development: Foundational Issues in Human Growth and Development Flashcards

1
Q

10 Stages of Human Development:

A
  • Prenatal period (conception to birth) Infancy (birth to 2 years)
  • Toddlerhood (2–3 years) Early childhood (3–5 years)
  • Middle childhood (6–12 years)
  • Adolescence (13–19 years)
  • Young adulthood (19–30 year)s
  • Middle adulthood (about 30–60 years)
  • Late adulthood (about 60–75 years)
  • Old age (about 75+ years)
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2
Q

Three types of Aging:

A

biological, psychological, social

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3
Q

biological ageing

A

Categorization of aging as biological (how the body functions and changes over time).

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4
Q

psychological ageing

A

Categorization of aging based on one’s perception of personal age

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5
Q

social ageing

A

Categorization of aging based on how one’s chronological age is viewed within the societal, or cultural context.

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6
Q

8 Categories of Theories of Human Development:

A

learning,
cognitive,
psychoanalytic, humanistic,

ethological,
language,
physical,
moral

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7
Q

nature vs. nurture

A

A controversial debate concerning the importance of nature innate qualities) versus nurture (environmental characteristics) in determining individual differences in human development

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8
Q

continuous development

A

Emphasizes the small shifts or gradual, sequential, changes that occur in behaviors and abilities over time and that are difficult to separate

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9
Q

discontinuous development

A

Portrays changes in behaviors and abilities as qualitatively different from previous or subsequent behaviors and abilities. Theorists who endorse this view of human development categorize developmental changes into distinct stages.

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10
Q

active theories

A

Developmental theories that portray people as active in regulating or governing their behavior

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11
Q

reactive theories

A

Theories of human development, such as Skinner’s operant conditioning, that propose that people are passive and react to environmental stimuli to accommodate to changes.

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12
Q

7 Special Designs in Human Development Research:

A
  • case study
  • naturalistic study
  • survey research
  • correlational research design
  • cross-sectional design studies
  • longitudinal design studies
  • time-lag studies
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13
Q

case study

A

(a) Used in human development research to collect data on a developmental change from a single individual, or a single group of individuals experiencing a similar developmental phenomenon. (b) A qualitative research approach that describes a case, a distinct system of an event, process, setting, or individuals or small group of individuals

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14
Q

naturalistic study

A

A type of study in which the researcher observes and documents a behavior or phenomenon in its natural setting.

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15
Q

survey research

A

A method of collecting quantitative data, in which a researcher selects a sample of participants and administers a series of questions to them. Survey research can be conducted via interviews or through administration of questionnaires and involves sampling a pool of participants to assess and understand their thoughts, feelings, and perceptions regarding the variable(s) under study

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16
Q

correlational research design

A

A type of nonexperimental research design that allows the researcher to describe the relationship between two variables. The variables are not experimentally manipulated; therefore, the researcher cannot determine a causal relationship. Instead, this design computes a correlation coefficient that describes the strength and direction of a relationship.

17
Q

cross-sectional design studies

A

A research method that allows the researcher to simultaneously compare several groups from differing levels of development (e.g., 20-year-olds, 30-year-olds, 40-year-olds) with respect to the independent variable(s).

18
Q

longitudinal design studies

A

A research method that involves repeated observations of a population over long periods of time. Longitudinal designs can be categorized further as trend (i.e., involves assessing the general population over time), where new individuals are sampled each time data is collected, cohort (i.e., involves assessing the same population over time), or panel studies (i.e., involves studying the same individuals over time).

19
Q

time-lag studies

A

A type of study commonly used in developmental research; involves replications of previous studies on a modern-day cohort using the same parameters as the previous study