MODULE 1
Human Development; Meaning Concepts, and Approaches
                                   Prepared by Ms. Sheryl M. Atajar
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
        --is the pattern of movement or change that begins at conception and continues through the
life span. Development includes growth and decline. This means that development can be positive or
negative.
Some Major Principles of Human Development
1. Development is relatively orderly.
       a. Proximodistal pattern
              --the muscular control of the trunk and the arms come earlier compared to the hands
                 and fingers
       b. Cephalocaudal pattern
             --During infancy, the greatest growth always occurs at the top – the head – with physical
              growth in size, weight and future differentiation gradually working its way down from top
              to bottom (for example, neck, shoulders, middle trunk and so on).
2. While the pattern of development is likely to be similar, the outcomes of developmental processes
and the rate of development are likely to vary among individuals.
3. Development takes place gradually.
4. Development as a process is complex because it is the product of biological, cognitive and
socioemotional processes.
       a. Biological processes
              -involve changes in the individual’s physical nature
       b. Cognitive processes
             -involve changes in the individual’s thought, intelligence, and language.
       c. Socioemotional processes
              -include changes in the individual’s relationships with other people, changes in
               emotions, and changes in personality.
Two Approaches to Human Development
1. Traditional Approach—emphasizes extensive change from birth to adolescence, little or no change
                        in adulthood and decline in late old age
2. Life-span Approach – emphasizes developmental change takes place as it does during childhood
Characteristics of the Life-span Perspective
       1. Development is lifelong.
             -It does not end in adulthood. No developmental stage dominates development.
       2. Development is multidimensional.
             -Development consists of biological, cognitive, and socio-emotional dimensions.
       3. Development is plastic.
             -Development is possible throughout the life-span.
       4. Development is contextual.
             -Individuals are changing beings in a changing world.
       5. Development involves growth, maintenance and regularization.
Principles of child development and learning that inform practice
1. All the domains of development and learning-physical, social and emotional, and cognitive-are
important, and they are closely interrelated. Children’s development and learning in one domain
influence and are influenced by what takes place in other domains.
2. Many aspects of children’s learning and development follow well documented sequences, with later
abilities, skills, and knowledge building on those already acquired.
3. Development and learning proceed at varying rates from child to child, as well as at uneven rates
across different areas of a child’s individual functioning.
4. Development and learning result from a dynamic and continuous interaction of biological
maturation and experience.
5. Early experiences have profound effects, both cumulative and delayed, on a child’s development
and learning; and optimal periods exist for certain types of development and learning occur.
6. Development proceeds toward greater complexity, self-regulation, and symbolic or representational
capacities.
7. Children develop best when they have secure, consistent relationships with responsive adults and
opportunities for positive relationships with peers.
8. Development and learning occur in and are influenced by multiple social and cultural contexts.
9. Always mentally active in seeking to understand the world around them, children learn in a variety
of ways; a wide range of teaching strategies and interactions are effective in supporting all these
kinds of learning.
10. Play is an important vehicle for developing self-regulation as well as for promoting language,
cognition, and social competence.
11. Development and learning advance when children are challenged to achieve at a level just
beyond their current mastery, and also when they have many opportunities to practice newly acquired
skills.
12. Children’s experience shape their motivation and approaches to learning, such as persistence,
initiative, and flexibility; in turn, these dispositions and behaviours affect their learning and
development.
                                     MODULE 2
                 The Stages of Development and Developmental Tasks
Concept of Developmental Task
         Robert Havighurst defines developmental task as one that “arises” at a certain period in our
life, the successful achievement of which leads to happiness and success with later tasks while failure
leads to unhappiness, social disapproval, and difficulty with later tasks.
6 Developmental Stages (Havighurst)
1. Infancy and Early Childhood (0-5 years)
2. Middle Childhood (6-12 years)
3. Adolescence (13-18 years)
4. Early Adulthood (19-29 years)
5. Middle Adulthood (30-60 years)
6. Later Maturity (60+)
Developmental Stages and Tasks (Santrock)
1. Prenatal period (from conception to birth)
       -It involves tremendous growth- from a single cell to an organism complete with brain and
behavioural capabilities.
2. Infancy (from birth to 18-24 months)
       -A time of extreme dependence on adults. Many psychological activities are just beginning –
language, symbolic thought, sensorimotor coordination and social learning.
3. Early Childhood (end of infancy to 5-6 years (Grade I)
       -These are the preschool years. Young children learn to become more self-sufficient and to
care for themselves, develop school readiness skills and spend many hours in play with peers.
4. Middle and Late Childhood (6-11 years of age, the elementary school years)
       -The fundamental skills of reading, writing and arithmetic are mastered. The child is formally
exposed to the larger world and its culture. Achievement becomes a more central theme of the child’s
world and self-control increases.
5. Adolescence (10-12 years of age ending up to 18-22 years of age)
        -Begins with rapid physical changes – dramatic gains in height and weight, changes in body
contour, and the development of sexual characteristics such as enlargement of the breast,
development of pubic and facial hair, and deepening of the voice. Pursuit of independence and
identity are prominent. Thought is more logical, abstract and idealistic. More time is spent outside of
the family.
6. Early adulthood (from late teens or early 20s lasting through the 30s)
       -It is time of establishing personal and economic independence, career development, selecting
a mate, learning to live with someone in an intimate way, starting a family and rearing children.
7. Middle Adulthood (40 to 60 years of age)
       -It is a time of expanding personal and social involvement and responsibility; of assisting the
next generation in becoming competent and mature individuals; and of reaching and maintaining
satisfaction in a career.
8. Late Adulthood (60s and above)
       -It is a time for adjustment to decreasing strength and health, life review, retirement, and
adjustment to new social roles.
                                            MODULE 3
                                  Issues on Human Development
3 Issues in Development
1. Nature vs. Nurture
2. Continuity vs. Discontinuity
3. Stability vs. Change
                                       MODULE 4
                     Research in Child and Adolescent Development
Teachers as Consumers/End Users of Research
       Research enables teachers to come up with informed decision on what to teach and how to
teach. This involves decisions related to educational policies, curriculum, effective teaching-learning
process, and even those involving research, too.
Teachers as Researchers
      The conduct of research does not only belong to thesis and dissertation writers. It is for
students and teachers too.
The Scientific Method
      One important principle in research is adherence to the scientific method, since research is a
systematic and a logical process.
       5 Steps of Scientific Method
       1. identify and define the problem
       2. determine the hypothesis
       3. collect and analyze data
       4. formulate conclusions
       5. apply conclusions to the original hypothesis
Research Designs
     Research
      Design                Description                       Strengths                        Weaknesses
 1. Case Study       An in-depth look at an         It provides information about     Need to exercise caution when
                     individual                     an individual’s fears hopes,      generalizing from the
                                                    fantasises, traumatic             information; the subject of a
                                                    experiences, upbringing,          case study is unique, with a
                                                    family relations, health, and     genetic make-up and
                                                    anything that helps a             experiences no one else
                                                    psychologist understand that      shares; involves judgements of
                                                    person’s development              unknown reliability, in that
                                                                                      usually no check is made to
                                                                                      see if other psychologists agree
                                                                                      with other observations.
 2. Correlational    A research design that         Useful because the more           Because correlational research
    Study            determines associations        strongly two events are           does not involve the
                                                    correlated, the more we can       manipulation of factors, it is not
                                                    predict one from the other        a dependable way to isolate
                                                                                      cause
 3. Experimental     A research design that         The only true reliable method     Experimental research is
                     determines cause-and-effect    of establishing cause and         limited to what is observable,
                     relationships. The             effect.                           testable and manipulable.
                     experimental method
                     involves manipulating one                                        Failure to achieve
                     variable to determine if                                         randomisation may limit the
                     changes on one variable                                          extent to which the study
                     cause changes in another                                         sample is representative of the
                     variable. This method relies                                     parent population and, with it,
                     on controlled methods,                                           generalizability of the findings
                     random assignment and the                                        of the study.
                     manipulation of variables t
                     test a hypothesis.                                               Experimentation with humans is
                                                                                      subject to a number of external
                                                                                      influences that may dilute the
                                                                                      study results.
 4. Naturalistic     A research design that         One of the advantages of this     The disadvantages of
 Observation         focuses on children’s          type of research is that it       naturalistic observation include
                     experiences in natural         allows the researcher to          the fact that it can be difficult to
                     settings.                      directly observe the subject in   determine the exact cause of a
                                                    a natural setting.                behaviour and the experimenter
                                                                                      cannot control outside
                                                                                      variables.
 5. Longitudinal      This research design studies     Allows them to record and           They are expensive and time-
                      and follows through a group      monitor developmental trends.       consuming.
                      over a period of time. The
                      same individuals are studied                                         The longer the study lasts, the
                      over a period of time, usually                                       more subjects drop out – they
                      several years or more.                                               move, get sick, lose interest,
                                                                                           etc. Subjects can be bias the
                                                                                           outcome of a study, because
                                                                                           those who remain may be
                                                                                           dissimilar to those who drop
                                                                                           out.
 6. Cross-sectional   A research strategy in which     Allows them to record and           It gives information about how
                      individuals of different ages    monitor developmental trends.       individuals change or about the
                      are compared at one time.        The researcher does not have        stability of their characteristics.
                                                       to wait for the individuals to
                                                       grow up or become older.
 7. Sequential        This is the combined cross-      Allows them to record and           It is complex, expensive, and
                      sectional and longitudinal       monitor developmental trends.       time-consuming.
                      approaches to learn about        It provides information that is
                      life-span development.           impossible to obtain from
                                                       cross-sectional or longitudinal
                                                       approaches alone.
 8. Action Research   Action research is a             Appropriate in a particular         Typically takes place in one
                      reflective process of            setting when the purpose of         organization only at a particular
                      progressive problem-solving      study is “to create changes         time and could not be
                      led by individuals working       and gain information on             interpreted within different
                      with others in teams or as       processes and outcome of the        organizations in the same way.
                      part of a “community of          strategies used”                    Therefore, research findings
                      practice” to improve the way                                         are hard (impossible) to
                      they address issues and          Uses different methods, can         generalize.
                      solve problems.                  get the best out of the different
                                                       methods employed, if done           If research participants do not
                      In the context of teaching,      well.                               feel they understand and own
                      action researches of                                                 the research project, this could
                      teachers stem from their         Stakeholders are included           lead to a potential conflict of
                      own questions about and          throughout and so researchers       interest between the researcher
                      reflections on their everyday    are more likely to make a           and those participating in the
                      classroom practice.              difference.                         organization, but also between
                                                                                           the researcher with some
                                                                                           participants, on the one hand
                                                                                           and other members of the
                                                                                           organization, on the other.
Data-Gathering Techniques
   Data-Gathering
                                                            Definition/Description
     Technique
 1. Observation         Observations can be made in either laboratories or materialistic settings. In naturalistic
                        observation, behaviour is observed in the real world like classrooms, home in
                        neighbourhood.
 2. Physiological       Certain indicators of children’s development such as, among others, heart rate,
    Measures            hormonal levels, bone growth, body weight, and brain activity are measured.
 3. Standardized        These are prepared tests that assess individuals’ performance in different domains.
    Tests               These tests are administered in a consistent manner.
 4. Interviews and      Involve asking the participants to provide information about themselves based on the
    Questionnaires      interview or questionnaire given by the researcher.
                        Gathering of data may be conducted through a printed questionnaire, over the
                        telephone, by mail, in person, or on-line.
                        Information is obtained by utilizing standardized procedures so that every participant is
                        asked the same questions in the same manner. It entails asking participants for
                        information in some structured format.
 5. Life-History        These are records of information about a lifetime chronology of events and activities.
    Records             They often involve a combination of data records on education, work, family, and
                        residence. These include public records or historical documents or interviews with
                        respondent.
Ethical Principles
Ethical principles provide a generalized framework within which particular ethical dilemmas may be
analyzed.
Details of these ethical principles are found in documents:
1. Ethical standards of the American Educational Research Association
2. Ethical Standards for Research with Children – Society for Research in Child Development
3. Standards of the American Psychological Association Concerning Research
       The following consideration for researchers conducted with young children and other
vulnerable population – National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC)
Some key points are:
      1. Research procedures must never harm children, physically or psychologically.
      2. Children and their families have the right to full information about the research in which they
         may participate, including possible risks and benefits. Their decision to participate must be
         based on what is called “informed consent.” There must be informed consent procedures
         with research participants.
      3. Children’s questions about the research should be answered in a truthful manner and in
         ways that children can understand. Researchers must be honest and clear in their
         communication.
      4. There should be respect for privacy. Information obtained through research with children
         should remain confidential. Researchers should not disclose personal information or the
         identity of participants in written or oral reports and discussions.
Impact of Teachers’ Research Involvement on Teachers
1. Teachers who have been involved in research may become more reflective, more critical and
   analytical in their teaching, and more open and committed to professional development.
2. Participating in teacher research also helps teachers become more deliberate in their decision-
   making and actions in the classroom.
3. Teacher research develops the professional dispositions of lifelong learning, reflective and mindful
   teaching, and self-transformation
4. Engaging in teacher research at any level may lead to rethinking and reconstructing what it means
   to be a teacher or teacher educator and, consequently, the way teachers relate to children and
   students.
5. Teacher research has the potential to demonstrate to teachers and prospective teachers that
   learning to teach is inherently connected to learning to inquire.