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Middle Childhood: The Social World

chapter eight

Invitation to the Life Span

Kathleen Stassen Berger | Fourth edition

1

The Nature of the Child (part 1)

Drive for independence from parents expands the social world.

Learn to care for themselves

Learn from each other

The Nature of the Child (part 2)

Erikson’s insights

Industry versus inferiority

Fourth of Erikson's eight psychosocial crises

Characterized by tension between productivity and incompetence

Children

Attempt to master culturally valued skills and develop a sense of themselves as either industrious or inferior, competent or incompetent.

Signs of Psychosocial Maturation over the Years of Middle Childhood

Responsibly perform specific chores

Manage a weekly allowance and activities

Complete homework

Attempt to conform to peers

Express preferences for after-school hours

Accept some responsibility for pets, younger children

Strive for independence from parents

See chart on page 283 for additional information.

4

The Nature of the Child (part 3)

Parental reactions

Shift from care provision to engagement in dialogue, discussion, and shared activities.

Various levels of release from parental supervision and provision of more autonomy

Decrease in time with parents; increase in time alone and with parents

5

The Nature of the Child (part 4)

Self-concept

Development of more specific and logical ideas about personal intelligence, personality abilities, gender, and ethnic background

Measurement of self to others in relation to own abilities, social status, and other attributes

Formulation of a more reality-grounded view of self; rise in self-criticism and self-consciousness

The Nature of the Child (part 5)

Children who affirm pride in their gender and ethnicity are likely to develop healthy self- esteem.

Some face social prejudice related to their minority or religious group membership.

Developing a sense of pride is more effective for self- confidence than directly preparing children for prejudice.

The Nature of the Child (part 6)

Culture and self-esteem

Cultures and families differ in which attitudes and accomplishments they value.

Emerging self-perception benefits academic and social competence.

Praise for process—not static qualities—encourages growth.

Notice and value of material possessions increases

Same Situation, Far Apart: Play Ball

8

The Nature of the Child (part 7)

Resilience

Capacity to adapt well to significant adversity and to overcome serious stress

Important components

Resilience is dynamic, not a stable trait.

Resilience is a positive adaptation to stress.

Adversity must be significant.

See Table 8.1 for dominant ideas about resilience from 1965 to present day.

Resilience is dynamic - a person may be resilient at some periods but not at others.

Resilience is a positive adaptation to stress - if rejection by a parent leads a child to establish a closer relationship with another adult, that child is resilient.

Adversity must be significant - Resilient children overcome conditions that overwhelm many of their peers.

Accumulated stresses over time, including minor ones, are more devastating than an isolated major stress.

9

The Nature of the Child (part 8)

Cumulative stress

Stress accumulates over time.

Daily hassles can be more detrimental than isolated major stress.

Social context is imperative.

Child soldiers

Homeless children

Separation after natural disaster

Cognitive Coping

Cognitive coping: Factors contributing to resilience

Child's interpretation of events

Support of family and community

Personal strengths such as creativity and intelligence

Avoidance of parentification

Child's interpretation of a family situation (poverty, divorce, etc.) impacts how that situation affects him or her.

Parentification: When a child acts more like a parent than a child. This may occur if the actual parents do not act as caregivers, making a child feel responsible for the family.

11

Families During Middle Childhood (part 1)

Shared and nonshared environments

Most personality traits and intellectual characteristics traced to genes and nonshared environment

Influence of shared environment shrinks with age.

Effect of nonshared environment increases.

12

Families During Middle Childhood (part 2)

Remember!

Recent findings reassert parent power.

Children raised in the same households by the same parents do not necessarily share the same home environment.

Changes in the family affect every family member differently, depending on age and/or gender.

Most parents respond to each of their children differently.

Families During Middle Childhood (part 3)

Family structure

Legal and genetic relationships among relatives living in the same home, includes nuclear family, extended family, stepfamily, and others.

Genetic connections

Legal connections

14

Families During Middle Childhood (part 4)

Family function

The way a family works to meet the needs of its members

Function is more important than structure, but harder to measure.

During middle childhood, families help children by

Providing basic material necessities.

Encouraging learning.

Helping them develop self-respect.

Nurturing friendships.

Fostering harmony and stability.

15

Families During Middle Childhood (part 5)

Needs of children in middle childhood

Physical necessities

Learning

Self-respect

Peer relationships

Harmony and stability

Families During Middle Childhood (part 6)

Family function is more important than structure.

Children value safety and stability.

Stability is difficult in military families. Caregivers are discouraged from making changes.

Children displaced because of storms, fire, war may suffer psychologically.

17

Families During Middle Childhood (part 7)

Various family structures

Two-Parent Families

Nuclear family

Stepparent family

Adoptive family

Grandparents alone

Two same-sex parents

Nuclear family: A family that consists of a father, a mother, and their biological children under age 18

18

Families During Middle Childhood (part 8)

Various family structures

Single-Parent Families

Single mother or father (never married)

Single mother or father (divorced, separated, or widowed)

Grandparent alone

More Than Two Adults

Extended family

Polygamous family

Single-parent family: A family that consists of only one parent and his or her children

Extended family: A family of three or more generations living in one household

Polygamous family: A family consisting of one man, more than one wife, and their children

19

Families During Middle Childhood (part 9)

Cohort changes

More single- parent households, more divorces and remarriages, and fewer children per family than in the past

Proportions differ, but problems within non- nuclear families are similar worldwide

U.S. has more single parents than other developed nations, yet almost two- thirds of all U.S. school- age children live with two parents

Possible Problems

As the text makes clear, structure does not determine function, but raising children is more difficult as a single parent, in part because income is lower. African American families have at least one asset, however. They are more likely to have grandparents who are actively helping with child care.

20

Families During Middle Childhood (part 10)

Family changes

Only one parent and his or her children under age 18

31 percent of all U.S. school-age children; rates of structure changes depend on age of child

More than half of U.S. children in a single-parent home for at least a year

Have children who fare worse in school and in adult life than most other children.

Are often low-income and unstable, move more often and add new adults more often in single-mother households

21

Families During Middle Childhood (part 11)

Two-parent family

Work best on average; children learn better in school; few psychological problems

Education, earning potential, and emotional maturity increase the rate of marriage and parenthood and decrease the rate of divorce.

Major predictor of their children’s well- being was not the parents’ sexual orientation but their income and stability; contact increases affection and care

Shared parenting decreases child maltreatment risk

Didn’t Want to Marry

This couple was happily cohabiting and strongly committed to each other but didn’t wed until they learned that her health insurance would not cover them unless they were legally married. Twenty months after marriage, their son was born.

For all children, having two parents around every day makes it more likely that someone will read to them, check their homework, invite their friends over, buy them new clothes, and save for their education. Of course, having two married parents does not guarantee good care

22

Families During Middle Childhood (part 12)

Single fathers and stepfathers

Generally, fathers who do not live with their children become less involved every year.

Single-parent fathers experience same problems as single mothers.

Remarried adults tend to spend less on step-children; sometimes reject them; change residence; disrupt harmony and stability.

Step-children may experience constellation shifts, differential discipline strategies, anger, sadness or destructive behaviors

23

Families During Middle Childhood (part 13)

Single families in cultural context

On average, single-parent structure functions less well -- generalities

Less income, time, stability

Emotional and academic support reduction

Culture is always influential.

24

Families During Middle Childhood (part 14)

Extended family

Family consisting of parents, their children, and other relatives living in one household

10 percent of U.S. school-age children

Family type distinction based on who lives in same household

Opposing Perspectives Why is this an “opposing perspective?”

Aren’t extended families always great?

It depends on intergenerational attitudes and income.

Multiple generation habitation is often accompanied by stress on all members.

Potential for family conflict is evident worldwide.

Extended families are often poor and conflicted, the two conditions known to harm children no matter what the family structure

Every family structure is sometimes good and sometimes not.

26

Families During Middle Childhood (part 15)

Family trouble

Two factors increase the likelihood of dysfunction in every structure, ethnic group, and nation.

Low income or poverty

High conflict

Many families experience both!

Families During Middle Childhood (part 16)

Poverty: Family-stress model

Any risk factor damages a family only if it increases the stress on that family.

Adults' stressful reaction to poverty is crucial in determining the effect on the children.

Wealth

Generally more income correlates with better family functioning.

Score gap between schools with high- and low- income children

is larger in the United States than in other nations.

Reaction to wealth may cause difficulty; parental reaction is key.

Effects of poverty are cumulative.

Both family function and family structure are affected by poverty.

28

Families During Middle Childhood (part 17)

Conflict

Family conflict harms children, especially when adults fight about child rearing.

Fights are more common in stepfamilies, divorced families, and extended families.

Although genes have some effect, conflict itself is often the main influence on the child's well-being.

Researchers found that, although genes had some influence, witnessing conflict was crucial, causing externalizing problems in boys and internalizing problems in girls.

Quiet disagreements did little harm, but open conflict (such as yelling when children could hear) and divorce did.

29

Families and Schools

This graph shows the score gap in fourth- grade science on the 2015 TIMSS between children in schools where more than 25 percent of the children are from affluent homes compared to children in schools where more than 25 percent are poor. Generally, the nations with the largest gaps are also the nations with the most schools at one or the other end of the spectrum and fewest in between. For example, 23 percent of the children in the United States attended schools that were neither rich nor poor, but 37 of the Japanese children did.

30

The Peer Group (part 1)

Culture of children

Each group of children has games, sayings, clothing styles, and superstitions that are not common among adults, just as every culture has distinct values, behaviors, and beliefs.

Customs, rules, rituals

Appearance

Independence from adults

No Toys

Boys in middle childhood are happiest playing outside with equipment designed for work. This wheelbarrow is perfect, especially because at any moment the pusher might tip it.

31

The Peer Group (part 2)

Friendship

School-age children value personal friendship more than peer acceptance.

Intense and intimate friendships improve with advances in social cognition and effortful control.

By the end of middle childhood, close friendships are almost always between children of the same sex, age, ethnicity, and socioeconomic status.

Boys: Better at joint excitement

Girls: Sympathetic reassurance

Children help each other learn academic and social skills and feel happier when they have friends.

32

The Peer Group (part 3)

Popular and unpopular children

Particular qualities that make a child liked or disliked depend on culture, cohort, and sometimes the local region or school.

Popular children in U.S.

Friendly and cooperative

Aggressive

33

The Peer Group (part 4)

Unpopular children in the U.S.

Neglected, not rejected children

Neglected by peers, but not actively rejected

Do not enjoy school; but psychologically unharmed

Aggressive-rejected children

Disliked by peers because of antagonistic, confrontational behavior; may become bully-victims

Withdrawn-rejected children

Disliked by peers because of their timid, withdrawn, and anxious behavior

The Peer Group (part 5)

Bullying

Repeated, systematic efforts to inflict harm through on a weaker person

Who Suffers More?

Physical bullying is typically the target of antibullying laws and policies, because it is easier to spot than relational bullying. But being rejected from the group, especially with gossip and lies, may be more devastating to the victim and harder to stop. It may be easier for the boy to overcome victimization than for the girl.

35

The Peer Group (part 6)

Types of bullying

Physical (hitting, pinching, or kicking)

Verbal (teasing, taunting, or name-calling)

Relational (destroying peer acceptance and friendship)

Cyberbullying (using electronic means to harm another)

The Peer Group (part 7)

Victims

Victims of bullying endure repeated shameful experiences with no defense.

They tend to be cautious, sensitive, quiet, and friendless.

Providing psychological defense against loss of self-respect is crucial.

Selection for bullying is based on emotional vulnerability and social isolation, not appearance.

In pervasive bullying, almost any trait can develop into an excuse to exclude and harass a vulnerable child.

The Peer Group (part 8)

Bullies

Popular, proud, socially dominant

Increasingly skilled at avoiding adult awareness, picking victims, and using nonphysical methods to avoid adult punishment

Boys typically attack smaller, weaker boys; girls use words and relational aggression to demean shyer girls.

Gay boys become targets, especially at end of middle childhood.

The Peer Group (part 9)

Causes of bullying

Early childhood: Chaotic home life, ineffectual discipline, hostile siblings, insecure attachment

Middle childhood: Attempt to gain status and power

Consequences of bullying

Serious psychological disorders by age 18

Impaired social understanding, lower school achievement, relationship difficulties, higher adult mental illness rates

The Peer Group (part 10)

Successful efforts to eliminate bullying

Personally finding ways to halt ongoing bullying by ignoring, retaliating, defusing, or avoiding

Involving the whole school, not just the identified bullies (Convivencia)

Engaging bystanders

Encouraging multicultural sensitivity

The Peer Group (part 11)

Children's morality

Children show a variety of skills

Making moral judgments.

Differentiating universal principles from conventional norms.

Influences on moral development in middle childhood

Peer culture

Personal experience

Empathy

The Peer Group (part 12)

Moral rules of child culture

Children align themselves with peers when adult morality clashes with child culture

Three moral imperatives of child culture in middle childhood

Defend your friends.

Don’t tell adults about children’s misbehavior.

Conform to peer standards of dress, talk, and behavior

The Peer Group (part 13)

Empathy

Empathy is understanding of the basic humanity of other people.

School-age children can think and act morally, but do not always do so due to hidden curriculum or adult values.

The Peer Group (part 14)

Kohlberg's levels of moral thought

Stages of morality stem from three levels of moral reasoning with two stages at each level

Preconventional moral reasoning

Conventional moral reasoning

Postconventional moral reasoning

See Table 8.3 for additional informtion about Kohlberg’s Three Levels and Six Stages of Moral Reasonng.

Kohlberg judged moral development not by the answers but by the reasons for the answers.

Preconventional moral reasoning: Emphasizes rewards and punishments

Conventional moral reasoning: Emphasizes social rules

Postconventional moral reasoning: Emphasizes moral principles

44

The Peer Group (part 15)

Criticisms of Kohlberg

Pros

Child’s use of intellectual abilities to justify moral actions was correct.

Cons

Culture and gender difference ignored.

Exclusive boy sample

Differences between child and adult morality not addressed.

Rational principles values more than individual needs

Kohlberg's levels could be labeled personal (preconventional), communal (conventional), and worldwide (postconventional)

45

Sharing What Is Mine

Sharing What Is Mine

Children chose ten stickers for themselves and then were asked to voluntarily and privately give some to an another child, whom they did not see or know. Some children — especially the

younger ones, were quite stingy, giving only a few away, and some, especially the older ones, were quite generous, giving away more than half. Generosity was measured by how many of the ten stickers were donated. In every nation, as children grew older they became more generous. It also was apparent that national wealth had a greater impact than ideology: Children were more generous in the richer nations (Canada, United States, and China) than in the poorer ones (Turkey and South Africa

46

The Peer Group (part 16)

Teaching morality

Once children understand moral equity, they may be more ethical than adults

Morality can be scaffolded with mentors using moral dilemmas to advance moral understanding, empathy, and moral regulation.