing with a ball and it ran under a chair. His son looks around the room for it but can’t see it. He carries on playing with something else. Does this mean that his son thinks the ball has disappeared? This experiment let to numerous other people from around the world trying them out. In older children aged 3-4, Jean Piaget would get two glasses. One tall and skinny, the other short and fat. He filled the short glass up with water and he poured that into the tall glass. He asked the children if there was more water now it was in the tall glass. The young children believed there was more water in the tall glass.
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JEAN PIAGET Piaget came up with four stages of development to show a childs development. SensoriMotor, Preoperational, Concrete Operational, and Formal Operational. It has been thought that some children pass through these stages at a faster rate.
Sensori-Motor This is the first stage of Jean Piaget’s theory. It starts at birth and carries on until the age of two. The child’s behaviour in this section is solely based on perception. They rely on objects seen in that moment. For example, the ball experiment explained on the previous stage.
Preoperational This is the second stage of the cognitive theory. They enter this stage at the age of two and don’t progress to the third stage until they are six or seven. Their thinking abilities are broadening and they are starting to think and talk outside their simple experiences. They are able to use language to describe images and words about certain objects. They are also able to expand their playtime by playing mummies and daddies or doctors and nurses.
3a-2b (a=10 b=4) = 3(10) - 2(4) = 30 - 8 = 22
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3a2 = 3 b (a = ( = 3 10) - 10 b =4 = 2 0 - 8 2(4) ) 2
Concrete Operational This is the third stage. This stage starts at the age of seven and ends at the age of 12. Their thinking develops and shows signs similar to adults. It is limited to real-life situations only. They now have the ability to think logically about certain things. They are able to recognize that their thoughts might be different to the others around them. They can finally classify objects by number, mass, and weight.
Formal Operation This is the final stage of the Piaget’s theory of development. This starts at 12 and carries on through adulthood. Children begin to show signs of using real situations as a form of thought. They have the ability to develop advanced mathematical skills like percentages, fractions and algebra.
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Jean Piaget The Study of child Intelligence
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10
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Year 1 - Tree
Year 6 - Tree
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LEV VYGOTSKY 1896-1934
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SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT THEORY
Vygotsky was born in 1896 and was part of the Russian Empire. Vygotsky was a pioneer of psychology; he contributed much important research to the field. His extensive research into cognitive development has lead his theory to be one of the most important of it’s kind. Vygotsky believed children’s thinking is affected by their knowledge of the social community (which is learnt from either technical or psychological cultural tools). He also suggested that language is the most important tool for gaining this social knowledge; the child can be taught this from other people via language. He defined intelligence as ‘the capacity to learn from instruction’, which emphasises the fact there is a requirement for a more knowledgable other person or ‘teacher’. According to Vygotsky’s theory, children can do more with the help and guidance of an adult or other more experienced person than they can do by themselves. The Zone of Proximal Development defines skills and abilities that are in the process of developing. The ZPD is the range of tasks that one cannot yet perform independently, but can accomplish with the help of a more competent individual. For example, a child might not be able to walk across a balance beam on her own, but she can do so while holding her mother’s hand. Since children are always learning new things, the ZPD changes as new skills are acquired.
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LEV VYGOTSKY
Present Level This is the first level of Vyhotsky’s theory. This describes what the child is capable of doing without any help from others.
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Potential Level This is the second Level of Vygotsky’s theory. This means what the child could potentially be capable of things with help from other people or ‘teachers’. For example writing their name by themselves.
Beyond reach at present Beyond reach at present Potential Development Current Development
Description The gap between level 1 and 2 is described as this zone of proximal development. He believed that through help from more knowledgable people, the child can potentially gain knowledge already held by them. However, the knowledge must be appropriate for the child’s level of comprehension. Anything that is too complicated for the child to learn that isn’t in their ZPD cannot be learnt at all until there is a shift in the ZPD. When a child does attain their potential, this shift occurs and the child can continue learning more complex, higher level material.
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Lev Vygotsky 1978
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19
Year 1 - House
Year 6 - House
20
JOHN BOWLBY 1907-1990
Yes
Is the attachment figure sufficiently attentive and responsive?
The child now feels security, love and self-confidence ...
No
... the child becomes preoccupied with the attachment figure, clinging on and being anxious.
21
Inconsistantly No
a hierarchy of attachment behaviors develop due to increasing fear and anxiety ...
ATTACHMENT THEORY
Bowdly was born in 1907 and was a psychoanalyst and believed that mental health and behavioural problems could be attributed to early childhood. John Bowbly proposed one of the earliest theories of social development. ... and is now playful, less inhibited, smiling, explorative and sociable
No
... the child becomes defensively avoidant of contact and appears indifferent about separation and reunion.
He suggests that children come into the world biologically pre-programmed to form attachments with others, because this will help them to survive. He belived Babies are born with the tendency to display certain innate behaviours which are called social releasers, which help ensure proximity and contact with the mother or mother figure. For example crying or laughing.– these are species-specific behaviou rs. John Bowlby worked as a psychiatrist in a Child Guidance Clinic in London, where he treated many emotionally disturbed children. This experience led Bowlby to consider the importance of the child’s relationship with their mother in terms of their social, emotional and cognitive development. Specifically, it shaped his belief about the link between early infant separations with the mother and later maladjustment, and led Bowlby to formulate his attachment theory.
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JOHN BOWLBY John Bowlby explained the dynamics of long-term relations between human beings. The theory states that an infant must have a relationship with at least one primary caregiver in order to benefit the child’s social and emotional development.The theory has four key components
Safe Haven This is the first stage of the attachment theory. Ideally, the child can rely on his caregiver for comfort at times whenever he feels threatened, frightened or in danger. For example, if a child is given a toy that he doesn’t like, he’d cry and his mother would remove the toy and hug the child so he would stop crying.
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Secure Bass This is the second stage of the theory. Here, the caregiver gives a good and reliable foundation to the child as he goes on learning and sorting out things by himself. For example, a child would ask questions to his mother about why his dad got sick and can’t play with him at the moment.
Proximity Maintenance
Separation Distress
This is the third state. This means that the child aims to explore the world but still tries to stay close to his care giver. For example, a teenager discusses peer problems with his mother.
This is the final stage of Bowlby’s theory. This means that the child becomes unhappy and sorrowful when he becomes separated from his caregiver. For example, an infant cries loudly when his mother leaves for work.
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John Bowlby Attachment Theory
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26
27
Year 1 - People
Year 6 - People
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ALBERT BANDURA 1925
29
SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY
Albert Bandura was born in Canada in 1925. He was well known for his theory of how children learn. Bandura believed that children learn from copying others. In society children are surrounded by many influential models, such as parents within the family, characters on children’s TV, friends within their peer group and teachers at school. He believed children pay attention to some of these people and encode their behavior. At a later time they may copy the behavior they have observed. They may do this regardless of whether the behavior is ‘gender appropriate’ or not but there are a number of processes that make it more likely that a child will reproduce the behavior that its society deems appropriate for its sex. First, the child is more likely to attend to and imitate those people it perceives as similar to itself. Consequently, it is more likely to imitate behavior modeled by people the same sex as it is. Second, the people around the child will respond to the behavior it imitates with either reinforcement or punishment. If a child imitates a modell’s behaviour and the consequences are rewarding, the child is likely to continue performing the behaviour. If parent sees a little girl consoling her teddy bear and says “what a kind girl you are”, this is rewarding for the child and makes it more likely that she will repeat the behaviour. Her behaviour has been reinforced
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ALBERT BANDURA Bandura believed that there was three core concepts at the heart of social learning theory. He thought that the first idea is that people can learn through observation. Next is the idea that internal mental states are an essential part of this process. Finally, this theory recognizes that just because something has been learned, it does not mean that it will result in a change in behavior.
Observational Learning
Intrinsic Reinforcement
In his famous Bobo doll experiment, Bandura demonstrated that children learn and imitate behaviors they have observed in other people. The children in Bandura’s studies observed an adult acting violently toward a Bobo doll. When the children were later allowed to play in a room with the Bobo doll, they began to imitate the aggressive actions they had previously observed.
Bandura noted that external, environmental reinforcement was not the only factor to influence learning and behavior. He described intrinsic reinforcement as a form of internal reward, such as pride, satisfaction, and a sense of accomplishment. This emphasis on internal thoughts and cognitions helps connect learning theories to cognitive developmental theories. While many textbooks place social learning theory with behavioral theories, Bandura himself describes his approach as a ‘social cognitive theory.’
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Behaviour
Albert Bandura’s Theory
Personal Factors
The Modeling Process He believed that observational learning demonstrates that people can learn new information without demonstrating new behaviors. Not all observed behaviors are effectively learned. Factors involving both the model and the learner can play a role in whether social learning is successful. Certain requirements and steps must also be followed. The following steps are involved in the observational learning and modeling process: Attention, Retention, Reproduction and Motivation.
Environmental Factors
Final Motivation In addition to influencing other psychologists, Bandura’s social learning theory has had important implication in the field of eduction. Today, both teachers and parents recognize the importance of modeling appropriate behaviors. Other classroom strategies such as encouraging children and building self-efficacy are also rooted in social learning theory.
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Albert Bandura Bandura (1986)
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Year 1 - Dog
Year 6 - Dog
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NOAM CHOMSKY 1928
n
lia a It
n
ma r e
G
nc e Fr
h
lis g En
37
h
ACQUISITION THEORY
Chomsky was born in 1928 and is an American Linguistic. He is well known for his theory but also as a philosopher, cognitive scientist, logician, historian, political critic, and activist. Chomsky was interested in the mind, the thoughts and the ideas. He believed that you could study the mind without the brain being involved. Chomsky believes that children couldn’t learn from the environment alone. It had to be structured from grammar. He believes that when a child is born, they are born with grammar hard-wired in. Fragments of adult behaviour are already inside the baby’s brain. As the baby grows up and starts to learn things, the fragments inside the brain fuse together. This is how we understand numbers etc. Chomsky says ‘It’s as if the child’s brain is a CD player already set to play the language; when the CD for a certain language is inserted, that is the language that the child learns.’ Chomsky also believes that every child has a language acquisition device, which encodes the major principles of a language and its grammatical structures into the child’s brain. Children have then only to learn new vocabulary and apply the syntactic structures to form sentences. Chomsky believed that a child could not possibly learn a language through copying alone because the language spoken around them is highly irregular. Adult’s speech is often broken up and even sometimes ungrammatical.
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Noem Chomsky Verbal Behavior (1957)
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RECENT RESEARCH
Babies don’t start moving on their own until they are nine months. They have to learn how to move and understand what they are doing. The information has to go into the brain for them to learn. Touching and manipulating objects is very important. This was recognised by Jean Piaget. They like to see new things happening. This is why they watch humans a lot of the time. Babies watch anything that can move e.g. a dog. The actions of a human moving trigger something in the baby’s brain, which makes them eventually move by themselves. In the last 5-10 years the brain can be measured using the imagery method. The chemical signal of a baby’s brain can be measured by putting sensors onto the scalp. The signal is clean because most babies don’t have hair. This is an easy way of looking at the baby’s brain. At about two years of age children understand their surroundings and where they are.
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Another method is the eye tracking device. This helps show what the babies are learning but also the focus of attention. From these methods we have learnt that babies know their own name by four months. This is in the steam of sound when someone speaks. In the first year of learning, a baby’s brain specializes sounds that only matter to them. These sounds go from 600 to around 45. The connections over time get strengthened or weakened depending on what the baby hears. For example, a mother’s voice. This is a strong voice and is heard all the time. This connection will strengthen but sounds in the background will weaken. This is how the sounds are lost. The same thing can happen in face recognition. A six-month-old baby will look at a familiar monkey’s face. The baby will then recognize that one face out of a bunch of monkeys. Adults don’t do this unless they are experts. They lose this skill as they grow up. There are 600 basic phonetic sounds which babies become accustom to. By the way the brain is built babies can recognize all these sounds at birth, e.g. sucking.
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With Thanks to Kingston Primary School Children in year 1 (aged 5 and 6 ) and year 6 (10 andd 11) for the production of the drawings Designed by Stacey Reeve Š 2012