Educational Resources in Infancy

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DEP2004-Chapter3.3Powerpoint.pptx

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Explain: These are the questions we will consider as we begin our journey into the field of lifespan development.

Developing the Roots of Sociability

Forming Relationships

Differences Among Infants

Developing the Roots of Sociability

LO:

Do infants experience emotions?

What sort of mental lives do infants have?

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Basic Familiar Expressions

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Define:

Nonverbal encoding is nonverbal expression of emotion.

These consistencies have led researchers to conclude that we are born with the capacity to display basic emotions.

Remarkably similar across the most diverse cultures

Nonverbal encoding fairly consistent among people of all ages

Facial Expression of Emotions

Important nonverbal communication tool used in everyday social interactions

Universals in Facial Expressions

Across every culture, infants show similar facial expressions relating to basic emotions. Do you think such expressions are similar in nonhuman animals?

Who IS that strange person, anyway?

Stranger anxiety

Memory develops  ability to recognize familiar people emerges  abililty to anticipate and predict events increases appearance of unknown person causes fear

Common around 6 months

Significant difference among infants and situations

When infants smile at a person, rather than a nonhuman stimulus, they are displaying a social smile.

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Stranger anxiety is the caution and wariness displayed by infants when encountering an unfamiliar person. Such anxiety typically appears in the second half of the first year.

Although stranger anxiety is common after the age of 6 months, significant differences exist between children.

Some infants, particularly those who have a lot of experience with strangers, tend to show less anxiety than those whose experience with strangers is limited. Furthermore, not all strangers evoke the same reaction.

For instance, infants tend to show less anxiety with female strangers than with male strangers.

In addition, they react more positively to strangers who are children than to strangers who are adults, perhaps because their size is less intimidating.

Separation Anxiety

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Separation anxiety is the distress displayed by infants when a customary care provider departs.

Separation anxiety, the distress displayed by infants when their usual care provider leaves their presence, is a universal phenomenon beginning at around the age of 7 or 8 months. It peaks at around the age of 14 months and then begins to decline. Does separation anxiety have survival value for humans?

Source: From Infancy: Its Place in Human Development by Jerome Kagan, Richard P. Kearsley, and Phillip R. Zelazo, p. 107, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, Copyright © 1978 by the President and Fellows of Harvard University College.

Separation Anxiety

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Infants' growing cognitive skills allow them to ask reasonable questions, but they may be questions that they are too young to understand the answer to: “Why is my mother leaving?” “Where is she going?” and “Will she come back?”

Stranger anxiety and separation anxiety represent important social progress. They reflect both cognitive advances and the growing emotional and social bonds between infants and their caregiver.

Universal across cultures

Begins about 7-8 months; peaks around 14 months

Largely attributable to same reasons as stranger anxiety

Smiling

Earliest smiles: little meaning

6 to 9 weeks:

Begin reliable smiling

Smile first relatively indiscriminate then selective

18 months:

Social smiling more frequent toward humans than nonhuman objects

End of 2nd year:

Use smiling purposefully

Show sensitivity to emotional expressions of others

Decoding Others' Facial and Vocal Expressions

Imitative abilities early in life may pave way for nonverbal decoding

Infants interpret others' facial and vocal expressions that carry meaning

In first 6 to 8 weeks

By 4 months

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Infants seem to be able to discriminate vocal expressions of emotion at a slightly earlier age than they discriminate facial expressions.

Although relatively little attention has been given to infants' perception of vocal expressions, it does appear that they are able to discriminate happy and sad vocal expressions at the age of 5 months.

In first 6 to 8 weeks: little attention paid to facial expressions due to limited visual precision

By 4 months: understand underlying emotions tied to facial and vocal expressions of others

By 5 months: discriminate happy and sad vocal expressions

By 7 months: respond to appropriately matched vocal and facial expressions

If you're happy and she knows it…

Social referencing

First occurs around 8-9 months

Intentional search for cues

Aids in understanding others' behavior in context

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Social referencing is the intentional search for information about others' feelings to help explain the meaning of uncertain circumstances and events.

It is a fairly sophisticated social ability: Infants need it not only to understand the significance of others' behavior, by using such cues as their facial expressions, but also understand the meaning of those behaviors within the context of a specific situation.

Do infants really know who they are?

?

?

?

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Development of Self-Awareness

Roots of self-awareness

Begin to grow around 12 months

Influenced by cultural upbringing

Research

Rouge spot

Average awareness begins 17 to 24 months

Complicated tasks requests

Awareness of inabilities around 23-24 months

Research suggests that this 18 month-old baby is exhibiting, clearly developing sense\of self.

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Very young infants do not have a sense of themselves as individuals; they do not recognize themselves in photos or mirrors.

Roots of self-awareness, knowledge of oneself, begin to grow at around the age of 12 months.

Reaction suggests that they are conscious that they lack the ability to carry out difficult tasks and are unhappy about it—a reaction that provides a clear indication of self-awareness.

By the age of 18 to 24 months, infants in western cultures have developed at least an awareness of their own physical characteristics and capabilities, and they understand that their appearance is stable over time. It is not clear how far this awareness extends.

Just Think About That!

Theory of mind

Knowledge and beliefs how mind works and influences behavior

Child explanations used to explain how others think

How does a theory of mind develop?

Young children

See other people as compliant agents

Begin to understand causality and intentionality

Demonstrate rudiments of empathy

Begin to use deception to fool others

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Young children begin to understand that others' behaviors have some meaning and that the behaviors they see people enacting are designed to accomplish particular goals, in contrast to the “behaviors” of inanimate objects.

By the age of 2, infants begin to demonstrate the rudiments of empathy. Empathy is an emotional response that corresponds to the feelings of another person. At 24 months of age, infants sometimes comfort others or show concern for them. In order to do this, they need to be aware of the emotional states of others.

During their second year, infants begin to use deception, both in games of “pretend” and in outright attempts to fool others. A child who plays “pretend” and who uses falsehoods must be aware that others hold beliefs about the world—beliefs that can be manipulated.

Infants appear to express and to experience emotions, and their emotions broaden in range to reflect increasingly complex emotional states.

The ability to decode the nonverbal facial and vocal expressions of others develops early in infants.

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Infants develop self-awareness, the knowledge that they exist separately from the rest of the world, after about 12 months of age and by the age of 2, children have developed the rudiments of a theory of mind.

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______________ is the caution and wariness

expressed by infants when encountering an

unfamiliar person.

a. Separation anxiety

b. Babbling

c. Stretching

d. Stranger anxiety

Marcel has been attending day care without incident since he was 6 weeks old. Now at around 14 months he starts to express difficulty when his mother leaves. He cries, shouts “No!” and then grabs her leg as she attempts to leave for work. Which of the following concepts best explains Marcel's change in behavior?

a. stranger anxiety

b. intuition

c. egocentrism

d. separation anxiety

When Darius bumped his knee on the table, he

gazed at his mother to look at her reaction. When

he saw that she was alarmed, he began crying.

This is an example of ______________.

a. fear

b. anxiety

c. social referencing

d. self-awareness

Why would the sad or flat emotional expressiveness of a depressed parent be hard on an infant? How might it be counteracted?

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Forming Relationships

Understanding Attachment

Earliest animal research suggests attachment based on biologically determined factors

Lorenz  imprinted goslings

Harlow  contact-seeking monkeys

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Imprinting: behavior that takes place during a critical period and involves attachment to the first moving object that is observed.

Harry Harlow gave infant monkeys the choice of cuddling a wire “monkey” that provided food or a soft, terry cloth monkey that was warm but did not provide food. Their preference was clear: Baby monkeys spent most of their time clinging to the cloth monkey, although they made occasional expeditions to the wire monkey to nurse. Harlow suggested that the preference for the warm cloth monkey provided contact comfort.

Harlow's work illustrates that food alone is not the basis for attachment. Given that the monkeys' preference for the soft cloth “mothers” developed some time after birth, these findings are consistent with the research showing little support for the existence of a critical period for bonding between human mothers and infants immediately following birth.

Understanding Attachment

Earliest human research suggests attachment based on needs for safety and security

Bowlby:

Attachment provides home base through qualitatively unique relationship with individual who best provides safety.

As children become more independent, they progressively roam further away from their secure base.

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In Bowlby's view, attachment is based primarily on infants' needs for safety and security—their genetically determined motivation to avoid predators. As they develop, infants come to learn that their safety is best provided by a particular individual.

How Strange!

Ainsworth Strange Situation

Widely used experimental technique to measure attachment

Sequence of staged episodes that illustrate strength of attachment between child and (typically) mother

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The “strange situation” follows this general eight-step pattern: (1) The mother and baby enter an unfamiliar room; (2) the mother sits down, leaving the baby free to explore; (3) an adult stranger enters the room and converses first with the mother and then with the baby; (4) the mother exits the room, leaving the baby alone with the stranger; (5) the mother returns, greeting and comforting the baby, and the stranger leaves; (6) the mother departs again, leaving the baby alone; (7) the stranger returns; and (8) the mother returns and the stranger leaves (Ainsworth et al., 1978).

Do all infants attach?

Reactions to Strange Situation vary considerably

One-year-olds typically show one of four major patterns

(See table 3-9)

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Reactions to various aspects of Strange Situation vary considerably, depending on nature of their attachment to their mothers.

One-year-olds typically show one of four major patterns—secure, avoidant, ambivalent, and disorganized-disoriented.

Secure attachment pattern use mother as the type of home base that Bowlby described; seem at ease in the Strange Situation as long as their mothers are present; explore independently, returning to her occasionally. Although they may or may not appear upset when she leaves, securely attached children immediately go to her when she returns and seek contact. Most North American children—about two-thirds—fall into the securely attached category.

Avoidant attachment pattern do not seek proximity to the mother, and after she has left, they typically do not seem distressed; seem to avoid her when she returns. It is as if they are indifferent to her behavior. Some 20 percent of 1-year-old children are in the avoidant category.

Ambivalent attachment pattern, display a combination of positive and negative reactions to their mothers. Initially, ambivalent children are in such close contact with the mother that they hardly explore their environment. They appear anxious even before the mother leaves, and when she does leave, they show great distress. But upon her return, they show ambivalent reactions, seeking to be close to her but also hitting and kicking, apparently in anger. About 10 to 15 percent of 1-year-olds fall into the ambivalent classification.

Classifications of Infant Attachment

And then there were four…

Recent expansion of Ainsworth work suggests fourth category: disorganized-disoriented

Inconsistent, contradictory, and confused behavior

May be least securely attached

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Children who have a disorganized-disoriented attachment pattern show inconsistent, contradictory, and confused behavior. They may run to the mother when she returns but not look at her, or seem initially calm and then suddenly break into angry weeping. Their confusion suggests that they may be the least securely attached children of all. About 5 to 10 percent of all children fall into this category.

In cases in which the development of attachment has been severely disrupted, children may suffer from Reactive Attachment Disorder, a psychological problem characterized by extreme problems in forming attachments to others. In young children, it can be displayed in feeding difficulties, unresponsiveness to social overtures from others, and a general failure to thrive. Reactive Attachment Disorder is rare and typically the result of abuse or neglect.

Does the quality of attachment have significant consequences for later life relationships?

Yes

Securely attached 1- year-old males show fewer psychological difficulties at older ages

Securely attached infants are more socially and emotionally competent later and more positively viewed

Adult romantic relationships are associated with attachment style developed during infancy

But

Children who do not have a secure attachment style during infancy do not invariably experience difficulties later in life

Children with a secure attachment at age 1 do not always have good adjustment later in life

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What roles do parents play in producing attachment?

Mothers

Sensitivity to their infants' needs and desires is hallmark of mothers of securely attached infants

Aware of moods and feelings

Responsive in face-to-face interactions

Feeds “on demand”

Demonstrates warmth and affection

Responds rapidly and positively to cues

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Mothers of secure infants tend to provide the appropriate level of response with interactional synchrony, in which caregivers respond to infants appropriately and both caregiver and child match emotional states.

Way for mothers to produce insecurely attached infants, according to Ainsworth, is to ignore their behavioral cues, to behave inconsistently with them, and to ignore or reject their social efforts.

What roles do parents play in producing attachment?

Fathers

Expressions of nurturance, warmth, affection, support, and concern are extremely important to infant emotional and social well-being

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Little mention of the father and his potential contributions to the life of the infant in early theorizing and research on attachment.

Ask: Why do you think this is?

First, John Bowlby, who provided the initial theory of attachment, suggested that there was something unique about the mother–child relationship. He believed the mother was uniquely equipped, biologically, to provide sustenance for the child, and he concluded that this capability led to the development of a special relationship between mothers and children.

Second, the early work on attachment was influenced by the traditional social views of the time, which considered it “natural” for the mother to be the primary caregiver, while the father's role was to work outside the home to provide a living for his family.

Ask: What caused this to change?

Societal norms are changing

Cultural Differences

How then does culture affect attachment?

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These differences in the ways that fathers and mothers play with their children occur even in the minority of families in the United States in which the father is the primary caregiver.

Differences occur in very diverse cultures: Fathers in Australia, Israel, India, Japan, Mexico, and even in the Aka Pygmy tribe in central Africa all engage more in play than in caregiving, although the amount of time they spend with their infants varies widely.

Differences in ways fathers and mothers play with their children occur in many US families and in very diverse cultures

Research findings suggest human attachment is not as culturally universal as Bowlby predicted.

Certain attachment patterns seem more likely among infants of particular cultures:

Germany

Japan

China and Canada

Does attachment differ across cultures?

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One study of German infants showed that most fell into the avoidant category.

Other studies, conducted in Israel and Japan, have found a smaller proportion of infants who were securely attached than in the United States.

Comparisons of Chinese and Canadian children show that Chinese children are more inhibited than Canadians in the Strange Situation.

While it is possible that Bowlby's claim that the desire for attachment is universal was too strongly stated, most of the data on attachment have been obtained by using the Ainsworth Strange Situation, which may not be the most appropriate measure in non-Western cultures.

Which conclusion is “right”?

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?

?

Hey Baby, Baby!

Babies react positively to presence of peers from early in life and engage in rudimentary forms of social interaction

Infants' sociability is expressed in several ways

Earliest months of life

Nine- to twelve-month-olds

Japanese parents seek to avoid separation and stress during infancy and do not foster independence.

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Young babies show more interest in peers than in inanimate objects and pay greater attention to other infants than they do to a mirror image of themselves.

They also begin to show preferences for peers with whom they are familiar compared with those they do not know.

Earliest months of life, they smile, laugh, and vocalize while looking at their peers.

Nine- to twelve-month-olds mutually present and accept toys, particularly to familiar others and play social games, such as peek-a-boo or crawl-and-chase.

“Expert” Infants

With age, infants begin to imitate each other

Impart information and skills from “experts” infant peers

May be inborn skill

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Abilities learned from the “experts” are retained and later utilized to a remarkable degree.

Learning by exposure starts early in life.

Recent evidence shows that even 6-week-old infants can perform delayed imitation of a novel stimulus to which they have earlier been exposed, such as an adult sticking the tongue out the side of the mouth.

Mirror, mirror, in the brain…

Mirror neurons

Fire not only when an individual enacts particular behavior, but also when individual simply observes another organism carrying out same behavior

Help infants understand others' actions and to develop theory of mind

Dysfunction may be related to some developmental disorders

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Research on brain functioning shows activation of the inferior frontal gyrus both when an individual carries out a particular task and also when observing another individual carrying out the same task.

Dysfunction of mirror neurons may be related to the development of disorders involving children's theory of mind as well as autism, a psychological disorder involving significant emotional and linguistic problems.

Attachment, the positive emotional bond between an infant and a significant individual, affects a person's later social competence as an adult.

Infants and the persons with whom they interact engage in reciprocal socialization as they mutually adjust to one another's interactions.

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Infants react differently to other children than to inanimate objects. Babies react positively to the presence of peers from early in life, and they engage in rudimentary forms of social interactions.

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______________ is the positive emotional bond that develops between a child and a particular individual.

a. Attachment

b. Smiling

c. Playing

d. Laughing

Children who are attached to their primary caregivers feel ______________ when they are with them and feel ______________ during times of distress.

a. concern; sad

b. pleasure; comforted

c. overwhelmed; distraught

d. confused; comfort

One way mothers can improve the likelihood of

secure attachment in their children is to respond

to their needs appropriately. Another name for this communication in which mothers and children match emotional states is___________.

a. emotion matching

b. goodness of fit

c. interactional synchrony

d. environmental assessment

In what sort of society might an avoidant attachment style be encouraged by cultural attitudes toward child rearing?

In such a society, would characterizing the infant's consistent avoidance of its mother as anger be an accurate interpretation?

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Differences Among Infants

Characteristics That Make Infants Unique

Personality

Sum total of enduring characteristics differentiating one individual from another

From birth onward

Infants begin to show unique, stable traits and behaviors that ultimately lead to their development as distinct, special individuals

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Origins of personality, the sum total of the enduring characteristics that differentiate one individual from another, stem from infancy.

From birth onward, infants begin to show unique, stable traits and behaviors that ultimately lead to their development as distinct, special individuals.

What were YOU like?

?

?

?

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Encourage students to share family stories about themselves.

Erikson: Psychosocial Development

Early experiences responsible for shaping key aspects of personalities

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During this period, infants develop a sense of trust or mistrust, largely depending on how well their needs are met by their caregivers.

If infants are able to develop trust, they experience a sense of hope, which permits them to feel as if they can fulfill their needs successfully. On the other hand, feelings of mistrust lead infants to see the world as harsh and unfriendly, and they may have later difficulties in forming close bonds with others.

During the end of infancy, children enter the autonomy-versus-shame-and-doubt stage, which lasts from around 18 months to 3 years. During this period, children develop independence and autonomy if parents encourage exploration and freedom within safe boundaries. However, if children are restricted and overly protected, they feel shame, self-doubt, and unhappiness.

Stage 1: trust versus mistrust

Trust = sense of hope and success

Mistrust = sense of harsh, unfriendly world

Stage 2: autonomy-versus-shame-and-doubt stage

Autonomy = sense of independence

Shame and doubt = sense of self-doubt and unhappiness

Another View: Temperament and Stabilities in Infant Behavior

What is temperament?

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Temperament encompasses patterns of arousal and emotionality that are consistent and enduring characteristics of an individual.

How does temperament apply to infants?

Temperament

Refers to how children behave, as opposed to what they do or why they do it

Displays as differences in general disposition from birth, largely due initially to genetic factors

Tends to be fairly stable well into adolescence

Is not fixed and unchangeable and can be modified by childrearing practices

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Dimensions of Temperament

Central dimensions

Activity level

Irritability

(See Table 3-10)

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Activity level, which reflects the degree of overall movement.

Another important dimension of temperament is the nature and quality of an infant's mood, and in particular a child's irritability.

Dimensions of Temperament

Categorizing Temperament

Babies can be described according to one of several temperament profiles.

Thomas and Chess, 1980

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Easy babies. Easy babies have a positive disposition. Their body functions operate regularly, and they are adaptable. They are generally positive, showing curiosity about new situations, and their emotions are moderate or low in intensity. This category applies to about 40 percent (the largest number) of infants.

Difficult babies. Difficult babies have more negative moods and are slow to adapt to new situations. When confronted with a new situation, they tend to withdraw. About 10 percent of infants belong in this category.

Slow-to-warm babies. Slow-to-warm babies are inactive, showing relatively calm reactions to their environment. Their moods are generally negative, and they withdraw from new situations, adapting slowly. Approximately 15 percent of infants are slow-to-warm.

As for the remaining 35 percent, they cannot be consistently categorized. These children show a variety of combinations of characteristics. For instance, one infant may have relatively sunny moods, but react negatively to new situations, or another may show little stability of any sort in terms of general temperament.

Easy babies

Difficult babies

Slow-to-warm babies

Inconsistently categorized babies

Does temperament matter?

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?

?

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Ask students: Does temperament matter? Why? Why not? In what ways?

One obvious question to emerge from the findings of the relative stability of temperament is whether a particular kind of temperament is beneficial.

The answer seems to be that no single type of temperament is invariably good or bad. Instead, children's long-term adjustment depends on the goodness-of-fit of their particular temperament and the nature and demands of the environment in which they find themselves.

Certain temperaments are, in general, more adaptive than others. The key determinant seems to be the way parents react to their infants' difficult behavior.

Temperament seems to be at least weakly related to infants' attachment to their adult caregivers.

Cultural differences also have a major influence on the consequences of a particular temperament.

True or false?

Behavior exhibited by girls and boys is interpreted in very different ways by adults.

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True

Ask students to give examples from their own experiences or observations. Is this unique to very early childhood? Does it continue throughout life?

How is this difference manifested?

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Parent-child play patterns

Different styles of activity and interaction from parents

Parental gender-based interpretation of child behavior

Gender Differences

Adults view behavior of children through lens of gender

All cultures prescribe gender roles for males and females

These roles differ greatly between cultures

Considerable amount of disagreement over extent and causes of gender differences

Differences between male and female infants, are generally minor

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Gender refers to our sense of being male or female.

The term “gender” is often used to mean the same thing as “sex,” but they are not actually the same.

Sex typically refers to sexual anatomy and sexual behavior, while gender refers to the social perceptions of maleness or femaleness.

Ask: What do you think some of these gender differences might be?

Most agree that boys and girls do experience at least partially different worlds based on gender.

Some gender differences are fairly clear from the time of birth. For example, male infants tend to be more active and fussier than female infants.

Boys' sleep tends to be more disturbed than that of girls. Boys grimace more, although no gender difference exists in the overall amount of crying.

There is also some evidence that male newborns are more irritable than female newborns, although the findings are inconsistent.

Gender Roles

Gender differences emerge with age

By age 1

Able to distinguish between males and females

Girls prefer to play with dolls or stuffed animals, while boys seek out blocks and trucks

By age 2

Boys behave more independently and less compliantly than girls

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Gender differences emerge more clearly as children age—and become increasingly influenced by the gender roles that society sets out for them.

Bring Alexander's Doll to class and read it to students. Ask: Should boys be allowed to play with dolls? Dress up in tutus? Should girls be allowed to play with trucks and toy tools? Dress up like construction workers? What influences your answer to these questions?

For instance, when a child takes his or her first steps, parents tend to react differently, depending on the child's gender: Boys are encouraged more to go off and explore the world, while girls are hugged and kept close. It is hardly surprising, then, that by the age of 2, girls tend to show less independence and greater compliance.

One study examined girls who were exposed before birth to abnormally high levels of androgen, a male hormone, because their mothers unwittingly took a drug containing the hormone while pregnant. Later, these girls were more likely to play with toys stereotypically preferred by boys (such as cars) and less likely to play with toys stereotypically associated with girls (such as dolls).

And so…

Differences in behavior between boys and girls begin in infancy and future continue throughout childhood (and beyond).

Although gender differences have complex causes, representing some combination of innate, biologically related factors and environmental factors.

These differences play profound role in social and emotional development of infants.

Family Life in 21st Century

Average size of families is shrinking.

Despite overall decline, half million births still to teenage women, the vast majority of whom are unmarried.

Close to 50 percent of children under age of 3 are cared for by other adults while their parents work, and more than half of mothers of infants work outside home.

One in three U.S. children lives in low income households.

The number of single-parent families has increased dramatically over the past 20 years.

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Ask: What do these statistics suggest?

Many infants are being raised in environments in which substantial stressors are present.

Society is adapting to the new realities of family life in the 21st century. Several kinds of social support exist for the parents of infants, and society is evolving new institutions to help in their care.

Where Are Children Cared For?

According to a major study by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, children end more time in some kind of child care outside the home or family as they get older.

Source: NICHD, 2006.

Good news, bad news!

Good news: Direct benefits

High-quality child care outside home produces only minor differences

Good news: Indirect benefits

Children in lower income households and those whose mothers are single may benefit

Bad news:

Infants less secure when in low-quality child care

Children who spend long hours lower have ability to work independently

Children who spend ten or more hours a week in group child care for a year or more have an increased probability of being disruptive in class

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Good news: research finds little or no difference in the strength or nature of parental attachment bonds of infants who have been in high quality child care compared with infants raised solely by their parents.

Ballooning body of research finds that the effects of participation in group child care are neither unambiguously positive or unambiguously negative. What is clear, though, is that the quality of child care is critical.

Good news: Direct benefits

High-quality child care outside home produces only minor differences from home care in most respects, and may even enhance certain aspects of development.

Good news: Indirect benefits

Children in lower income households and those whose mothers are single may benefit from the educational and social experiences in child care, and from higher income produced by parental employment.

Bad news:

Infants may be somewhat less secure when they are placed in low-quality child care, if they are placed in multiple child-care arrangements, or if their mothers are relatively insensitive and unresponsive.

Children who spend long hours in outside-the-home child-care situations have lower ability to work independently and have less effective time management skills.

Children who spend ten or more hours a week in group child care for a year or more have an increased probability of being disruptive in class.

What aspects of development might be enhanced by participation in infant child care outside the home?

High-quality infant child care seems to produce only minor differences from home care in most respects, and some aspects of development may even be enhanced.

The American Psychological Association suggests that parents consider these questions in choosing a program:

Are there enough providers?

Are group sizes manageable?

Has the center complied with all governmental regulations, and is it licensed?

Do the people providing the care seem to like what they are doing?

Choosing the Right Infant Care Provider

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The American Psychological Association suggests that parents consider these questions in choosing a program:

Are there enough providers? A desirable ratio is one adult for every three infants, although one to four can be adequate.

Are group sizes manageable? Even with several providers, a group of infants should not be larger than eight.

Has the center complied with all governmental regulations, and is it licensed?

Do the people providing the care seem to like what they are doing? What is their motivation? Is child care just a temporary job, or is it a career? Are they experienced? Do they seem happy in the job, or is offering child care just a way to earn money?

What do the caregivers do during the day? Do they spend their time playing with, listening and talking to, and paying attention to the children? Do they seem genuinely interested in the children, rather than merely going through the motions of caring for them? Is there a television constantly on?

Are the children safe and clean? Does the environment allow infants to move around safely? Is the equipment and furniture in good repair? Do the providers adhere to the highest levels of cleanliness? After changing a baby's diaper, do providers wash their hands?

What training do the providers have in caring for children? Do they demonstrate a knowledge of the basics of infant development and an understanding of how normal children develop? Do they seem alert to signs that development may depart from normal patterns?

Finally, is the environment happy and cheerful? Child care is not just a babysitting service: For the time an infant is there, it is the child's whole world. You should feel fully comfortable and confident that the child-care center is a place where your infant will be treated as an individual.

According to Erikson, during infancy individuals move from the trust-versus-mistrust stage of psychosocial development to the autonomy-versus-shame-and-guilt stage.

Temperament encompasses enduring levels of arousal and emotionality that are characteristic of an individual.

Gender differences become more pronounced as infants age.

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Child care outside of the home can have neutral, positive, or negative effects on the social development of children, depending largely on its quality.

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Patterns of arousal and emotionality that are consistent and enduring in an individual are known as an individual's ______________.

a. gender

b. temperament

c. intelligence

d. mood

______________ are prescribed by societies as activities or positions appropriate for males and females.

a. Gender expectations

b. Sex roles

c. Gender roles

d. Sex expectations

Research finds significant differences in the

strength and nature of the parental bond for

infants raised in the home compared to infants

exposed to high-quality day care.

True

False

If you were introducing a bill in Congress regarding the minimum licensing requirements for child care centers, what would you emphasize?

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