Infants Children and Adolescents Eighth Edition Chapter 13

  • Slides: 38
Download presentation
Infants, Children, and Adolescents Eighth Edition Chapter 13 Emotional and Social Development in Middle

Infants, Children, and Adolescents Eighth Edition Chapter 13 Emotional and Social Development in Middle Childhood Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Learning Objectives (1 of 3) Socio-emotional Dev. • • 1. What personality changes take

Learning Objectives (1 of 3) Socio-emotional Dev. • • 1. What personality changes take place during Erikson’s stage of industry versus inferiority? 2. Describe school-age children’s self-concept and selfesteem, and discuss factors that affect their achievementrelated attributions. 3. Cite changes in the expression and understanding of emotion in middle childhood. 4. Describe changes in moral understanding during middle childhood, including children’s understanding of diversity and inequality. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Learning Objectives (2 of 3) Middle Children • • 5. How do peer sociability

Learning Objectives (2 of 3) Middle Children • • 5. How do peer sociability and friendship change in middle childhood? 6. Describe major categories of peer acceptance and ways to help rejected children. 7. What changes in gender-stereotyped beliefs and gender identity occur during middle childhood? 8. How do maternal employment and life in dual-earner families affect children’s development? Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Learning Objectives (3 of 3) • • • 9. Cite common fears and anxieties

Learning Objectives (3 of 3) • • • 9. Cite common fears and anxieties in middle childhood. 10. Discuss factors related to child sexual abuse, its consequences for children’s development, and its prevention and treatment. 11. Cite factors that foster resilience in middle childhood. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Erikson’s Theory: Industry vs. Inferiority • Industry: developing a sense of competence at useful

Erikson’s Theory: Industry vs. Inferiority • Industry: developing a sense of competence at useful skills and tasks • Industry combines several developments of middle childhood: – – Positive but realistic self-concept Pride in accomplishment Moral responsibility Cooperative participation with agemates • Inferiority: pessimism and lack of confidence in one’s ability to do things well Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Self-Concept in Middle Childhood • Self-concept is refined and organized into stable psychological dispositions.

Self-Concept in Middle Childhood • Self-concept is refined and organized into stable psychological dispositions. • Perspective-taking skills are crucial for developing self-concept based on personality traits. • Children form an ideal self that they use to evaluate actual self. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Influences on Self-Concept • Cognitive development influences structure of self. • Cognitive capacities and

Influences on Self-Concept • Cognitive development influences structure of self. • Cognitive capacities and feedback from others influence content of self-concept. • Perspective-taking skills (ability to distinguish others’ viewpoints from one’s own) improve. • Family and community support are important. • Content of self-concept depends on culture: – Asian parents stress harmonious interdependence. – Western parents emphasize independence and selfassertion. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Self-Esteem in Middle Childhood • Self-esteem – differentiates and adjusts to more realistic level.

Self-Esteem in Middle Childhood • Self-esteem – differentiates and adjusts to more realistic level. – becomes hierarchically structured. • Four broad self-evaluations: – academic competence – social competence – physical/athletic competence – physical appearance Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Hierarchical Structure of Self-Esteem in Mid-Elementary School Years Figure 13. 1 Photos from left

Hierarchical Structure of Self-Esteem in Mid-Elementary School Years Figure 13. 1 Photos from left to right: © Ellen B. Senisi; © Tim Pannell/Corbis; © Mitch Wojnarowicz/The Image Works; © Radius Images/Photolibrary Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Influences on Self-Esteem • Cultural values • Gender-stereotyped beliefs • Child-rearing practices: – Authoritative

Influences on Self-Esteem • Cultural values • Gender-stereotyped beliefs • Child-rearing practices: – Authoritative parenting builds self-esteem. – Controlling parenting undermines self-esteem. • Achievement-related attributions Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Achievement-Related Attributions • Mastery-oriented attributions: – Attribution of successes to ability – Incremental view

Achievement-Related Attributions • Mastery-oriented attributions: – Attribution of successes to ability – Incremental view of ability (belief that it can be improved through effort) – Focus on learning goals • Learned helplessness: – Attribution of failure to ability and success to luck – Fixed view of ability (belief that it cannot be changed) – Focus on performance goals Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Influences on Achievement-Related Attributions • Person praise vs. process praise • Teachers’ messages: emphasis

Influences on Achievement-Related Attributions • Person praise vs. process praise • Teachers’ messages: emphasis on learning vs. grades • Adult feedback: gender differences • Cognitive development: more realistic view of abilities • Cultural values Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Fostering a Mastery-Oriented Approach • Attribution retraining: – teaches children to attribute success to

Fostering a Mastery-Oriented Approach • Attribution retraining: – teaches children to attribute success to effort and strategy use. – encourages children to focus on individual improvement more than grades. – is best begun in middle childhood. • Prevention of learned helplessness: – – Provision of meaningful tasks Parent and teacher encouragement Private performance evaluations, providing constructive feedback Small classes, providing individualized support for mastery and accommodation for differences in learning styles Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Emotional Development in Middle Childhood • Self-conscious emotions—pride and guilt: – Pride and guilt

Emotional Development in Middle Childhood • Self-conscious emotions—pride and guilt: – Pride and guilt become clearly governed by personal responsibility. – Children experience self-conscious emotions even when no adult is present. – Pride motivates children to take on further challenges. – Guilt prompts them to make amends and strive for self -improvement. • Emotional understanding: – Ability to explain emotion by referring to internal states – Appreciation of mixed emotions Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Emotional Self-Regulation • Coping with stress: problem-centered vs. emotioncentered coping • Emotional self-efficacy: –

Emotional Self-Regulation • Coping with stress: problem-centered vs. emotioncentered coping • Emotional self-efficacy: – Feeling of being in control of one’s emotional experience – Fosters favorable self-image, optimistic outlook • Cultural influences: – Hindu emphasis on control of emotional behavior vs. Buddhist emphasis on maintaining calm, peaceful disposition – Western emphasis on personal rights, self-expression Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Moral Development • Conventions with vs. without clear purpose • Consideration of intentions and

Moral Development • Conventions with vs. without clear purpose • Consideration of intentions and context of violations Moral rules • Consideration of intentions and context of violations Matters of • Recognition of areas of personal choice as well as limits on choice Social conventions Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Understanding Individual Rights • Children typically challenge adult authority within the personal domain. •

Understanding Individual Rights • Children typically challenge adult authority within the personal domain. • Notions of personal choice enhance children’s moral understanding. • Older school-age children – place limits on individual choice. – typically favor kindness and fairness when faced with conflicting concerns. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Understanding Diversity and Inequality • Children absorb prevailing societal attitudes, associating power and privilege

Understanding Diversity and Inequality • Children absorb prevailing societal attitudes, associating power and privilege with white people, inferior status with people of color. • Children pick up information about group status from implicit messages in their surroundings. • When authority figures confer status distinctions, children may form biased attitudes. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

In-Group and Out-Group Biases: Development of Prejudice • By age 7 or 8, both

In-Group and Out-Group Biases: Development of Prejudice • By age 7 or 8, both majority and minority children express in-group favoritism. • Around the same time, white children’s prejudice against out-group members often weakens. • Extent to which children hold biases depends on personal/situational factors: – Fixed view of personality traits – Overly high self-esteem – Social world in which people are sorted into groups Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Ways of Reducing Prejudice • Intergroup contact in which racially and ethnically different children

Ways of Reducing Prejudice • Intergroup contact in which racially and ethnically different children – have equal status – work toward common goals – become personally acquainted – are expected by authority figures to interact • Long-term contact and collaboration among neighborhood, school, and community groups • Inducing children to view traits as changeable Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Peer Groups • Peer groups – form on basis of proximity and similarity. –

Peer Groups • Peer groups – form on basis of proximity and similarity. – adopt similar dress and behavior. • Peer culture – involves specialized vocabulary, dress code, place to “hang out. ” – often involves exclusion of peers who deviate. – may be characterized by relational aggression. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Friendship in Middle Childhood • Friendship becomes more complex and psychologically based. • Trust

Friendship in Middle Childhood • Friendship becomes more complex and psychologically based. • Trust is the defining feature of friendship. • Friendships are more selective. • High-quality friendships are fairly stable. • Impact of friendships depends on qualities of friends: kindness and compassion vs. aggression and hostile interaction Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Peer Acceptance • Likability: extent to which child is viewed as worthy social partner

Peer Acceptance • Likability: extent to which child is viewed as worthy social partner • Categories of peer acceptance: – Popular children: popular-prosocial, popular-antisocial – Rejected children: rejected-aggressive, rejectedwithdrawn – Controversial children – Neglected children – Average children Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Helping Rejected Children • Coaching, modeling, and reinforcing positive social skills • Training in

Helping Rejected Children • Coaching, modeling, and reinforcing positive social skills • Training in perspective taking and social problem solving • Interventions focusing on parent–child interaction Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Peer Victimization: Bullies and Their Victims • About 20% of children are bullies; about

Peer Victimization: Bullies and Their Victims • About 20% of children are bullies; about 25% are repeatedly victimized. • About 20– 40% of youths have experienced “cyberbullying. ” • Approaches to reducing bullying: – Change victimized children’s negative opinions of themselves and help them acquire social skills. – Change youth environments to promote prosocial attitudes and behaviors. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Gender Typing in Middle Childhood • Gender stereotyping – is well-established by age 5.

Gender Typing in Middle Childhood • Gender stereotyping – is well-established by age 5. – extends to personality traits and academic subjects. • Gender-stereotype flexibility – increases dramatically from age 7 on. – is less pronounced for boys than for girls. • Sex-segregated peer associations – strengthen during middle childhood. – continue to contribute powerfully to gender typing. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Gender Identity and Behavior Gender identity expands to include • gender typicality: degree to

Gender Identity and Behavior Gender identity expands to include • gender typicality: degree to which child feels similar to others of same gender. • gender contentedness: degree to which child feels comfortable with his/her gender assignment. • felt pressure to conform to gender roles: degree to which child feels that others disapprove of his/her gender-related traits. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Never-Married Single-Parent Families • About 40% of U. S. births are to single mothers:

Never-Married Single-Parent Families • About 40% of U. S. births are to single mothers: – More than double the percentage in 1980 – Steady decline in teenage parenthood since early 1990 s • Especially common among African-American young women • Increases financial hardship, adjustment problems in children Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Divorce Rates: International Comparisons Figure 13. 6 (Based on U. S. Census Bureau, 2014

Divorce Rates: International Comparisons Figure 13. 6 (Based on U. S. Census Bureau, 2014 b. ) Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Consequences of Parental Divorce • Immediate consequences: – Instability, conflict, drop in income –

Consequences of Parental Divorce • Immediate consequences: – Instability, conflict, drop in income – Parental stress, disorganized family life – Affected by children’s age, temperament, sex • Long-term consequences: – Improved adjustment after two years – More problems among boys, children with difficult temperaments – Affected by extent of father’s involvement Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Maternal Employment and Child Development • Benefits (when mothers enjoy work and remain committed

Maternal Employment and Child Development • Benefits (when mothers enjoy work and remain committed to parenting): – – – higher self-esteem positive family and peer relations fewer gender stereotypes better grades more father involvement • Drawbacks (when mother’s employment is stressful): – less time for children – risk of ineffective parenting Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Support for Employed Parents and Their Families • Father’s participation in child-rearing responsibilities •

Support for Employed Parents and Their Families • Father’s participation in child-rearing responsibilities • Part-time work or flexible schedules • Job sharing • On-site child care • Paid leave when children are ill • Equal pay and employment opportunities for women Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Child Care for School-Age Children • Self-care children regularly look after themselves during after-school

Child Care for School-Age Children • Self-care children regularly look after themselves during after-school hours. • Self-care increases with age and with SES. • Implications depend on children’s maturity and how they spend their time. • Before age 8 or 9, most children need supervision. • “After-care” programs offering academic assistance and enrichment activities have special value for low-SES children. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Fears and Anxieties in Middle Childhood • Fears of the dark, thunder and lightning,

Fears and Anxieties in Middle Childhood • Fears of the dark, thunder and lightning, and supernatural beings persist. • Additional fears include personal harm, academic failure, injuries and death, peer rejection. • Phobias are intense, unmanageable fears. • School refusal: – Age 5– 7 : fear of maternal separation – Age 11– 13 : fear of particular aspects of school • Harsh living conditions contribute to anxieties. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Impact of Ethnic and Political Violence • When war is temporary, most children do

Impact of Ethnic and Political Violence • When war is temporary, most children do not show long-term difficulties. • Chronic danger can impair psychological functioning. • Parental affection and reassurance are best protection against lasting problems. • International organizations aid children in war-torn regions. Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Child Sexual Abuse Characteristics of victims Characteristics of abusers Consequences Prevention and treatment •

Child Sexual Abuse Characteristics of victims Characteristics of abusers Consequences Prevention and treatment • • • More often female Most reported in middle childhood Usually male Often a parent or known by a parent Adjustment: anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, anger/hostility • Behavior: sleep difficulties, loss of appetite, suicidal reactions, substance abuse, delinquency • Prevention: education • Treatment: long-term therapy Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Children’s Eyewitness Testimony • Age differences: – School-age children give more accurate, detailed accounts.

Children’s Eyewitness Testimony • Age differences: – School-age children give more accurate, detailed accounts. – Older children are more resistant to misleading questions. – Even preschoolers can give accurate accounts if interviewed properly. • Suggestibility: – Questioners may lead or pressure witnesses. – Long delays, biased interviewing, and stereotyping of the accused can lead to false information. • Interventions: – “Court schools” to prepare child witnesses – Unbiased, open-ended questions; warm, supportive interview tone – Methods to protect children from emotional trauma or later punishment Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.

Resources That Foster Resilience • Personal: easygoing temperament; above-average intelligence; favorable self-esteem; pleasure in

Resources That Foster Resilience • Personal: easygoing temperament; above-average intelligence; favorable self-esteem; pleasure in mastery; good emotional selfregulation • Family: warm, trusting relationship with a parent; authoritative child rearing; positive discipline; supportive sibling relationships • School: teachers who are warm, helpful, and stimulating; lessons in tolerance, respect; extracurricular activities that strengthen skills • Community: high-quality after-school programs; adult who is a positive coping model; stability of neighborhood and services; youth groups that promote prosocial behavior Copyright © 2016 Laura E. Berk. All Rights Reserved.