Essay
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Chapter Five
Entering the Social World: Socioemotional Development in
Infancy and Early Childhood
Erikson’s Stages of Early Psychosocial Development
⊗ Basic trust vs. mistrust
⊗ Autonomy vs. shame and doubt
⊗ Initiative vs. guilt
Attachment
⊗ Evolutionary psychology perspective ⊗ Attachment figure = “secure base”
⊚ Infant behavior motivated by need to feel safe and need to explore
⊗ Internal Working Model ⊚ Secure vs. Insecure
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Steps Toward Attachment
⊗ Bowlby proposed four stages of attachment ⊚ Preattachment stage (birth to 6-8 weeks) ⊚ Attachment in the making (6-8 weeks to 6-
8 months) ⊚ True attachment (6-8 months to 18
months) ⊚ Reciprocal relationships (18 months on)
Forms of Attachment ⊗ Ainsworth’s Strange Situation paradigm
⊚ Observe child’s reactions to a newcomer ⊚ Classified four types of attachment
⊙ Three insecure types; one secure
Four Types of Attachment
Relationships
⊗ Secure attachment (60-65%): baby may or may not cry upon separation; wants to be with mom upon her return
and stops crying
⊗ Avoidant attachment (20%): baby not upset by separation; ignores or looks away when mom returns
⊗ Resistant attachment (10-15%): separation upsets baby; remains upset after mom’s return and is difficult to
console
⊗ Disorganized attachment (5-10%): separation and return confuse the baby; reacts in contradictory ways (e.g.,
seeking proximity to the returned mom, but not looking at
her)
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Father-Infant Relationships
⊗ Attachment to fathers tends to follow that with mothers
⊗ Fathers tend to spend more time playing with children than taking care of them
⊗ Fathers play with children differently than mothers (more rough and tumble) ⊚ Mothers more often read to children and
talk with them ⊗ Children tend to seek out the father for a
playmate; mothers are preferred for comfort
Consequences of Attachment
⊗ Feelings of security lay foundation for psychological development ⊚ Future social relationships ⊚ Memory ⊚ Perception of others ⊚ Ability to process painful information
What Determines Quality of Attachment?
⊗ Quality of Caregiving ⊗ Infant Characteristics ⊗ Parents’ internal working models
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Emerging Emotions
Types of Emotions
⊗ Basic Emotions ⊚ Happiness
⊙ Social smile (6-10 weeks)
⊚ Anger ⊚ Sadness ⊚ Fear
⊙ Stranger Anxiety (~6
months)
⊗ Complex Emotions ⊚ Examples: Guilt,
Embarrassment,
Pride
⊚ Child must understand self
⊚ 18-24 months
Recognizing Emotions
⊗ 4-6 months: differentiate among faces expressing happiness, sadness, and fear ⊚ Engage in social referencing ⊚ 14-month-olds remember earlier observed
emotional reactions of parents to particular objects
⊚ 18-month-olds use the reactions of one adult to another adult’s behavior to guide their own behavior
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Fostering Emotional Understanding ⊗ Factors contributing to children’s understanding of
emotion ⊚ Parents and children frequently discussing past
emotions (especially negative ones, such as fear and anger)
⊚ Parents explaining how feelings differ and feelings’ situational elicitors
⊚ Positive and rewarding relationship with parents and siblings
Regulating Emotions
⊗ Emotion regulation: controlling what one feels and how to communicate feeling ⊚ Dependent on cognitive processes
⊙ Attention and reappraisal ⊗ 4-6 months: use simple strategies to regulate
emotions (e.g., turning away from a scary image)
⊗ 24 months: because of an adult’s attention and help, express sadness rather than fear or anger
Interacting with Others
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The Joys of Play ⊗ Even two 6-month-olds look, smile, and point at each
other ⊗ 12 months: parallel play, in which children play alone but
are keenly interested in what others are doing ⊗ 15-18 months: simple social play, in which children do
similar activities and talk or smile at each other ⊗ 24 months: cooperative play, theme-based play where
children take special roles
Make-Believe ⊗ Values and traditions are expressed through make-believe
or imaginary characters ⊗ Helps children explore frightening topics ⊗ Imaginary playmates promote imagination, sociability, and
adjustment ⊗ Pretend play is a regular part of preschooler’s play
⊚ 16-18 months understand difference between pretending vs. reality
Gender Differences
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Images of Men & Women: Facts & Fantasy
⊗ Social role: cultural guidelines as to how we should behave, especially with others ⊚ Gender roles are one of the first learned
⊗ Learning gender stereotypes ⊚ Our world is not gender neutral ⊚ 18 months: girls and boys look longer at
gender-stereotyped pictures of toys ⊚ 4-year-olds: extensive knowledge of
gender-stereotyped activities and some behaviors or traits
Gender-Related Differences
⊗ How do boys and girls actually differ? ⊚ Verbal ability ⊚ Mathematics ⊚ Spatial ability ⊚ Memory ⊚ Social influence ⊚ Aggression ⊚ Emotional sensitivity ⊚ Effortful control
Gender Typing
⊗ Parents are equally warm and encouraging to boys and girls
⊗ Parents model and differentially reinforce appropriate gender-typed behaviors
⊗ Results support social learning theory ⊗ Gender Schema Theory ⊗ Mothers rarely contradict or question
children’s gender-stereotyped statements ⊗ Peer influence