| The
CEDA Meta-Profession Project |
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| ITEM: |
HUMAN
DEVELOPMENT |
| Definition or Description: |
The
field of human development encompasses a number of theories that have applicability
in the meta-profession of college teaching. At its base, the higher education
experience is intended to promote the intellectual, ethical, social, cultural,
and (sometimes) the physical development of the student. Thus, knowledge
and expertise in the theories of human development is sometimes critical
in the design and development of the entire educational experience. |
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Comment: |
See the Other section below for descriptions of some of the major human development theories. These descriptions have been derived from Life-Span Human Development by Carol K. Sigelman and David R. Shaffer. |
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| References
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Other: |
Freud's Psychoanalytic Theory Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) challenged prevailing notions of human nature and human development by proposing that we are driven my motives and emotions on which we are largely unaware and that we are shaped by our earliest experiences in life. Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development Jean Piaget (1896-1980) viewed intelligence as a process that helps an organism adapt to its environment and proposed four major periods of cognitive development. Behaviorism
John B. Watson believed that conclusions about human development and functioning should be based on observations of overt behavior rather than on speculations about unconscious motives or cognitive processes that remain unobservable. Skinner's Operant Conditioning Theory
B. F. Skinner believed that the essence of human development is the continual acquisition of new habits of behavior and that these learned behaviors are controlled by external stimuli (reinforcers and punishers). Bandura's Social
Cognitive Theory
Albert Bandura claimed that humans are cognitive beings whose active processing of information from the environment plays a major role in learning and human development. Vygotsky's Cognitive
Theory
Lev Vygotsky insisted that children's minds are shaped by the particular social and historical context in which they live and by their interactions with adults. The information processing approach to human development emphasizes the fundamental mental processes involved in attention, perception, memory, and decision-making by using a computer analogy. Biobehavioral Theories
These theories look to investigate the extent to which genetic and environmental differences among people or animals are responsible for differences in their traits. Bowlby's Attachment
Theory
John Bowlby believed that many infant behaviors that promote emotional attachments have evolved because they make it more likely that the infant will be cared for by adults and will therefore survive. Cross-Cultural Theories
This perspective looks to find the typical rather than the unique and look for the underlying similarities among cultures in order to define universal occurrences. Bronfenbrenner's Ecological
Theory of Development
Urie Bronfenbrenner emphasized that the developing person is embedded in a series of environmental systems that interact with one another and with the individual to influence development. Contextual Theories
These perspectives hold that development arises from the ongoing interrelationships between the changing organism and a changing world. Changes in the person produce changes in his or her environment, changes in the environment produce changes in the person, and this interchange goes on continuously. Risk and Resiliency Theories
These theories investigate the survival of
individuals (resiliency) that are faced with adversity (risk).
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