Mattingly "AI & Prompt Design: The Basics of Prompt Design"
Theoretical Perspectives on Development
1. Melody L. Calicoy Prof. Catherine DG. Santos
BEEd 2nd year – Section A
THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON DEVELOPMENT
Objectives:
At the end of the discussion, the student will be able to:
- Identify some theoretical perspectives on development as the main focus of this topic
- Explain structural-organismic perspectives
- Identify and explain the Psychoanalytic and Psychosexual Stages of Development by
Sigmund Freud
- Identify and explain the Psychosocial Stages of Development by Erik Erikson
- Differentiate and correlate the two theories as part of the structural-organismic
perspectives
- Identify and explain the Cognitive Social Learning Theory by Albert Bandura
- Identify and explain the other approaches theoretical perspectives concerning
development
Subject Matter:
Topics:
- Theoretical Perspectives on Development
Sigmund Freud‟s Psychoanalytic and Psychosexual Development
Erik Erikson‟s Psychosocial Stages of Development
Albert Bandura‟s Social Cognitive Learning Theory
Other approaches that emphasizes theoretical perspectives on development –
an overview only
Information Processing approaches
Dynamic Systems
Contextual Perspectives
Historical Approaches
Ethological Theory
Evolutionary Psychology
Urie Brofenbrenner‟s Ecological Theory
References:
- Acero, Victorina D. et al. Child and Adolescent Development. Rex Publishing, 2010
- Kahayon, Alicia H. and Aquino, Gaudencio V. General Psychology Fourth Edition.
National Bookstore, 1999
- Internet
Materials: visual aids and handouts
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2. Lesson Content:
Theories serve two functions. First, they help explain the knowledge about how children
develop, and second they encourage further researches about behavior that can be tested
and evaluated. While they take varied positions on the issue or concept of development,
they are seen as being complimentary to each other.
Structural-organismic perspectives consider the quality of various changes in the
stages of human development. Sigmund Freud‟s Psychoanalytic and Psychosexual
Development and Erik Erikson‟s Psychosocial Theory belongs to this category. They
assert that a child responds to a set of biological drives.
SIGMUND FREUD’S PSYCHOANALYTIC AND PSYCHOSEXUAL THEORY
Short Biography of Sigmund Freud
Freud was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis, who created an
entirely new approach to the understanding of the human personality. He is regarded as one
of the most influential and controversial minds of the 20th century.
Freud parents were poor, but they ensured his education. Interested in law as a student, he
moved instead to medicine.
Sigismund Schlomo Freud (later changed to Sigmund Freud) was born on May 6, 1856 in
Freilberg, Moravia (now Pribor in the Czech Republic). His father was a merchant. The
family moved to Leipzig and then settled in Vienna, where Freud was educated. Freud‟s
family were Jewish but he was himself non-practicing.
In 1873, Freud began to study medicine at the University of Vienna. After graduating, he
worked at the Vienna General Hospital. He collaborated with Jose Breuer in treating hysteria
by the recall of painful experiences under hypnosis. In 1885, Freud went to Paris as a student
of the neurologist Jean Charcot. On his return to Vienna the following year, Freud set up in
private practice, specializing in nervous and brain disorders. The same year he married
Martha Bernays, with whom he had six children.
After World War One, Freud spent less time in clinical observation and concentrated on
the application of his theories to history, art, literature and anthropology. In 1923, he
published “The Ego and the Id”, which suggested a new structural of the mind, divided into
the „id‟, the „ego‟ and the ‟superego‟.
In 1933, the Nazis publicly burnt a number of Freud‟s books. In 1938, shortly after the
Nazis annexed Austria, Freud left Vienna for London with his wife and daughter Anna.
Freud had been diagnosed with cancer of the jaw in 1923, and underwent more than 30
operations. He died of cancer in September 23, 1939 at the age of 83.
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3. Psychoanalytic Theory
Freud recognizes the early experiences as determinants of later development. According
to him, the three basic element of personality are the following: the id, ego, and the
superego.
- Id is the primitive side of man, influences by biological, animalistic instincts. Those
instincts are sex and aggression. The id operates under the pleasure principle because
the id shows no rules, is greedy, demanding and unable to delay gratification.
- Ego is the second component of personality, which can identify and consider the
realistic consequences of one‟s actions. The ego operates the reality principle, which
states that ego seeks to maximize gratification but within the constraints of reality.
- Superego is the repository of one‟s abstract morals and values, religion, socialization,
being artistic and others. There are two aspects of superego: the ego ideal and the
conscience. These are the dos and don‟ts of moral personality.
Ego ideal contains the values and ideals to which one aspires.
Conscience is part of personality that causes one to feel guilty after the
violation of a moral principle.
Psychosexual Stages of Development
Oral Stage (0-18 months). This stage is characterized by receiving gratification through
the mouth: sucking, crying and exploring objects with the mouth. It is characterized by
personality traits of passive dependency and aggressiveness. This stage is divided into
two phases; the oral-receptive and the oral aggressive phases. This stage is purely Id
because the individual is selfish, demanding and delay gratification.
Anal Stage (18 months to about 3 ½ to 4 years). In this stage developed the toilet
training. A major developmental milestone in this stage is mastery over one‟s
elimination functions. The two phases of this stage are the anal-retentive phases. First is
related to tension related to expelling waste; second is related to the pleasurable
stimulation from retaining faces. In this stage the ego develops. And this is the time that
the parents make demands on the child. If the child satisfies the parent‟s demands, then
the child receives praise and approval. If not, then the child experiences parental
disapproval.
Phallic Stage (about 3 ½to 6 years or Oedipal Period). The child demonstrates
instinctual attraction from the opposite sex parent. This result in fear of the same sex
Parent. The attraction and fear brings severe conflict called Oedipus complex. This is the
son-mother relationship. The Electra complex represents the daughter-father relationship.
It is the stage that libido occurs. The child becomes interested in his body and recognizes
his own sexuality. In this stage, the superego develops, also the Castration Anxiety and
Electra complex.
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4. - Castration anxiety is the conscious or unconscious fear of losing all part of the
sex organs, or the function of such.
Latency Stage (6 year to puberty). Sexual and aggressive urges continue to operate in
this stage, but he tends to channel them into age appropriate interests and activities such
as academics, sports, and hobbies.
Genital Stage (puberty to death). The child‟s basic interest and sources of erotic
satisfaction become centered in heterosexual behavior. The body is physiologically
mature and if no major fixations have occurred at an earlier stage of development, the
individual may be able to lead a normal heterosexual life.
A fixation occurs when there is arrested development or inability to pass the next stage.
E.g. oral fixation is characterized by thumb sucking, nail biting, greediness, and fixation,
by excessive conformity and self-control and compulsiveness. The phallic character is
reckless in behavior and defends his sexual prowess without feelings of love.
ERIK ERIKSON’S PSYCHOSOCIAL STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT
Short Biography of Erik Erikson
Erik Erikson was born on June 15, 1902 in Frankfurt, Germany. “The common story was
that his mother and father had separated before his birth, but the closely guarded fact was that he
was his mother‟s child from an extramarital union. He never saw his birth father or his mother‟s
first husband,” reported Erikson‟s obituary that appeared in The New York Times in 1994.
His young Jewish mother raised by herself for a time before marrying a physician, Dr.
Theodor Homberger. The fact that Homberger was not in fact his biological father was concealed
from him for many years. When he finally did learn the truth, he was left with feeling of
confusion about who he really was. This early experience helped spark his interest in the
formation of identity.
His interest in identity was further developed based upon his own experiences in school.
At his temple school, the other children teased him for being Nordic because he was tall, blonde,
and blue-eyed. At grammar school, he was rejected because of his Jewish background. These
early experiences helped fuel his interest in identity formation and continued to influence his
work throughout his life.
When he finished high school, Erikson dabbled in art and spent some time traveling
throughout Europe. At the suggestion of a friend, Erikson studied psychoanalysis and earned a
certificate from the Vienna Psychoanalytic Society.
He also took a teaching position at a school created by Dorothy Burlingham, a friend of
Anna Freud‟s. He continued to work with Burlingham and Freud at the school for several years,
met Sigmund Freud at a party, and even became Anna Freud‟s patient.
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5. He met a Canadian dance instructor named Joan Serson who was also teaching at the
school where he worked. The couple married in 1930 and went on to have children.
Erikson moved to the United States in 1933 and was offered a teaching position at
Harvard Medical School. He also changed his name from Erik Homberger to Erik Homberger-
Erikson, perhaps as a way to forge his own identity. In addition to his position at Harvard, he
also had a private practice in child psychoanalysis. Later, he held teaching positions at the
University of California at Berkeley, Yale, the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute, Auster
Riggs Center, and the Center for Advanced Studies of the Behavioral Science.
He died on May 12, 1994 at the age of 92.
Erikson expanded Freud‟s theories to relations include social and cultural factors as
influences on the child‟s development as well as to extend the theory into a lifespan
perspective.
Psychosocial Stages of Development (Post-Freudian)
1. Infancy (from birth to 1 year). It is characterized by the oral-sensory mode of
incorporation, the psychosocial crisis of basis: TRUST vs. MISTRUST, as the basic
strength of hope, and core pathology of withdrawal. Infancy covers the first year of life, a
time equivalent to Freud‟s oral stage.
Hope: Trust in primary caregiver and in one‟s own ability to make things happen.
2. Early Childhood (from 1 to 2 years). It is parallel to Freud‟s anal stage. Anal, urethral
muscular psychosexual modes are in ascendance and the conflict of AUTONOMY vs.
SHAME & DOUBT produces the basic strength called will or its antithesis, compulsion.
Will: New physical skill lead to demand for more choices, most often seen as saying
“no” to caregivers; child learns self-care skills such as toileting.
3. Play Age or Early Childhood (from 3 to 5 years). A time corresponding to the Phallic or
Oedipal period, the child experiences genital-loco motor psychosexual development and
undergoes the crisis of INITIATIVE vs. GUILT. Either the basic strength of purpose or
the pathology of inhibition may emerge.
Purpose: Ability to organize activities around some goals; more assertiveness and
aggressiveness (Oedipus or Electra conflict with parent of same sex may lead to guilt).
4. School Age or Middle to Late Childhood (from 6 to 11 years). The child experiences
the crisis of INDUSTRY vs. INFERIORITY, from which arises the basic strength of
competence or the core pathology of inertia. The school-age child expands relations
between the family to include peers and teachers who serve as models.
Competence: cultural skills and norms, including school skills and tool use (failure to
master these lead to sense of inferiority).
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6. 5. Adolescence (from 7 to 18 years). A crucial stage because one‟s clear and consistent
image of self-ego IDENTITY – should emerge from this period. However IDENTITY
or ROLE DIFFUSION may dominate the psychosocial crisis, thereby postponing
identity. Fidelity is the basic strength of adolescence, role repudiation its core pathology.
Fidelity: Adaptation of sense of self to pubertal changes, consideration of future choices,
achievement of a more mature sexual identity, and search for new values.
6. Young Adulthood (from 19 to 30 years). Characterized by genitality, a psychosexual
mode than can exist in the absence of intimacy. Ideally, however, INTIMACY should
win out in its conflict with ISOLATION and produce the basic strength of love. If the
psychosocial crisis is not completely resolved, the core pathology of exclusivity results.
Love: Person develops intimate relationships beyond adolescent love.
7. Adulthood (from 31 years to old age). A time not only of procreation but also of
productive work and social commitment. The dominant crisis is GENERATIVITY vs.
STAGNATION, while care is the basic strength and rejection, possible core pathology.
Care: People rear children, focus on occupational achievement or creativity, and train the
next generation; turn outward from the self toward others.
8. Old Age (until death). The crisis of INTEGRITY vs. DESPAIR, wisdom, as the basic
strength, as opposed to disdain, the core pathology marks this final stage.
Wisdom: Person conducts a life review integrates earlier stages and comes to terms with
basic identity; develops self-acceptance.
This psychosocial theory is based on the most important tasks both personal and social
that the individual must accomplish at a particular stage.
Erikson‟s concept of humanity is generally optimistic and idealistic. People can
overcome early pathologies, but crisis, anxiety and conflict are a normal and necessary part of
living.
ALBERT BANDURA’S SOCIAL COGNITIVE LEARNING THEORY
Short Biography of Albert Bandura
Albert Bandura was born on December 4, 1925 in a small Canadian town. The last of six
children, Bandura‟s early education consisted of one small school with only two teachers.
According to Bandura, because of this limited access to educational resources, “The students had
to take charge of their own education”
Bandura soon became fascinated by psychology after enrolling at the University of
British Columbia. He had started out as a biological science major, his interest in psychology
formed quite by accident. While working nights and commuting to school with a group of
students, he found himself arriving at school much earlier than his course started. To pass the
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7. time, he begat taking “filler classes” during these early morning hours, this led to him eventually
stumbling upon psychology.
Bandura explained, “One morning, I was wasting time in the library. Someone had I
forgotten to return a course catalog and I thumbed through it attempting to find a filler course to
occupy the early time slot. I noticed a course in psychology that would serve as excellent filler. It
sparked my interest and I found my career.”
In 1949, he graduated from the University of British Columbia with a degree in
Psychology. Bandura earned his Master of Arts degree in 1951 and received his Doctor in
Philosophy degree in Clinical Psychology from the University of Iowa in 1952.
After earning his Ph.D., he was offered a position in Stanford University. Bandura
accepted the offer (even though it meant resigning from another position he had already
accepted) and has continued to work at Stanford to this day. It was during his studies on
adolescent aggression that Bandura became increasing interested in vicarious learning, modeling
and imitation.
In 1953, he began teaching at Stanford University. In 1974, he served as President of the
APA. In 1980, he received the APA‟s Award for Distinguished Scientific Contributions. In 2004,
he was recognized as an outstanding lifetime contributor in psychology by American
Psychological Association.
History of Social Cognitive Learning Theory
Social cognitive learning theory stemmed out of work in the area of social learning theory
proposed by Neal E. Miller and John Dollard in 1941. Identifying four key factors in learning
new behavior: drives, cues, responses, and rewards, they posit that if one were motivated to
learn a particular behavior, then that particular behavior would be learned through clear
observations. By imitating these observed actions the individual observer would solidify that
learned action and would be rewarded with positive reinforcement. The proposition of social
learning was expanded upon and theorized by Albert Bandura from 1962 until the present.
Social cognitive learning theory which was proposed by Albert Bandura has become the
most influential theory of learning and development.
His theory added a social element, arguing that people can learn new information and
behaviors by watching other people known as observational learning or modeling.
It emphasizes the concept of imitation as a form of learning. Learning according to this
theory results from the ability of the child to select the pattern of behavior to imitate.
Basic Social Learning Concepts
1. People can learn through observation
Observational learning In his famous Bobo doll experiment, Bandura demonstrated that
children learn and imitate behaviors they have observed in other people. The children in
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8. Bandura‟s studies observed an adult acting violently toward a Bobo doll. When the children were
later allowed to play in a room with the Bobo doll, they began to imitate the aggressive actions
they had previously observed.
Three basic models of observational learning:
A live model which involves an actual individual demonstrating or acting out a
behavior.
A verbal instructional model, which involves descriptions and explanations of a
behavior.
A symbolic model, which involves real or fictional characters displaying behaviors
in books, films, televisions, programs, or online media.
2. Mental states are important to learning
He describes intrinsic reinforcement as a form of internal reward, such as pride,
satisfaction, and a sense of accomplishment.
3. Learning does not necessarily lead to a change in behavior
Observational learning demonstrates that people can learn new information without
demonstrating new behaviors. The following steps are involved in the observational
learning and modeling process:
Attention – in order to learn, you need to be paying attention.
Retention – the ability to store information.
Reproduction – it is time to actually perform the behavior you observed. Further
practice of the learned behavior leads to improvement and skills advancement.
Motivation – in order for observational learning to be successful, you have to be
motivated to imitate the behavior that has been modeled. Reinforcement and
punishment play important role in motivation.
In addition to influencing other psychologists, Bandura‟s social learning theory
has had important implication in the field of education. Today, both teachers and
parents recognize the importance of modeling appropriate behaviors. Other
classroom strategies such as encouraging children and building self-efficacy are
also rooted in social learning theory.
Self-efficacy – the course wherein the learner improves his newly learned
knowledge or behavior by putting it into practice.
In the Social Cognitive Theory, we are considering three variables:
o Person – Environment Interaction – It is the human beliefs, ideas and cognitive
competencies are modified by external factors such as supportive parent, stressful
environment or a hot climate.
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9. o Person – Behavior Interaction – The cognitive processes of a person affect his
behavior; likewise, the performance of such behavior can modify the way he thinks.
o Environmental – Behavior Interaction – External factors can alter the way you display
the behavior. Also, your behavior can affect and modify your environment.
This model clearly implies that for effective and positive learning to occur an
individual should have positive personal characteristics, exhibit appropriate
behavior and stay in a supportive environment.
The Three Variables in Social Learning Theory
Behavior
Personal Environmental
Factors factors
These three variables in Social Cognitive Theory are said to be interrelated with each
other, causing learning to occur. An individual‟s personal experience can converge with the
behavioral determinants and the environmental factors.
OTHER APPROACHES ON THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVES ON DEVELOPMENT
The early behaviorists proposed that learning is regulated by environmental factors that
define and modify patterns of behavior. They may either be classical or operant
conditioning.
Information-processing approaches have been applied in studies dealing with cognitive
development and social behavior. They focus on how a child processes information and
uses this as guide in adapting a particular behavior pattern.
Dynamic systems theories look at individuals as members of a system and that this
dynamic interaction contributes to their development. Behavior is shaped by their
constant relations with the members that make up the system.
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10. Contextual perspectives take into the account in the matter of psychological
development, the contributions of cultural factors. According to Vygotsky, a child
interacts with his social environment. Development then as the child ages, is guided by
the more matured skilled others with whom the child establishes a continuous
relationship.
Brofenbrenner’s Ecological theory underscores the importance of the various
environmental systems to development. These include the family, school, community and
culture. These are reffered to as ecological system – the microsystem, mesosystem,
exosystem, macrosystem and the chronosystem. In the ecological theory perspective, a
child acquires experiences from the environment, adds such experiences to the built-in
knowledge, and modifies his understanding of the environment.
Microsystem focuses on the ways children live and relate to people include
institutions with the most number of interactions like family, peers and school.
Mesosystem is the interrelations among the components of the microsystem.
Exosystem is the actual situation a child is in that included the settings that
influence the development of the child and where the child is not directly a
participant.
Macrosystem is the system that surrounds the microsystem, mesosystem, and
exosystem; represents the values, ideologies, and laws of society or culture.
Chronosystem is the time-based dimension that can alter the operation of all
other systems in Brofenbrenner‟s model, from microsystem through macrosystem.
Historical approaches acknowledge the contributions of historical events to human
development. Psychologist view development from a life-span development.
Ethological development describes development from a biological-evolutionary
approach. It concerns itself with the observation of behavior including distinguishing
features that cut across human societies, human cultures, and even intra human species.
Evolutionary psychology touches on the cognitive development and how cognitive
capabilities and constraints influence the process of human evolution and meeting the
survival needs.
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