What is Development? + Ontogenic Development
Ontogenic Development : The course of development of an individual through the lifespan (Breugelmans, Chasiotis, & Sam, 2012)
Explain Prenatal Development
Explain the Germinal Stage of Prenatal Development
Placenta : A structure that allows oxygen and nutrients to pass into the foetus from the mother’s bloodstream and bodily wastes pass out to the mother
Explain the Embryonic Stage of Prenatal Development
Explain the Fetal Stage of Prenatal Development
List the Environmental Factors and Prenatal Development
Explain 1. Nutrition as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Explain 2. Stress and Emotion as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Explain 3. Drug Use as an Environmental Factor in Prenatal Development
Explain 4. Alcohol Consumption as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Fetal Alcohol Syndrome : A collection of congenital (inborn) problems associated with excessive alcohol use during pregnancy
- Heart defects, hyperactivity, microcephaly (small head), delayed motor development, impaired cognitive development etc.
Explain 5. Maternal Illness as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Explain 6. Environmental Toxins as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Explain 7. Fetal Origins of Adult Disease as an Environmental Factor of Prenatal Development
Define Motor Development
Explain Maturation
What are Developmental Norms?
Cultural Variations and its Significance on Human Development
Explain Attachment in Early Emotional Development
What is Separation Anxiety in Early Emotional Development
Explain the Theories of Attachment
Explain the Patterns of Attachment (Ainsworth et al., 1978)
1. Secure Attachment : Infants play & explore comfortably with their mother present, become visibly upset when she leaves, quickly calmed by her return
2. Anxious-Ambivalent Attachment (Resistant Attachment) : Infants appear anxious when their mothers are near, protest excessively when she leaves, but are not particularly comforted when she returns
3. Avoidant Attachment : Infants seek little contact with their mothers, are often not distressed when she leaves
Explain Day Care & Attachment
Explain Culture & Attachment
Explain Language Development and Fast Mapping
Fast Mapping : Process by which children map a word onto an underlying concept after only one exposure
E.G A child uses contextual clues to infer that ‘yellow’ is related to the colour of a banana