Study Guide For FMST 210, Final Exam, Winter Term 1, 2021
Study Guide For FMST 210, Final Exam, Winter Term 1, 2021
Study Guide For FMST 210, Final Exam, Winter Term 1, 2021
Match five types of theories (Psychoanalytic, Behaviorist - Operant Conditioning, Behaviorist - Social Learning,
Cognitive, Systems) with their descriptions
Psychoanalytic Theories
● Development and behavior are the result of interplay of inner drives, memories, and conflicts we are unaware of
and cannot control.
● Two major Psychoanalytic theories/theorists:
1. Freud’s Psychosexual Theory - Behavior is driven by unconscious impulses outside our awareness.
2. Erikson’s Psychosocial Theory - Included the role of the social world in shaping our sense of self
● Freud's psychosexual stages (oral, anal, phallic, and latency)
○ periods in which unconscious drives are focused on different parts of the body, making stimulation to
those parts a source of pleasure
● Erikson's 8 psychosocial stages:
○ Each stage presents a unique developmental task, which is referred to as a crisis or conflict that must be
resolved
1. how they understand and interact with others and changes in how they understand themselves
and their roles as members of society
○ Trust vs mistrust: if parent always responds to baby's cry then they learn to trust that their basic needs
will be met, if parent doesn't come then they learn mistrust
○ If learn mistrust in stage 1 they will have a difficult time forming bonds later in life
Cognitive Theory
● Development and behaviour are the result of thought or Cognition
● Piaget's Cognitive-Developmental Theory:
○ Children and adults use their ability to think to better understand their environment
○ Organization of learning results in Cognitive schemas or concepts ideas and ways of interacting with the
world
■ Schemas are ways for us to organize our knowledge so it makes sense in our brain eg. "food,"
"furniture" sit on chair, eat banana not the other way around
● Piaget's stages of cognitive development
1. Sensorimotor
2. Preoperational
3. Concrete operational
4. Formal operational
Systems Theories
● Emphasizes the role of social context in development
● People are inseparable from the familiar, neighbourhood and societal contexts in which they live
● Two systems theories:
○ Vygotsky's Sociocultural Systems Theory:
■ Examines how culture is transmitted from one generation to the next through social interaction
■ Ex. You grew up in Vancouver but Chinese parents - would be brought up with Chinese and
Canadian culture, Vygotsky would suggest that you understand the world based on your cultural
training
○ Bronfenbrenner's Bioecological Systems Theory:
■ Addresses both the role of the individual and that individual's social interactions
■ Development is result of interactions among biological, cognitive and psychological changes
within a person and their changing context
■ Individuals are embedded in, or surrounded by, series of sociocultural contexts
■ Bronfenbrenner's Bioecological model: in slides
● Microecosystem: the immediate physical and social environment surrounding the
person (family, peers, and school.)
● Mesosystem: the relations and interactions among microsystems
○ experiences in the home (microsystem) influence those at school (microsystem)
● Exosystem: other settings in which the individual is not a participant but that
nevertheless influence him or her.
● Macrosystem: the greater sociocultural context in which the microsystem, mesosystem
and exosystem are embedded.
Dominant-Recessive Disorders
● Age
○ >35 y/o = high risk pregnancy
○ Risk of miscarriage, low birth weight, and down syndrome goes up the most with age
● Nutrition
○ What the woman eats goes directly to fetus
○ 2000-3000 calories a day to maintain pregnancy
○ Spina bifida - lack of folic acid
● Emotional wellbeing
○ Chronic stress in pregnant women (domestic violence, dangerous neighbourhood) - low birth weight,
premature birth, longer hospital stay
○ Stress hormones go through umbilical cord to the baby = child has ADHD, anxiety, aggressive tendencies
● Prenatal care
○ Sonograms, doctors visits, amniocentesis, vitamins, advice on nutrition + emotional wellbeing
○ SES plays a role
Physical Development
● Nutrition
○ Fat: fatty diets --> protein leptin --> starts process of getting ovaries ready to work
○ Basically the more fat that a girls has = earlier puberty/ovulation
○ Most likely also happens with boys and spermarche but easier to track in girls
● Stress
○ Extreme stress (domestic abuse, sexual abuse, poverty, severe untreated anxiety) causes puberty
to occur earlier
● SES (socioeconomic status)
○ Low SES linked to earlier puberty because they are more likely to be overweight and obese
Off-timed puberty
Health
* Marijuana Use in Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood – Common Substance Used by Teens and Young
Adults – Canadian Statistics
* Guided Participation
● providing a scaffold to help them accomplish more than the child could do alone (guiding instead of
helping)
● More skilled partner is attuned to needs of the child and guides her to accomplish more than she could
do alone
● The gap between a child's competence level (what she can do alone) and what she can do with
assistance
○ This is where the brain fails them because prefrontal cortex is not powerful enough to overpower the
limbic system:
○ Limbic system
■ Responds when we get a rush of adrenaline or something looks really fun or appealing
■ Part of reward center in brain
■ Become poor decision makers when we have the opportunity to do something that will
stimulate reward center/limbic system
■ Ex. If given opportunity to drag race in car and give them 5 things fun about drag racing and 5
things that could go really wrong they are bound to look at the positive things that are much
more likely to happen than the negative risks - prioritize rewards, downplay risks
■ Part of the personal fable
■ Less likely to listen to people that tell them they shouldn't do things (often parents with
functioning prefrontal cortex) than people that tell them they should do things (their friends
with underdeveloped prefrontal cortex)
Intelligence
○ Flynn Effect:
■ The idea that intelligence tends to go up with each generation
■ When looking at IQ scores, that score seems to go up ~3 points every decade for the last 100
years
■ Looked at 4 million people in 30 different countries (cross-cultural)
■ Over 100 years raw IQ scores went up 30 points
■ Attributed to better access to education + environmental stimulation
■ Most people didn't get more than a grade 6 education in early 1900's
■ 70-80% finishing grade 12 by like 1940
■ Need more knowledge and skills just to survive
■ This applies to raw IQ because as they noticed scores going up, they adjusted it so that the mean
remained at 100
Language Development
* Match the Five Basic Components that Underlie All Languages with their Descriptions
● Phonology: Knowledge of sounds used in a given language
○ Learning how to detect, discriminate and produce speech sounds
● Morphology: Understanding the ways that sounds can be combined to form words
○ Infants learn that sounds can be combined in meaningful ways
● Semantics: Meaning or content of words and sentences
○ Growing vocabulary signals an increase in semantic knowledge
● Syntax: knowledge of the structure of sentences
○ Rules by which words are to be combined to form sentences
● Pragmatics: Understanding how to use language to communicate effectively
○ Ex. Learning how to talk to a child vs your boss vs your grandma
○ Different words, tone of voice
Emotional Development
* Significance of a Secure Attachment – Adulthood – Securely Attached and Insecurely Attached) (2 questions will
come from this section of the lecture, 1 question requires you to know a number)
○ Securely attached
■ Desire closeness in a relationship because they trust that they can be vulnerable and their
partner won't reject them
■ Way more likely when they have children of their own to form a secure attachment with that
child
■ 65% of adults
○ Insecurely attached
■ Jealous type
■ Possessive
■ Don't really trust the relationship
■ Domestic violence - abuser
○ Sabotages adult relationships
○ 35% of adults
* Match the 4 types of Identity (Achievement, Moratorium, Diffusion, Foreclosure) with their Descriptions
Identity achievement: The identity state in which after undergoing a period of exploration a person commits to
self-chosen values and goals
- establishing a coherent sense of self after exploring a range of possibilities
- individuals must consider their past and future
- See yourself at the end of the life and looking back at the life you lived
Psychosocial moratorium: a period in which the individual is free to explore identity possibilities before
committing to an identity
- sample careers, considering becoming an actor one week and a lawyer the next.
- explore personalities and desires, trying out different personas and styles.
- The unsuccessful resolution of the identity search is confusion
- withdraws from the world, isolating oneself from loved ones, parents, and peers
Identity diffusion: The identity state in which an individual has not undergone exploration nor committed to
self-chosen values and goals
Identity foreclosed: The identity state in which an individual has not undergone exploration but has committed
to values and goals chosen by an authority figure
- Parents decided what you are going to do
- Chosen an identity without engaging in exploration
- tend to be inflexible and view the world in black and white, right and wrong, terms
Moral Development
● Less evidence for this today: period of time where researchers saw gender differences on moral
reasoning (1980s, 20 years after Kohlberg)
● Big push: she said Kohlberg only looked at boys/men
● Tried to replicate Kohlberg's stuff with boys and girls
● Found 2 different orientations, particularly in adults:
● Care orientation: desire to maintain relationships and responsibility not to cause harm
○ Similar to conventional reasoning
○ more likely to be expressed by women
● Justice orientation: based on abstract principles of fairness and individualism
○ Similar to post-conventional reasoning
○ predominantly by males
● Said one is not a higher level of development, just different way of looking at things
● Research NOW says individual people take on both perspectives depending on situation, no gender
difference
* Discipline - Induction
● Inductive discipline: Strategy to control children’s behavior that relies on reasoning and discussion
● Discipline method based on reasoning and guidance
○ Parents model effective conflict resolution
○ Focuses on behaviour and not child's characteristics
■ Focus on what they're doing not who they are
■ "I love you but I don't love what you just did"
○ helping children find and use words to express their feelings
○ provide children with choices, permitting them to feel some control over the situation and be
empowered
Gender
Sexuality
● 20-30s
● Also high in new relationships
● Couple of 25 year olds who have been together for 4 years probably having less sex than a new couple in
their 50s
● Frequency of sexual intercourse associated with emotional, sexual, and relationship satisfaction, as well
as overall happiness
● Statistics
○ 1981: 6%
○ 2017: 21%
○ More long term cohabiting couples in Canada than in the United States
○ Quebec and the three territories have way higher rates of cohabitation than the other nine
provinces
○ Across Canada - 16%, Quebec - 40%, Nunavut 50%
● Who cohabits?
○ There was a strong connection in Quebec to Catholicism then it went away in 50s/60s (?) so
that's why
○ Nationwide in Canada/US - the people who cohabit are individuals with lower levels of
education and income - explains high levels in territories (lower income/education) this is
because having a wedding is expensive so I guess they just don't get married for that reason also
cohabiting is more economical
● Any family composition - if parents have formed a very strong, positive relationship with their kid =
positive child outcomes
● Kids raised by LGBT parents might actually be better off
○ Psychosocial and emotional development, levels of self-esteem, depression, suicidal ideology,
friendships = no difference between LGBT and hetero parents
○ Social competence, navigating social relationships, higher academic measures, fewer social and
behavioural problems in LGBT parents
■ Bc consciously became parents
○ Probably higher level of secure attachment
○ may score higher in some aspects of social and academic competence, and show fewer social
and behavioral problems and lower levels of aggression
Parent-Child Relationships
* Match the 4 Parenting Styles with the Most Likely Outcomes for Children
● Authoritative
○ Outcomes for children
■ Positive
■ High academic achievement, cooperative with everyone, have empathy for others, first person
they go to when they have a problem is their parents
● Authoritarian
○ Outcomes for children
■ Lower academic achievement compared to authoritative
■ Bc rules never explained or open to negotiation, these kids do not have conflict resolution and
compromising skills
■ Incredibly compliant (good) but out of fear (bad)
■ Easy to push them around in a relationship because it seems normal to them
● Permissive/Indulgent
○ Outcomes for children
■ No self regulation because have never been trained to monitor their own behaviour
■ People you don't want as a roommate bc will not feel a sense of obligation to treat the common
space respectfully + pretty spoiled
■ Challenging to have a relationship with
■ Lack impulse control (go into debt, get injured, etc.)
● Indifferent
○ Outcomes for children
■ Low academic achievement
■ Low on cognitive, psychosocial abilities
■ Sometimes physical development stunted
■ Behavioural problems
■ Delinquent behaviour
■ Peer rejection bc lack social skills
■ Early sexual activity
■ Early drug and alcohol users
■ Sociopaths likely to have indifferent parents
● Positive
○ Use an authoritative parenting style
○ Be positive role models for close relationships - parents need to get along with each other, get
along with their own siblings
○ Parents help resolve conflict between siblings - when younger: "tell your sister you're sorry, tell
your sister you accept their apology"
○ Encourage to resolve conflict themselves as teenagers: "I want you two to sit and talk about this
and resolve this"
○ Form a secure attachment
● Negative
○ Model negative relationships with other parent and siblings
○ Other parenting styles that are not authoritative
○ Form an insecure attachment
○ Favour one child over the other
■ When it comes to privileges and punishments, should treat kids of different ages
differently: age at which you get phone, curfew, etc. Sometimes younger kid perceives
this as favouritism - "why can older sibling do this"
* Peer Relationships in Childhood – Childhood Play – Physical and Socioemotional Benefits of Play
● When we play (regardless of type) - physical benefits: exercise, use gross and fine motor skills, build muscle,
more control over muscle (climbing, jumping, learn how to skip, jump rope, playing tag)
○ Rough-and-tumble play: running, climbing, chasing, jumping, and play fighting
■ More in boys than girls
■ Father is more likely to participate with boys more than girls
○ Sociodramatic play: taking on roles and acting outside stories and themes
■ Imitate roles, reenacting
■ More in girls
● Social and emotional benefits: playing games + creating rules - really cognitive (what you do to win, lose, what
each person does), helps them learn how to negotiate and get along bc all kids have to agree on what the rules
are. Have to be able to articulate ideas, develops prosocial skills
● Social promotion: practice of promoting children to the next grade even when they have not met the
academic standards
○ Hope for them to catch-up (easier)
○ Believed holding students back to repeat a grade had a negative impact on their educational
experience, without providing many benefits (reason)
○ face a higher drop-out rate in later years because they are simply unable to handle the
increasing load of schoolwork, tests, and grades (outcome)
● Grade retention:
○ Practice of holding children back
○ Reasons for retention
■ Social promotion pulls down school average for standardized tests (underlying
motivation/reason)
■ Give these kids another year to master the material so they meet standards at the end
of the year (reason given)
■ Often kids with unexplained absences - indifferent/indulgent parents
■ Emotional age lower than actual age
○ Outcomes of retention
■ Damages self esteem
■ Don't do as well as socially promoted
■ Doing worse at math and English
■ Poor school attendance bc probably have parents who aren't getting them to school
(unexplained absences)
■ 2x as likely to drop out of high school
○ Socially promote but identify kids who need help + give additional support (social services,
tutoring)
● Transfer onto their kids (growth mindset, fixed mindset, etc. - child will have same)
● Won't facilitate their kid changing/learning/advancing if they have a fixed mindset, won't provide tutors,
if they're bad at a sport - more likely to just say you're not good at that instead of finding them a new
sport to try
● Availability of opportunities and resources
○ Lack of financial resources to provide for their kids even though having master orientation and
growth mindset
● Unpaid work: household and childcare stuff that needs to be done but that isn't paid
● Paid work: like a job
● Dual earner, heterosexual households w children: women do 17.5 hours of unpaid work and men to 10 in
a week
○ Resentment
● Most couples argue about: chores, money, in-laws, sex, kids
○ Do not show in gay and lesbian couples
● Homosexual couples w kids less likely to have big gap with who does the unpaid work
Endings
● Infancy: leading cause = genetic abnormalities, usually die in first week or month , second = illness, third
= SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome)
● Children (1-12): leading cause = accidents due to inappropriate supervision
● Adolescents: leading cause = accidents, second = drowning, third = unintentional poisoning (overdose)
● Usually experience grief for their parent for a longer period of time than do adults
○ When a 5 y/o vs 35 y/o has a parent die, the child will grieve for longer bc it affects them
developmentally
○ If dad died when kid was 10, will grow up and have a child and be confused about their
relationship after the kid reaches 10 bc he didn't have relationship w dad past 10
● Need support, nurturance and continuity in their lives
○ Someone needs to step in and maintain the routine of things that the person that died did
○ Ex. Pick up from school, read book, watch soccer games - someone else needs to now take on
these roles
○ Helps w bereavement bc don't have to deal with other stuff changing in addition to losing a
parent/loved one
○ The person left (remaining person) will have a hard time - have to explain over and over that the
person is not coming back
○ Maintain routines for children
■ Someone else needs to step in and carry on with the routine