Chapter 14 – Development
over the Lifespan
I. Physical Development
A. prenatal
B. infantile reflexes
C. puberty
D. menopause
II. Social Development
A.
Attachment
1. Freud:
cupboard theory
2. Bowlby: comfort theory
3. assessed via
Ainsworth’s Strange Situation
4. separation anxiety
B.
Gender development
1. gender identity
a. transgendered,
transsexual, intersexed cases
2. gender typing (sex
role stereotypes)
3. biological vs social influences
C.
Parental influences: discipline
methods/styles
1. power assertion vs.
induction
2. authoritarian vs.
authoritative vs. permissive
III. Cognitive
Development – Piagetian Theory
A. assimilation and accommodation
B.
Stages:
1. Sensorimotor stage
(object permanence)
2. Preoperational stage (egocentricity)
3. Concrete operations (conservation of
quantity, volume, mass)
4. Formal operations (abstract thought)
C. Criticisms
and new understandings
IV. Moral Development
A.
Kohlberg’s stages
1. preconventional
2. conventional
3. postconventional
B.
Criticisms: Gilligan, others
C. gender vs. power, role of education or
other factors, inconsistencies
V. Lifespan Development:
A.
Erikson’s stage theory
1. Eight stages or crises spanning entire life
B.
Current views: less emphasis on
stages, more on overlapping courses
C.
Still are some developmental issues related to specific life stages
1. Life transitions
a.
Physical transitions (eg,
weaning, puberty, menopause)
b.
Social transitions (eg,
leaving home, getting married, having a child)
2. Changes related to aging (eg,
sensory functioning in older adults)