CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENT


Child Psychology

According to my observation a child can think while being in the womb. During the initial weeks some mother's may show food aversions or liking. They show expression of kicking or rolling during 6–7 month after listening to a sound, at a fragrance. When a woman is pregnant and the kid starting kicking and rolling during the sixth month. The neural tube starts to develop during 4–6 week and I believe children show signs of thinking even more from 24th week.
Child psychology involves looking at the issues, stages and various influences that a child experiences throughout their development into functioning adults. Child psychology can be divided into two main areas - the actual process of psychological development that the child goes through when growing up and the analysis and treatment of the various problems that a child may face throughout their development. During a child's development from infancy to adulthood, many influences are responsible for shaping their ways of seeing the world, their ideas of their own identity and their place within society. Factors such as environmental setting, family, community and the media all shape a child. In a perfect world, a child would develop successfully into a happily functioning adult, without any problems along the way, however this is not usually the case and many children find that they may struggle throughout the process.
     The following related links is a brief summary of the main stages of childhood development and the important steps and influences a child faces at each stage. Childhood can be divided into four stages: infancy; early childhood; middle childhood and adolescence.
                                                  

                                                                                       Developmental Psychology

 Developmental psychology is the study of the physical, cognitive (thinking) and social changes that people go through from conception onwards.
Beginning of Developmental Psychology as a Field of Interest:
     Interest in the development of children became popular in the nineteenth century, during the industrialization of Europe and North America. At this time, people's lives could be divided into periods - childhood and adulthood. As well, schooling became popular. At first, child psychologists looked at issues such as the labor force and studied items such as the acceptable time per day that a child could work without damaging themselves. This sort of data was used to clarify basic questions about human development and how to study it. In the late nineteenth century, child psychology became an institutionalized research and practice.
Core Concern:
      The core concern of child psychologists is the steps of development that children go through. There are three fundamental questions that psychologists ask about the process of development:
1) Continuity: Psychologists are interested in whether development of children is a gradual process of change, or if it is made up of periods of rapid change and the sudden onset of new thoughts and behaviors.


2) Sources of development: Psychologists are interested in what parts of development are influenced by genes and what parts are influenced from the environment within which the child grows up.


3) Individual differences: Psychologists are interested in how people differ and how they come to develop the characteristics that make them unique.


Nature vs. Nurture:

     For years, there has existed a debate about whether nature (biology/genetic make-up) has a predominant role in child development or whether the nurture (the environment in which the child grows up) does. Nature refers to the inherited biological characteristics of an individual, such as their genes. Nurture refers to the influences in the environment that affect a child, such as the social environment of their family and their school. Modern psychologists suggest that we cannot look at these things exclusively. Both nature influences how one perceives the environment and vice versa.
Frameworks: 


      There are four major ways that psychologists approach child development. These are:
1) The Biological Maturation Framework: According to this framework, the sources of development are biological, coming from things that have been inherited from parents and that exist in the child's genetic make-up.


2) The Environmental Learning Framework: According to this framework, development occurs and is influenced from outside factors, coming from the child's environment.


3) The Constructionist Framework: This viewpoint considers both environment and biological influences that are working together in the child's development.


4) The Cultural-Context framework: This framework sees both the importance of biological and of environmental factors, and also looks at how these interact within a certain culture.


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