transactional nature of development
children affect their environment at the same that the their environment affects them
Cultural influences
Self regulation
Children as active participants in development
Relationships
Development
Human development
early experiences matter!
Developmental plasticity
intervention
the course of development can be changed in early childhood through effective intervention
GASKINS
Brazelton and Cramer
Brazelton and Cramer: three forms of parental fantasies
1) the baby as ghost, representing an important person from the parent’s past (unable to respond to actual baby)
2) reenactment of past modes of relationship
3) baby represents a part of the parent’s own unconscious
Biopsychosocial Model
Trust Vs. Mistrust
Gradual Nature of Development
Society’s role in development
crying curve
between 4-6 weeks, decreases around 6-7 weeks
biobehavioral shifts
Sanders
birth to 2.5 months (initial adaptation) 2.5 to 5 months (reciprocal exchange) 5 to 9 months (early directed activities) 9 to 15 months (focalization on mother) 12 to 18 months (self-assertion)
Emde
Emde’s shifts
2 months (awakening of sociability)
7 to 9 months (onset of focused attachment)
12 to 13 months (toddlerhood begins)
18 to 21 months (growing autonomy)
temperament
shared meaning/intersubjectivity