Child Development Theorists: Early Childhood Education Study Guide and Notes
Jean Piaget believed that your _________ development was what mattered and that it is affected by both _______ matters and environmental interaction.
cognitive, biological
Lev Vygotsky's arrow
things you can do all on your own, things you can do with a bit of help, and things you can't do yet, no matter how much support you get
Lev Vygotsky developed the theory of social development with an emphasis on the ______________________
zone of proximal development
Mary Ainsworth
Attachment: theory that explains why and how children develop certain attachments to heir caregiver.
John Watson
Behaviorism: a comprehensive theory about the nature of human development and how a person's thinking and intellect can change overtime.
Jean Piaget
Cognitive Development: a learning theory that only focuses on observable behaviors and that a learner responds to situations based on environment rather than his/her mental state.
zone of proximal development
In Vygotsky's theory, the range between children's present level of knowledge and their potential knowledge state if they recieve proper guidance and instruction
Abraham Maslow
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs: a theory that promotes psychological health by fulfilling innate human needs before being able to culminate self-actualization.
Maria Montessori
Montessori Method of Teaching: Developed a method of learning that emphasizes active learning, independence, cooperation, and learning at each child's unique pace of development.
Lawerance Kohlberg
Moral Development: Theory describing the process of moral development and the changes in morality from early childhood to adulthood.
Abraham Maslow's Hierarchy
Needs range from most basic physiological to the most pyschological: pysiological needs, saftey and security needs, love and belongingness needs, esteem needs, self-actualization.
Lawernce Kohlberg's levels of moral development
Preconventional morality, coventional morality, post-conventional morality
Sigmund Freud
Psychosexual Development: Believed that events from childhood have a great impact on adulthood and that individuals advance through sexual stages of development that shape who they will become as a person
Erik Erikson
Psychosocial Development: Like Freud, this theorist also believed in the "stage theory". He believed that individuals advance through 8 interrelated social stages throughout their life cycle.
Lev Vygotsky
Social Development: Theory based on what is known as the "zone of proximal development" which describes what children should know, know , can know with proper guidance.
Albert Bandura
Social Learning Theory: theory of learning and social behavior which purposes that new behaviors can be acquired by observing and imitating others.
Stages of Erikson's Theory
Trust vs. mistrust (infancy) Autonomy vs. shame and doubt (toddler) Initiative vs. guilt (preschool) Industry vs. inferiority (school age) Identity vs. role confusion (adolescence) Intimacy vs. isolation (young adulthood) Generativity vs. stagnation (middle adulthood) Ego integrity vs. despair (later adulthood)
B. F. Skinner
operant conditioning: a learning process through which the strength of a behavior is modified by reinforcement or punishment of an action.
Stages of Freud's Theory
oral, anal, phallic, latency, genitals.
Jean Piaget's stages of cognitive development
sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, formal operational
Frued: Psycho_________; Erikson: Psycho_________
sexual, social