Growth:
·
Growth means the quantitative changes that take
place in size, length, height and weight.
·
It is used in the physical sense.
·
The changes that occur in the specific aspects of
a living beings body and behaviour are called growth.
·
Growth stops at the stage of maturity changes are
visible and measurable.
Development:
·
Development suggests the qualitative changes that
take place in an individual’s body such a change is all-round and includes
shapes, form etc. It refers to the entire body.
·
Development improvement in the function of the
body.
·
Development improvement in the function of the
body.
·
It is not easy to measure this improvement
directly.
·
Evaluation of development will have to be made by
observing keenly in behavioural situations.
·
Development can be noticed in some children even
though there may be not be much growth. There may not be increase in their
height, weight and size but there may be improvement in the function of the
body on the whole.
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT:
|
SL.
No
|
Growth
|
Development
|
|
1
|
It may be limited to the changes in the
Quantitative aspect.
|
It implies to the overall changes
occurring in
Both quantitative and qualitative aspects.
|
|
2
|
It has narrow meaning.
|
It has wider and more
comprehensive Meaning
|
|
3
|
Its scope is confined to those aspects /
Dimensions of one’s
personality in which
Quantitative changes occur.
|
It is employed to describe the changes in
all
Dimensions of one’s personality whether
Physical, mental, emotional and social.
|
|
4
|
It is directly observable and measurable.
|
It is not directly observable and
measurable.
|
|
5
|
It is not continuous and stops when
Maturity has been attained.
|
It is continuous process and life long
Process.
|
|
6
|
It has simple process.
|
It has complex process and it is
difficult to
Assess and measure one’s developmental
Aspects.
|
SPAN OF HUMAN DEVELOPMENTAL STAGE:
|
Period/Stages
of Development
|
Approximate
age
|
|
Pre-natal period
|
Nine months in mother’s
womb
|
|
Post-natal period
|
From
birth to first two weeks
|
|
Infancy period
|
From
2 weeks to 2 years
|
|
Childhood period
|
From
3rd year to 12th years.
|
|
Early-childhood period
|
From
3rd year to 6th years.
|
|
Later childhood period
|
From 7th year to 12+ years or
till the onset of puberty.
|
|
Adolescence period
|
From
13th year to 19th year OR from onset of puberty till
the attainment of maturity.
|
|
Adulthood period
|
From 20th year to 60th
years OR From attaining maturity to the age one ceases to produce one’s own kind.
|
|
Old age or Ageing period
|
From 61st years onwards OR
from the end of the reproduction capability till death.
|
1.2:Meaning of childhood
Childhood is the age span ranging
from birth to adolescence. According to Piaget's theory of cognitive development, childhood consists of
two stages: preoperational stage and concrete operational stage. In developmental psychology, childhood is divided up into the developmental stages of toddler hood (learning to walk), early childhood (play age), middle childhood (school age), and adolescence
(puberty through post-puberty). Various childhood factors could affect a
person's attitude formation.[1]
The concept of childhood emerged during the 17th and 18th
centuries, particularly through the educational theories of the philosopher John and the growth of books for and about children. Previous to this point, children were
often seen as incomplete versions of adults.
Childhood is followed by two phases for about 10 to 12 years,
they are as follows:
1.
Early childhood ( 3 to 6Years)
2. Later childhood (7 to
12 Years)
Early childhood:
Generally, the period
between three and six years belongs to the early childhood.
Characteristics
of Early childhood
1.Physical
Development:
Ø
Early
childhood is a period of slow, steady and uniform physical growth.
Ø
The child begins to assume the body proportions
of an adult.
Ø
The average annual increase in height is 3
inches and that in weight is 3 to 5 pounds.
Ø
During the first few months of early childhood,
the last 4 baby teeth erupt.
Ø
During
the last six months of early childhood, the baby teeth begin to be replaced by
permanent teeth.
Ø
Brain has
developed 90% of its adult weight.
Ø
The child in preschool stage develops a variety
of motor skills like walking, running, jumping, hopping, climbing etc.
2. Social
Development:
Ø
During early childhood the child acquires the
preliminary training and experiences needed to become a member of gang in later
childhood.
Ø
Hence early childhood is often called the
pre-gang age.
Ø
During this stage, children become increasingly
aware of their bodies and learn their sexual identities as male or female.
q
The important features of socialization during
pre-school years are the following:
ü
Feeling of autonomy develops in children. They begin
to explore their environment independently.
ü
Social environment expands beyond home.
ü
Children of both sexes play together without any
discrimination.
ü
They learn to co-operate with others and make
friends on shared interests and similar personality traits:
ü
Child seeks social approval of his action.
3. Emotional
Development:
Ø
Emotions are especially intense during early
childhood.
Ø
This is a time of disequilibrium when children
are out of focus in the sense that they are easily aroused to emotional
outbursts.
Ø
The intense emotionality in childhood is
characterized by temper tantrums, intense fear, and unreasonable outburst of
jealousy.
q
The chief characteristics of emotions
during pre-school years are the following:
ü
During early childhood emotions appear more
frequently and more intensely.
ü
Emotions are expressed in relation to concrete
objects.
ü
Emotions are temporary. The child shifts his
emotions very rapidly.
ü
Emotional expressions in early childhood are
intense very rapidly.
ü
Children fail to hide their emotions but express
them indirectly through different activities such as crying, nail biting,
thumb-sucking and speech difficulties.
4.
Intellectual Development:
Ø
The child begins to think symbolically.
Ø
He understands the basic functional relational
relationship between things and events.
Ø
He begins
to form concepts of physical and social reality.
Ø
The pre-school gradually develops the perception
of size, shape colour, time and distance.
Ø
Memory increases at a very rapid speed.
Ø
Creativity and imagination begin to grow.
Ø
Thinking and reasoning develop in relation to
concrete materials.
Ø
Span of attention and interest in exploring the
environment increases.
5. Language
Development:
Ø
During
the first 8-10 months, the child’s only mode of communication is its babbling.
Ø
Dramatic improvements in speech and language.
Ø
Single
word communication slowly gets replaced by short sentences, and gradually these
sentences become larger and more complex.
Ø
As children pass the age of three, they can use
the past tense, plurals and differentiate between, I, you and we.
Ø
Between age 4 and 5, they can use a sentence
with 4 and 5 words. They can also use prepositions.
Ø
Five to six-year-old children can give meanings
and opposites. More conjunctions, prepositions and articles make their speech
rich.
Ø
Six to seven-year
children speak more like adults with a few errors. They use gestures to
emphasize the meaning of the words they use.
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD
q
The following points may be helpful to the
teacher while planning kindergarten education for children:
- The greatest trauma
experienced by the new school entrant is separation from his mother. The
child can be prepared for this by a short period of separation that he can
joyfully spend in the nursery school. Slowly he gets accustomed to being
separated from his mother and learns to adjust to a fixed schedule.
- Activity must be an
integral part of nursery training. As the children are acquiring new motor
skill, they have an innate urge to practice them. So opportunity should be
given to them for manipulating and handling objects play with block and to
perform simple motor skills.
- Action songs, games
that involve varied activities like running, skipping, jumping etc. should
be planned for pre-scholars.
4. Imitation and
repetitive behaviours are characteristic feature of children at this stage. Hence,
they should be encouraged for learning and strengthening behviour through
imitation and repetition.
5. Pre-school
education must pre-school education must primarily focus on language training.
This could be achieved by:
ü
Providing opportunities to children for free
conversation among themselves and between the teachers.
ü
Providing opportunities for participation in
storytelling, recitation of nursery rhymes, singing of songs etc.
ü
Providing opportunities to children to
associates sounds with appropriate pictures of trees, birds, animals, objects
etc.
6. Nursery
education should be a preparatory stage for reading and writing.
Ø
The process of writing implies finer muscular
control, eye-span and eye-hand co-ordination, which are not perfect in the 3 to
5 years old child.
Ø
Therefore, reading and writing must be given
undue emphasizes.
7. Art activities
like easel painting, finger painting, crayoning, sand writing, clay modeling,
tracing, cutting and pasting various shapes etc. should be introduced.
LATER CHILDHOOD (Primary
School Stage)
Later childhood
extends from the age of six years to the individual becomes sexually mature.
THIS period is labeled by parents as the troublesome or sloppy age; by
educators as elementary school age; and by psychologists as gang age or age of
conformity. These different names are used because of the following reasons:
1.
Troublesome age: Parents consider
later childhood as a troublesome period because it is the time when children
are no longer willing to do what they are told to do when they are more
influenced by their peers than by the parents and other eider members of the
family.
2.
Sloppy age: Since children are
careless, untidy and irresponsible about their clothes & other material
possessions during later childhood, this period is called as sloppy age.
3.
Gang age & Age of
conformity: During later childhood, children’s major concern is acceptance
by their age- mates & membership in a gang, especially aging with prestige
in the eyes of their age-mates. Because of this absorbing concern, children are
willing to conform to group approve standard in term of appearance, speech
&behavior. This has led psychologist to label late childhood as the age of
conformity
DEVELOPMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF
LATER CHILDHOOD
The
following are the major development characteristics of later childhood:
- 1.Physical
Development:
Ø
Later
childhood is a period of slow & relatively uniform growth until the changes
of puberty begins.
Ø
The growth is slowest for girls between the ages
of nine& ten years, while boys grow slowest between 10 & 11 years.
Ø
This slow period of growth is called pre-puberty
lag.
Ø
Primary
teeth start falling at around sixth year & replaced by permanent teeth in
the next five years.
Ø
The most significant physical changes occurring
during this period is the lengthening of limbs.
Ø
Sex differences in physical growth become more
pronounced in late childhood. Because boys begin their puberty growth spurt
approximately a year later than girls, they tend to be slightly shorter &
lighter in weight than girls of the same age until they too become sexually
mature.
2. Motor
Development:
Ø
Motor abilities improve a great deal between
sixth & twelfth year.
Ø
Improving muscle co- ordination helps the child
to acquire new skills & improve the already acquired ones.
Ø
They have reasonably good mastery over the basic
motor skills of sitting standing, walking & simple finger manipulation.
Ø
By the age of twelve, muscle co-ordination is
almost perfect.
Ø
At this stage, improved co-ordination of hand
& finger muscles helps the child to produce good handwriting
3. Emotional
development:
Ø
During elementary school period, children
gradually learn to control the overt expressions of their emotions, especially
the unpleasant ones & to use emotional catharsis to clear their pent-up
emotions.
Ø
Later childhood is a period of relative
emotional calm. The child gradually learns to control his emotional expression
in social situations.
Ø
The emotional responses of the child become less
diffuse, random & undifferentiated.
Ø
Emotional expressed in late childhood are
pleasant ones, because this will help the child in the release of pent-up
animal spirits.
4. Social
Development:
Ø
Later childhood is marked by greater degree of
social awareness. There is a great expansion of child’s social world.
Ø
He develops social behavior necessary to adjust
with others. He becomes an active member of a peer group.
Ø
He believes in group loyalty and thus tries to
conform to the rules & values maintained by the group.
Ø
Children reject adult standards & circle of
friends widens
Ø
In this age, boys & girls make individual
groups because their interests, habits & desires become differentiated.
Ø
During this period children develop group
consciousness &they become less selfish, self-centered 7 aggressive but
more cooperative & out-going.
5.
Intellectual Development:
Ø
During later childhood, children enter into
piglet’s concrete operational stage of intellectual development.
Ø
They
begin to think logically but are unable to think in abstract terms. Children
develop powers of observation, attention, reasoning &abstract thinking.
Ø
During elementary school period the child’s
ability to absorb information and accumulate ideas increases and his memory
become more efficient.
Ø
Children become increasingly concerned with the
cause and effect relationship in physical & natural phenomena in the
environment.
6. Speech and
Language Development:
Ø
During late childhood, all areas of speech-
pronunciation, vocabulary, comprehension, &sentence structure- improve
rapidly.
Ø
A six-year-old
child has fairly large vocabulary, and throughout later childhood his general
vocabularies grow by leaps and bounds.
Ø
Errors in
pronunciation are less common at this age.
Ø
A new
word may be incorrectly pronounced for the first time but after hearing the
correct pronunciation once or twice, children are generally able to pronounce
it correctly.
Ø
Primary schoolers show a keen desire to learn
meanings of new words, phrases, and usage and he tries to use them in his
conversation.
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING FOR LATER CHILDHOOD
q
The following points may be helpful to teachers
in planning educational strategies for elementary school children:
- Teachers must not over
emphasize reading and writing for children between ages 6 and 9 as their
neuro muscular coordination is not perfect.
- The child attains a reasonably
good neuro muscular coordination by the age of 10 years.
- It is the time to
emphasize reading, writing, drawing, etc. At this stage the child should
be helped to improve his handwriting.
- Since children between
6 and 9 years have very short span of attention, text books must not have
long words. As the child grows older the span of attention lengthens and
longer words can be gradually introduced.
- Use pictorial aids
while teaching in elementary class as they will not only helped to make
the lessons interesting, but they also make the concepts clear.
- Since children of this
age are able to think only in concentrate terms, teachers should give them
enough opportunities to solve problems of a concentrate nature.
- Making good use of the gregarious
instinct, the child can be induced to take part in scouting and other team
games.
- His extrovert nature
can be put to good use in sending him on extensive tours of the country so
that his knowledge increases.
- His imitative habit
can be put to the most advantageous use by performing useful activities in
his presence so that he may learn to emulate them.
- Children in their
later childhood are highly curious to know about the environment. His
curiosity can be aroused regarding novel things and he can then be left to
learn many new things.
- The acquisitive tendency of children can
be best used by encouraging him to collect things such as stamps,
photographs, old coins etc.
CHARACTERISTICS
OF CHILDHOOD
1.
Early childhood is a period of slow, steady and uniform
physical growth.
2.
The child in preschool stage
develops a variety of motor skills like walking, running, jumping, hopping,
climbing etc.
3.
Children of both sexes play
together without any discrimination.
4.
They learn to co-operate with
others and make friends on shared interests and similar personality traits:
5.
Child seeks social approval of
his action.
6.
Emotions are temporary. The
child shifts his emotions very rapidly.
7.
Emotional expressions in early
childhood are intense very rapidly.
8.
Children fail to hide their
emotions but express them indirectly through different activities such as
crying, nail biting, thumb-sucking and speech difficulties.
9.
Memory increases at a very
rapid speed.
10.
Creativity and imagination begin
to grow.
11.
Thinking and reasoning develop
in relation to concrete materials.
12.
Span of attention and interest
in exploring the environment increases.
13.
Later childhood is a period of
slow & relatively uniform growth until the changes of puberty begins. The
growth is slowest for girls between the ages of nine& ten years, while boys
grow slowest between 10 & 11 years.
14.
Motor abilities improve a great
deal between sixth & twelfth year. Improving muscle co- ordination helps
the child to acquire new skills & improve the already acquired ones.
15.
Later childhood is a period of
relative emotional calm. The child gradually learns to control his emotional
expression in social situations.
16. Later childhood
is marked by greater degree of social awareness. There is a great expansion of
child’s social world. He develops social behavior necessary to adjust with
others.
17.
In this age, boys & girls
make individual groups because their interests, habits & desires become
differentiated. Playgroups are essentially single sex groups & there
develop an antagonistic feeling towards the groups of opposite sex.
18. During later
childhood, all areas of speech- pronunciation, vocabulary, comprehension,
&sentence structure- improve rapidly.
1.3:Physical and intellectual development of child
PHYSICAL
DEVELOPMENT OF A CHILD
q
Physical growth and development refers to a
process which brings about bodily and physiological changes-internal as well as
external-in an organism from the conception till his death.
q
Generally,
these changes take place in the following dimensions:
(I ) Gross
physical structure or physique:
Ø
It involves changes in height, weight, body
proportions and general physical appearance.
(ii) Internal
organs.
Ø
It involves changes in the functioning of
glands, nervous system and other body systems-circulatory, respiratory,
digestive, muscular, lymphatic and reproductive.
Physical characteristics and Needs of Children from 5
to 8 years
Physical Characteristics Needs
1. Average increase in height of about 5
cms. 1. Adequate sleep for 10 to 12 hours.
2. Girls mature faster than boys. 2.
Frequent periods of rest and recreation.
3. Legs lengthen rapidly. 3. Active play and large space for play.
4. Nose and throat difficulties are frequent. 4. Guidance in eating and
health protection.
5. Tend to take more food than their
stomach 5. Preventive measures
against childhood
Can hold.
Diseases like measles.
6. Show resistance taking a bath. 6. Proper
dress according to weather.
7. Average gain in health.
7. Care of teeth etc.
8. Gradual improvement in speed, steadiness
of
Movement and accuracy.
From
9 to 11 years
1. Children are extremely active. 1. Careful eye examination.
2. Relatively free from disease. 2. Correction of
postures.
3. Relatively healthy and sturdy. 3. Frequent change of physical activity.
4. Choosy about food but eat a great
deal. 4. Independence in caring
for physical needs.
5. Girls increase steadily in physical
skills. 5. Adequate
nutrition.
6. Girls usually have less stamina than
boys. 6. Supervision of strenuous
physical activities.
7. Interested in competitive games which 7. ----do----
require skill.
8. More easily fatigued after physical
activity. 8. ----do----
Ø
Ø Physical
changes are rather rapid in the earlier part of the child’s life.
INTELLECTUAL
DEVELOPMENT OF A CHILD
Ø Intellectual
or mental development implies the growth and improvement of several mental
abilities.
Ø These
abilities include perception, observation, remembrance, imagination, thinking,
problem-solving, intelligence, language ability etc. they grow and mature with
age.
Ø They
are inter-dependent, inter-related and develop as whole.
Ø The
development of various abilities goes on a simultaneously but certain abilities
may develop faster than the rest.
Ø All
the abilities may not mature at the same time.
Ø There
may be variations in the rate of overall intellectual development at various ages.
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Ø
During early childhood the child acquires the preliminary
training and experiences needed to become a member of gang in later childhood.
Ø
Feeling of autonomy develops in children. They begin to explore
their environment independently.
Ø
Social environment expands beyond home.
Ø
Children of both sexes play together without any discrimination.
Ø
They learn to co-operate with others and make friends on shared
interests and similar personality traits:
Ø
Child seeks social approval of his action.
Ø
Later childhood is marked by greater degree of social awareness.
There is a great expansion of child’s social world.
Ø
Peer group becomes important agent of socialization during later
childhood
Ø
Children reject adult standards & circle of friends widens
Ø
In this age, boys & girls make individual groups because
their interests, habits & desires become differentiated. Playgroups are
essentially single sex groups & there develop an antagonistic feeling
towards the groups of opposite sex.
Ø
During this period children develop group consciousness
&they become less selfish, self-centered 7 aggressive but more cooperative &out-going.
EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Ø
Emotions are especially intense during early childhood.
Ø
During early childhood emotions appear more frequently and more intensely.
Ø
Emotions are expressed in relation to concrete objects.
Ø
Emotions are temporary. The child shifts his emotions very
rapidly.
Ø
Emotional expressions in early childhood are intense very rapidly.
Ø
Later childhood is a period of relative emotional calm. The
child gradually learns to control his emotional expression in social
situations.
Ø
The emotional responses of the child become less diffuse, random
& undifferentiated.
Ø
Emotional expressed in late childhood are pleasant ones, because
this will help the child in the release of pent-up animal spirits.
Early childhood
1.
Physical Development: Early childhood is a
period of slow, steady and uniform physical growth. The child begins to assume
the body proportions of an adult. The average annual increase in height is 3
inches and that in weight is 3 to 5 pounds. During the first few months of
early childhood, the last 4 baby teeth erupt. During the last six months of
early childhood, the baby teeth begin to be replace3d by permanent teeth. Brain
has developed 90% of its adult weight. The child in preschool stage develops a
variety of motor skills like walking, running, jumping, hopping, climbing etc.
2.
Social Development: During early
childhood the child acquires the preliminary training and experiences needed to
become a member of gang in later childhood. Hence early childhood is often
called the pre-gang age. During this stage, children become increasingly aware
of their bodies and learn their sexual identities as male or female. This
self-awareness contributes to the development of either positive or negative
self-attitudes. During pre-school years children develop new inter-personal and
sex-appropriate relationship with others. They learn to share and compete with
siblings and peers. The pattern of socialization at this period can be seen in
the play behavior of children, It moves from the most independent solitary
play, through parallel and associative play to the participatory co-operative
play. The important features of socialization during pre-school years are the
following:
a)
Feeling of autonomy develops in children. They begins to explore
their environment independently.
b)
Social environment expands beyond home.
c)
Children of both sexes play together without any discrimination.
d)
They learn to co-operate with others and make friends on shared
interests and similar personality traits:
e)
Child seeks social approval of his action.
3.
Emotional Development: Emotions are
especially intense during early childhood. This is a time of disequilibrium
when children are out of focus in the sense that they are easily aroused to
emotional outbursts. The intense emotionality in childhood is characterized by
temper tantrums, intense fear, and unreasonable outburst of jealousy. The chief
characteristics of emotions during pre-school years are the following:
a)
During early childhood emotions appear more frequently and more
intensely.
b)
Emotions are expressed in relation to concrete objects.
c)
Emotions are temporary. The child shifts his emotions very
rapidly.
d)
Emotional expressions in early childhood are intense very
rapidly.
e)
Children fail to hide their emotions but express them indirectly
through different activities such as crying, nail biting, thumb-sucking and
speech difficulties.
4.
Intellectual
Development: At the early childhood, an individual enters in piaget’s second
stage of cognitive development-pre-operational stage. The child begins to think
symbolically. He understands the basic functional relational relationship
between things and events. He begins to form concepts of physical and social
reality. The other major characteristics of intellectual development during
pre-school years are:
a)
The pre-school gradually develops the perception of size, shape
colour, time and distance.
b)
Memory increases at a very rapid speed.
c)
Creativity and imagination begins to grow.
d)
Thinking and reasoning develop in relation to concrete
materials.
e)
Span of attention and interest in exploring the environment
increases.
5.
Language Development: During the first
8-10 months, the child’s only mode of communication is its babbling and cooing.
The first words are uttered around the child’s first birthday. Then there is a
slow-down for about two to three months when the children seems to be
concentrating on recently acquired motor skills like standing without support
and walking. After this, come swift and dramatic improvements in speech and
language. Single word communication slowly gets replaced by short sentences,
and gradually these sentences become larger and more complex.
As children pass the age of three, they can use the past tense,
plurals and differentiate between, I, you and we. Between age 4 and 5, they can
use a sentence with 4 and 5 words. They can also use prepositions. Five to six
year old children can give meanings and opposites. More conjunctions,
prepositions and articles make their speech rich. Six to seven year children
speak more like adults with a few errors. They use gestures to emphasize the
meaning of the words they use.
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD
The following points
may be helpful to the teacher while planning kindergarten education for
children:
1.
The greatest trauma experienced by the new school entrant is
separation from his mother. The child can be prepared for this by a short
period of separation that he can joyfully spend in the nursery school. Slowly
he gets accustomed to being separated from his mother and learns to adjust to a
fixed schedule.
2.
Activity must be an integral part of nursery training. As the
children are acquiring new motor skill, they have a innate urge to practice
them. So opportunity should be given to them for manipulating and handling
objects play with block and to perform simple motor skills.
3.
Action songs, games that involve varied activities like running,
skipping, jumping etc. should be planned for pre-scholars.
4.
Imitation and repetitive behaviours are characteristic feature
of children at this stage. Hence they should be encouraged for learning and
strengthening behviour through imitation and repetition.
5.
Pre-school education must pre-school education must primarily
focus on language training. This could be achieved by:
a)
Providing opportunities to children for free conversation among
themselves and between the teachers.
b)
Providing opportunities for participation in storytelling,
recitation of nursery rhymes, singing of songs etc.
c)
Providing opportunities to children to associates sounds with
appropriate pictures of trees, birds, animals, objects etc.
6.
Nursery education should be a preparatory stage for reading and
writing. The process of writing implies finer muscular control, eye-span and
eye-hand co-ordination, which are not perfect in the 3 to 5 years old child.
Therefore, reading and writing must be given undue emphasizes.
7.
Art activities like easel painting, finger painting, crayoning,
sand writing, clay modeling, tracing, cutting and pasting various shapes etc.
should be introduced.
DEVELOPMENTAL CHARACTERISTICS OF LATER CHILDHOOD
The following are the
major development characteristics of later childhood:
1.
Physical Development: Later childhood is a
period of slow & relatively uniform growth until the changes of puberty
begins. The growth is slowest for girls between the ages of nine& ten
years, while boys grow slowest between 10 & 11 years. This slow period of
growth is called pre-puberty lag. Primary teeth start falling at around sixth
year & replaced by permanent teeth in the next five years. The most
significant physical changes occurring during this period is the lengthening of
limbs. Sex differences in physical growth become more pronounced in late
childhood. Because boys begin their puberty growth spurt approximately a year
later than girls, they tend to be slightly shorter & lighter in weight than
girls of the same age until they too become sexually mature.
2.
Motor Development: Motor abilities
improve a great deal between sixth & twelfth year. Improving muscle co-
ordination helps the child to acquire new skills & improve the already
acquired ones. They have reasonably good mastery over the basic motor skills of
sitting standing, walking & simple finger manipulation. By the age of
twelve, muscle co-ordination is almost perfect. At this stage , improved
co-ordination of hand & finger muscles help the child to produce good
handwriting
3.
Emotional development: During elementary
school period, children gradually learn to control the overt expressions of
their emotions, especially the unpleasant ones & to use emotional catharsis
to clear their pent-up emotions. The important characteristics of emotional
development during later childhood are the following
a.
Later childhood is a period of relative emotional calm. The
child gradually learns to control his emotional expression in social
situations.
b.
The emotional responses of the child become less diffuse, random
& undifferentiated.
c.
Emotional expressed in late childhood are pleasant ones, because
this will help the child in the release of pent-up animal spirits.
4.
Social Development: Later childhood is
marked by greater degree of social awareness. There is a great expansion of
child’s social world. He develops social behavior necessary to adjust with
others. He becomes an active member of a peer group. He believes in group
loyalty and thus tries to conform to the rules & values maintained by the
group. The child’s social development at this stage is influenced by the mutual
interaction between various groups; their competition, conflict &
co-operation. The major changes occur in the social behavior of children during
the elementary school stage are the following:
a.
Peer group becomes important agent of socialization during later
childhood
b.
Children reject adult standards & circle of friends widens
c.
In this age, boys & girls make individual groups because
their interests, habits & desires become differentiated. Playgroups are
essentially single sex groups & there develop an antagonistic feeling
towards the groups of opposite sex.
d.
During this period children develop group consciousness
&they become less selfish, self-centered 7 aggressive but more cooperative
&out-going.
5.
Intellectual
Development: During later childhood, children enter into piglet’s concrete
operational stage of intellectual development. They begin to think logically
but are unable to think in abstract terms. Children develop powers of
observation, attention, reasoning &abstract thinking. They can focus on
more than one aspects of a situation & can globally experience what happens
around.
The major
developmental changes of cognitive ability during this period are the
following:
a.
During elementary school period the child’s ability to absorb
information and accumulate ideas increases and his memory become more
efficient.
b.
His ability to generalize as well as capacity for logical
thinking increases.
c.
The child becomes increasingly efficient in selecting,
developing &applying cognitive operations in relation to concrete objects
d.
At this age, the child tends to live in a world of make believe,
of which he himself is the creator
e.
Children become increasingly concerned with the cause and effect
relationship in physical & natural phenomena in the environment.
6.
Speech and Language
Development: During late childhood, all areas of speech- pronunciation,
vocabulary, comprehension, &sentence structure- improve rapidly. A six year
old child has fairly large vocabulary, and throughout later childhood his
general vocabularies grow by leaps and bounds. Errors in pronunciation are less
common at this age. Anew word may be incorrectly pronounced for the first time
but after hearing the correct pronunciation once or twice, children are
generally able to pronounce it correctly. Primary schoolers show a keen desire
to learn meanings of new words, phrases, and usage and he tries to use them in
his conversation. The six year old child should have command of nearly every
kind of sentence and structure. They rarely use the passive voice. From six
until the age of 9 or 10 the length of sentences will increase. These long
sentences are generally rambling and loosely kainite. Gradually after the age
of 9 the child begins to use shorter and more compact sentences.
By the age of 9-10,
children develop an increasingly complex and understanding of syntax.
Grammatical errors are slowly eliminated and they talk fluently. They are able
to use contextual clues to understand meanings of new words and they continue
to experiment with new words in their conversation.
EDUCATIONAL PLANNING FOR LATER CHILDHOOD
Later childhood is a
crucial period with regard to the educational life of an individual as it is
the beginning of formal schooling. The following points may be helpful to
teachers in planning educational strategies for elementary school children:
Ø
Teachers must not over emphasize reading and writing for
children between ages 6 and 9 as their neuro muscular coordination is not
perfect.
Ø
The child attains a reasonable good neuro muscular coordination
by the age of 10 years.
It is the time to
emphasize reading,writing, drawing, etc.At this stage the child should be
helped to improve his handwriting.
Ø
Since children between 6 and 9 years have very short span of
attention, text books must not have long words. As the child grows older the
span of attention lengthens and longer words can be gradually introduced.
Ø
Use pictorial aids while teaching in elementary class as they
will not only helped to make the lessons interesting, but they also make the
concepts clear.
Ø
Since children of this age are able to think only in concentrate
terms, teachers should give them enough opportunities to solve problems of a
concentrate nature.
Ø
Making good use of the gregarious instinct, the child can be
induced to take part in scouting and other team games.
Ø
His extrovert nature can be put to good use in sending him on
extensive tours of the country so that his knowledge increases.
Ø
His imitative habit can be put to the most advantageous use by
performing useful activities in his presence so that he may learn to emulate
them.
Ø
Children in their later childhood are highly curious to know
about the environment. His curiosity can be aroused regarding novel things and
he can then be left to learn many new things.
Ø
The acquisitive tendency of children can be best used by
encouraging him to collect things such as stamps, photographs, old coins etc.
Important General Characteristics of
Child’s Development
1.
It is
very rapid during infancy (from birth to three years.)
2.
Period
of pre-childhood (4 to 6 years) is the period of fixation i. e, what is acquired
in infancy is fixed or stabilized.
3.
Period
of early childhood (7 to 9 years) shows again a period of growth and
development but the speed is slow in comparison to infancy.
4.
Later
childhood (10 to 12years) is again a period of fixation.
5.
The
first three years of adolescence are marked as the years of rapid growth and
development. This is followed by a period of slow growth.
6.
All
the sensory and motor organs of the child’s body are in the process of growth.
7.
The
urge for motor activities like walking, running, jumping, catching, throwing,
etc. is at its peak.
8.
Muscular
development takes place rapidly.
9.
In
the middle and later childhood, coordination of hands and fingers becomes
possible.
10. Children take delight in strenuous
physical activities.
11. Children enjoy movement.
12. There is an urge among
children to participate in activities which involve speaking, seeing, and
manipulating.
MENTAL OR INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT OF
CHILD
(Piaget’s cognitive theory of
development)
Meaning: Mental development implies the progressive changes
in the mental process which go on from birth to death. Mental process is an
activity on the part of the organism which is of a psychological nature or
involved in the mind. There are mental tests to evaluate a specific ability or
performance.
Mental development
includes various aspects such as development of concepts, perception, language,
memory, reasoning, thinking, imagination and intelligence.
Mental development or intellectual development is the development of
the mental abilities and capacities which help an individual to adjust his
behavior to the ever changing environmental conditions or to enable him to
accomplish a task that needs complex cognitive abilities. According to
J.S.Bruner (1964), “Intellectual development is the capacity to deal with
several choices at the same time.”
STAGES OF CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
Piaget divides the
stages of cognitive development of the child into the following categories;
1.
Sensory-motor stage( Birth to 2 years) :This stage covers the period from birth to
two years. This stage is marked by sensation. Simple learning occurs but the
child does not think at this stage. These early sensory motor experiences of
the child have a great bearing on the development of his later intellectual abilities.
In the world of the child an object exists when it is physically present. He
then gains some consciousness about the stability of the object. He starts
comprehending casually. It is sometimes said that the child’s mental
development at this stage is equal to that of an intelligent animal. By the end
of two years, the child develops the concept which is characterized by
relationship among objects and between objects and his own body.
2.
Pre-conceptual stage (2 to 6 years): This stage is roughly between two years and
six years. The child develops ways of representing events and objects through
symbols, including verbal symbols of language. He can now think about things
that are not immediately present. The child now becomes ego-centric i.e.
primarily concerned himself.
3.
Intuitive Stage (4 to 8 years): This covers the age four to eight years. The
reason of the child is not logical and is based oin intuition rather than
systematic logic. The intuitive thought is primarily concerned with static
conditions but the child is able to use concepts as stable generalization of
his past and present experiences. He, however, cannot adequately link a whole
set of successive conditions into an integrated totality.
4.
Concrete Operations stage (6 to 11/12
years) : The stage of development is usually between
the age of 6 to eleven or 12 years. At this stage a child is concerned with the
integration and stability of his cognitive system. The child develops logical
operations from simple associations. He learns to add, subtract, multiply and
divide. He is in a position to classify, concrete objects. These operations are
called concrete because they relate directly to objects. These operations do
not involve abstract thinking. Piaget has coined a new term grouping
to describe a set of operations. Piaget has given a long list of operations
which make it possible to handle numbers in various relations to each other,
the arrangement of objects into classes and sub classes and the ordering of
objects according to one or more attributes.
5.
Formal Operational Stage (12 to
adolescence): At this stage the thought process of the child
becomes quite systematic and reasonably well integrated. The child is in a
position to free himself from the concrete operations related directly to
objects and to groups. He is capable of reasoning with propositions removed
from the concrete. He develops an experimental spirit. Now he solves problems
more systematically and the bases of action are not trial and error. The
youngsters at this stage are able to organize information, reason
scientifically, build hypotheses based on understanding to causality and test
their hypothesis.
EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS
AT THE PRE-SCHOOL AND PRIMARY STAGE
1.
The
teacher should familiarize himself with the theoretical and practical aspects
of Piaget’s theory of cognitive development.
2.
The
teacher should try to assess the level and type of thinking of each child in
his class.
3.
Each
child may be asked to perform some of the experiments as suggested by Piaget.
4.
The
teacher should spend a lot of time in listening to each child’s reaction to the
experiments.
5.
Plenty
of equipment materials and opportunities should be given to children to learn
on their own.
6.
For
social interaction, group situations may be arranged so that children learn
from each other.
7.
Learning
experiences should be so arranged as they take into account the level of
thinking of mental development attained by an individual or group.
8.
It
should be kept in mind by the teachers that the children may e influenced by
egocentric speech or thought.
DEVELOPMENTAL TASKS
R.H. Havighurst (1953) has defined a development task in these words,
“ A development task is a task which arises at or about a certain period in the
life of the individual, successful achievement of which leads to his happiness
and to success with later tasks, while failure leads to unhappiness and
difficulty with later tasks. “
In simple words a development task may be explained as;
·
Every
society or culture has certain norms.
·
Every
society or culture expects its members to follow these norms.
·
These
norms are in terms of certain essential skills.
·
Mastery
over these skills leads to happiness and failure leads to unhappiness.
·
Skills
are related to age groups.
·
Norms
vary somewhat from one socioeconomic group to another.
List of developmental Tasks
1.
Birth to 6 years:
1.
Learning
to walk
2.
Learning
to take solid food
3.
Learning
to talk
4.
Learning
to control the elimination of body wastes
5.
Learning
sex differences
6.
Achieving
physiological stability
7.
Forming
simple concepts of social and physical reality
8.
Learning
to relate oneself emotionally to parents, siblings and other people
9.
Learning
to distinguish right and wrong and developing a conscience
2.
6 to 12 years:
1.
Learning
physical skills, ordinary games.
2.
Building
wholesome attitudes towards oneself as a growing organism.
3.
Learning
to get along with age-mates.
4.
Learning
an appropriate sex role i.e. masculine or feminine role.
5.
Developing
fundamental skills in reading, writing and calculating.
6.
Developing
concepts necessary for everyday living.
7.
Developing
conscience, morality and values.
8.
Achieving
personal independence.
9.
Developing
attitude towards social groups and institutions.
3.
Adolescence (13 to 18 years)
1.
Accepting
one’s physique.
2.
Accepting
a masculine or feminine role.
3.
Gaining
emotional independence from parents and other adults.
4.
Establishing
new relations with age-mates of both sexes.
5.
Achieving
assurance of economic independence.
6.
Selecting
and preparing for a vocation.
7.
Developing
necessary concepts for civic competence.
8.
Developing
intellectual skills.
9.
Developing
socially acceptable behaviour.
10. Preparing marriage and family life.
11. Developing harmonious moral and scientific
values.
DEVELOPMENTAL TASKS OF CHILDHOOD
1.
Learning
to walk.
2.
Learning
to take solid food.
3.
Learning
to talk.
4.
Learning
to Control the elimination of body waste.
5.
Learning
sex differences and sexual modesty.
6.
Getting
ready to read.
7.
Learning
physical skills necessary for ordinary games.
8.
Building
wholesome attitude forward oneself as a growing organism.
9.
Learning
to get along with age-mates.
10. Learning an appropriate
masculine or feminine social role.
Social
and emotional development of a child
What is social development?
1. Social development means
investing in people. It requires the removal of barriers so that all citizens
can journey toward their dreams with confidence and dignity. It is about
refusing to accept that people who live in poverty will always be poor. It is
about helping people so they can move forward on their path to
self-sufficiency.
2. Every New Brunswicker must have the opportunity to grow, develop their own
skills and contribute to their families and communities in a meaningful way. If
they are healthy, well-educated and trained to enter the workforce and are able
to make a decent wage they are better equipped to meet their basic needs and be
successful. Their families will also do well and the whole of society will
benefit.
3. Social development is about
improving the well-being of every individual in society so they can
reach their full potential. The success of society is linked to the
well-being of each and every citizen.
4. Social development refers to
the process by which a child learns to interact with others around them.
5. Social development is most
often refers to how a child develops friendships and other relationships, as well how a child handles conflicts with
peers.
6. Healthy social development allows us to form positive relationships
with family, friends, teachers, and other people in our lives.
7. Social development refers to the
process by which a child learns to interact with others around them. As they
develop and perceive their own individuality within their community, they also
gain skills to communicate with other people and process their actions. Social
development most often refers to how a child develops friendships and other
relationships, as well how a child handles conflict with peers.
Why is
social development so important?
Social development can actually impact
many of the other forms of development a child experiences. A child’s ability
to interact in a healthy way with the people around her can impact everything
from learning new words as a toddler, to being able to resist peer pressure as
a high school student, to successfully navigating the challenges of adulthood.
Healthy social development can help your child:
- Develop language skills. An
ability to interact with other children allows for more opportunities to
practice and learn speech and language skills. This is a positive cycle,
because as communication skills improve, a child is better able to relate
to and react to the people around him.
- Build self-esteem. Other
children provide a child with some of her most exciting and fun
experiences. When a young child is unable to make friends it can be
frustrating or even painful. A healthy circle of friends reinforces a
child’s comfort level with her own individuality.
- Strengthen learning skills. In
addition to the impact social development can have on general
communication skills, many researchers believe that having healthy
relationships with peers (from preschool on up) allows for adjustment to
different school settings and challenges. Studies show that children who
have a hard time getting along with classmates as early as preschool are
more likely to experience later academic difficulties.
- Resolve conflicts. Stronger
self-esteem and better language skills can ultimately lead to a better
ability to resolve differences with peers.
- Establish positive attitude. A
positive attitude ultimately leads to better relationships with others and
higher levels of self-confidence.
How can parents
make a difference when it comes to social development?
Everyday experiences with parents are
fundamental to a child’s developing social skill-set. Parents provide a child
with their very first opportunities to develop a relationship, communicate and
interact. As a parent, you also model for your child every day how to interact
with the people around you.
Because social development is not talked about as much as some other
developmental measures, it can be hard for parents to understand the process
AND to evaluate how their child is developing in this area. There are some
basic developmental milestones at every age, as well as some helpful tips a
parent can use to support their child.
Emotional
Development
1.
It refers to the recognize, express and
manage feelings at different stages of life and to have empathy for the
feelings of others.
--Which
may include both positive and negative emotions.
--Largely
affected by relationships with parents, siblings and peers.
2.
A tremendous amount of
and
emotional development takes place during early childhood. As
kids experience temper tantrums, mood swings, and an expanding social world,
they must learn more about their emotions as well as those of other people.
Social
and Emotional Development
As parents, we all want our children
to be healthy easier to tell if your child is development physically, but do
you know if your child is developing the appropriate social and emotional
skills? Supporting their emotional and social development is just as important
as supporting their physical development.
1.
Social and emotional development is a child's ability to understand the
feelings of others, control his or her own feelings and behaviors, get along
with other children, and build relationships with adults.
2.
In order for children to develop the
basic skills they need such as cooperation, following directions, demonstrating
self-control and paying attention, they must have social-emotional skills.
Why
is important for children to have positive social and emotional skills?
- Having
positive social and emotional skills is important throughout life and can
have an impact on how they function at home, school and in the community.
- When
young children are faced with social, emotional or behavioural challenges
it can impact their chances for school success and healthy relationships.
- A
child’s positive relationship with trusting and caring adults is the key
to successful emotional and social development.
What
can you as a caregiver do to support positive, social and emotional
development?
1.
Lead by example, by modeling positive
behavior.
2.
Be affectionate.
3.
Be considerate of feelings, wants and
needs.
4.
Express pride in accomplishments.
5.
Express interest in daily activities.
6.
Respect their viewpoints.
7.
Provide encouragement and support
during time of stress.
Why
Social And Emotional Development Is Important For Child?
1. Effective social and emotional
skills in preschoolers can be related to successful completion of education,
excellent performance in co-curricular activities and flourishing career
opportunities in adulthood.
2. Positive social and emotional skills
will impact the way a child functions at home, school and in the community.
3. Social, emotional or behavioural inabilities can impact the chances of
academic success and development of healthy relationships.
Thus, a childhood with well-developed
skills is a stepping stone to a successful adulthood and life ahead.
Development Of Social And Emotional
Skills At Different Ages
|
Age
|
Social And Emotional Skills
|
|
Birth to 1 year
|
Babbles with expression and copies
sounds
Shows attachment to mother and other family members
Shares toys with infants
Plays games such as
“peek-a-boo”
|
|
2 years
|
Temper tantrums
Imitates peers
Points to things or pictures when they are named
|
|
3 years
|
Initiates peer interactions
Understands rules
Shows a wide range of emotions
Carries on a conversation using 2 to 3 sentences
|
|
4 years
|
Preferred friendship
Elaborate fantasy play (e.g., ‘superhero’)
Usually compliant to instructions
|
|
5 years
|
Plays away from parent
Elaborate discussion of emotions
Speaks very clearly
|
What
are the key social and emotional skills?
•
Self-awareness is the ability to
recognize your emotions and understand the links between emotions, thoughts and
behaviors.
•
Self-
management is
the ability to regulate emotions, thoughts and behaviors.
•
Social awareness is the ability to
take other’s perspectives and demonstrate
empathy.
•
Relationship skills are the
ability to build and maintain healthy
relationships.
•
Responsible
decision
making is the ability to make good choices about your behavior
and interactions with others.
Why are social-emotional skills
important?
Early social emotional skills are related to how socially; emotionally,
academically and professionally skilled we are later in life. For example,
having higher social-emotional skills in kindergarten are related to important
outcomes at age 25 (Jones, Greenberg, & Crowley, 2015). These outcomes
include:
•
Educational success, such as completing
a college degree
•
Career success,
such as an increased likelihood of being employed
•
Other key life outcomes, such as being
less likely to have problems with the police
Social-emotional skills help children
to persist on challenging tasks, to effectively seek help when they need it and
to be thoughtful in their actions.
Key points for
supporting children’s emotional development
Providing effective support for
children’s emotional development starts with paying attention to their
feelings and noticing how they manage them. By
acknowledging children’s emotional responses and providing
guidance, parents, carers and school staff can help
children understand and accept feelings, and develop
effective strategies for managing them.
- Tune
into children’s feelings and emotions
Some emotions are easily identified, while others are less obvious.
Tuning into children’s emotions involves looking at their body language,
listening to what they are saying and how they are saying it, and
observing their behaviour. This allows you to respond more
effectively to children’s needs and to offer more specific guidance to
help children manage their emotions.
- Help children
recognise and understand emotions
Taking opportunities to talk with children and teach them about
emotions helps children to become more aware of their own emotions as well
as those of others. Encouraging children to feel comfortable with
their emotions and providing them with practice in talking about
their feelings helps children to further develop ways to manage their
emotions.
- Set limits on
inappropriate expression of emotions
It is very important for children to understand that it is okay to
have a range of emotions and feelings, but that there are limits to the
ways these should be expressed. While acknowledging children’s emotions,
it is therefore very important to set limits on aggressive, unsafe
or inappropriate behaviours.
- Be a role model
Children learn
about emotions and how to express them appropriately by watching others –
especially parents, careers and school staff. Showing children the ways
you understand and manage emotions helps children learn from your
example. This includes examples of saying: “Sorry, I lost my temper”
(because no parent is perfect!) and then showing how you might make amends.
This can be
especially helpful when supporting children around fear and
worries. Everyone gets
scared, and children can get scared for all sorts of reasons. Very young
children are often afraid of imaginary things like monsters hiding
under the bed. Older children usually fear real things that might happen, like
being
hurt.
All children need reassurance and support so they can learn to cope with
fear and worries on their own.
Developing
emotional skills
|
Skills needed
|
Children with beginning
skills
|
Children with developing
skills
|
Children with more developed
skills
|
|
Emotional
self-awareness
|
tend
to have one emotion at a time
act
out how they feel
flip
between one emotion to another quickly
|
start
to understand that they can have more than one emotion in reaction to the
same event as long as they are similar (e.g. happy and excited)
|
understand
that they can have opposite feelings to the same situation (e.g. feel both
happy and sad that the school year is ending)
|
|
Recognising
other people’s emotions
|
rely
on physical clues to identify emotions (e.g. tears = sadness)
|
Take
into account clues from the situation to help explain the emotion (eg
understand that a child might be sad because his/her toy has been broken.)
|
have
a more complex understanding of the interaction between emotions, situations
and people (eg the child is sad because the thing that was broken was a gift
from a loved grandparent who died recently)
|
|
Emotion
regulation – i.e. the ability to manage emotions effectively
|
are
able to use simply ways to manage emotions with support from adults (e.g.
choose a different activity to distract them from feeling frustrated)
|
are
increasingly able to choose appropriate behavioural responses (e.g. asks and
waits for assistance with difficult task)
|
are
increasingly able to manage emotions by rethinking own goals and motives (e.g.
decide that there is no point being angry about something he or she can’t
change)
|
Social
and Emotional Development in Early Childhood
A tremendous
amount of social and emotional
development takes place during early
childhood. As kids experience temper tantrums, mood swings, and an expanding
social world, they must learn more about their emotions as well as those of
other people.
Emotions and Social Experiences of Early Childhood
Throughout the toddler years, temper
tantrums are quite common. There's a good reason why people often refer to this
stage as the "terrible two's"! Toddlers tend to have rapid mood
swings. While their emotions can be very intense, these feelings also tend to
be quite short-lived. You might be stunned at how your child can go from
screaming hysterically about a toy he wants at one moment to sitting in front
of the television quietly watching his favorite show just moment later.
Children at this
age can be very possessive and have difficulty sharing. Learning to get along
with other children is an essential skill, however. In just a few short years,
your child will go from spending most of his time with family and close friends
to spending large chunk of his day interacting, learning, and playing with
other kids at school.
In fact, researchers
have found emotional development and social skills are essential for school
readiness. Examples of such abilities include paying attention to adult
figures, transitioning easily from one activity to the next, and cooperating
with other kids.
Helping Kids Develop Social and Emotional Skills
So how can you
help your child learn how to play well with others? Social competence not only
involves the ability to cooperate with peers; it also includes such things as
the ability to show empathy, express feelings, and share generously.
Fortunately, there are plenty of things that you can do to help your kids
develop these all-important social and emotional skills.
Modeling
appropriate behaviors is essential. Observation plays a vital role in how young
children learn new things. If your child sees you sharing, expressing
gratitude, being helpful, and sharing feelings, your child will have a good
solid understanding of how to interact with other people outside the home. You
can model these responses in your own household with both your child and other
members of the family. Every time you say "please" or "thank
you," you are demonstrating how you would like your children to behave.
Most
importantly, be sure to offer praise when your children demonstrate good social
behaviors. Reinforcement not only makes young children feel good about
themselves, it helps them understand why certain behaviors are desirable and
worthy of praise. Helping your children feel good about themselves also plays
an important role in developing a sense of empathy and emotional competence. By
creating a positive climate where children are allowed to share their feelings,
children will naturally begin to become more generous and thoughtful.
Social and emotional
development with special reference to diverse Social & Economic background
Parental support with children’s learning is
considered to be one pathway through which socio- economic factors influence
child competencies. Irrespective of
socio-economic status, parents eng aged with various learning activities
(except reading) roughly equally. The socio-economic factors i.e., family
income and maternal educational qualifications, were found to have a stronger
effect on children’s language/literacy than on social- emotional competence.
Socio-economic disadvantage, lack of maternal educational qualifications in
particular, remained powerful in influencing competencies in children aged
three and at the start of primary school.
The effects of socio-economic disadvantage on children’s development
have been explained through parents’ decisions about how to allocate a range of
resources, for example money, time and energy (investment model). The amount of
money parents spend on children (e.g. purchasing books, toys) and the time they
spend with them in joint activities (e.g. reading books) are considered
investments that have the potential to enhance children’s cognitive skills and
language and emergent literacy. The investment model often explains the link between
family income and children’s cognitive and linguistic development, whereas the
link between socio- economic disadvantage and children’s behavioural
functioning is explained through the impact of poverty on parental skills and
capabilities and has been found to be modest.
Parental investment in the form of
home learning is associated with children’s early linguistic and cognitive
development and emergent literacy, which are precursors to school success,
especially in reading. Literacy-rich environments where pre-school children
have access to books and other print materials and parents engage with them in
age-appropriate learning opportunities contribute positively to child literacy
and language and emotional and behavioural regulation. Beyond reading, parents
engage their children in activities such as reciting rhymes and songs, telling
stories m and teaching the alphabet, numbers and letters.
Socio-economic factors and
parental involvement with home learning
In
general, across socio-economic groups, small differences were found in the
number of parents involved with their children in helping with homework (e.g.
writing), teaching the alphabet and songs/rhymes and telling stories and
playing music. Across family income and educational qualifications groups, the
number of parents involved with these learning activities was roughly equal.
Across socio-economic groups, over three-quarters of parents engaged in
learning activities with their children daily or several times a week, with a
small number of parents engaging with home learning less frequently or not at
all.
Does family’s social background
matter?
Family income and maternal educational
qualifications yielded modest to moderate effects on social adjustment and
moderate to strong effects on language/literacy. Specifically, children with
educated parents (degree level or vocational equivalent) were on average about
six months ahead in language/literacy compared to their peers whose parents did
not have any educational qualifications.
The socio-economic
risk factors were found to have a stronger effect on children’s
language/literacy than on social competence, suggesting that their influence is
specific to child competencies. Moreover, the socio-economic factors exerted a
differential effect. For language/literacy, income had a moderate effect,
whereas maternal educational qualifications yielded a strong effect. A similar
pattern was found regarding social competence, with income and educational
qualifications yielding a modest and a moderate effect, respectively.
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