24 Facts About Developmental psychology

1.

Developmental psychology is the scientific study of how and why humans grow, change, and adapt across the course of their lives.

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2.

Ongoing debates in regards to developmental psychology include biological essentialism vs neuroplasticity and stages of development vs dynamic systems of development.

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3.

Developmental psychology involves a range of fields, such as educational psychology, child psychopathology, forensic developmental psychology, child development, cognitive psychology, ecological psychology, and cultural psychology.

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4.

Developmental psychology generally focuses on how and why certain changes occur over time in the course of a human life.

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5.

Developmental psychology believed that humans developed in stages throughout their lifetimes and that this would affect their behaviors.

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Socratic questioning
6.

Developmental psychology suggested that the adult's role in helping the child learn was to provide appropriate materials that the child can interact with and use to construct.

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7.

Developmental psychology used Socratic questioning to get children to reflect on what they were doing, and he tried to get them to see contradictions in their explanations.

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8.

Developmental psychology believed that these stages are not separate from one another, but rather that each stage builds on the previous one in a continuous learning process.

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9.

Developmental psychology proposed four stages: sensorimotor, pre-operational, concrete operational, and formal operational.

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10.

Developmental psychology suggested three levels of moral reasoning; pre-conventional moral reasoning, conventional moral reasoning, and post-conventional moral reasoning.

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11.

Developmental psychology expanded Piaget's original eight stage to seventeen stages.

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12.

In other words, Vygotsky claimed that Developmental psychology should focus on the progress of human consciousness through the relationship of an individual and their environment.

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13.

Developmental psychology felt that if scholars continued to disregard this connection, then this disregard would inhibit the full comprehension of the human consciousness.

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14.

Constructivism is a paradigm in Developmental psychology that characterizes learning as a process of actively constructing knowledge.

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15.

Evolutionary developmental psychology is a research paradigm that applies the basic principles of Darwinian evolution, particularly natural selection, to understand the development of human behavior and cognition.

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16.

Significant debate in developmental psychology is the relationship between innateness and environmental influence in regard to any particular aspect of development.

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17.

One of the major discussions in developmental psychology includes whether development is discontinuous or continuous.

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18.

Developmental psychology is concerned not only with describing the characteristics of psychological change over time but seeks to explain the principles and internal workings underlying these changes.

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19.

Mathematical modeling is useful in developmental psychology for implementing theory in a precise and easy-to-study manner, allowing generation, explanation, integration, and prediction of diverse phenomena.

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20.

Developmental psychology's theory suggests that development proceeds through a set of stages from infancy to adulthood and that there is an end point or goal.

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21.

Developmental psychology employs many of the research methods used in other areas of psychology.

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22.

Developmental psychology psychologists have a number of methods to study changes in individuals over time.

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23.

Developmental psychology's underwent abnormal child psychology which involved problems with her linguistics.

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24.

Developmental psychology delays tend to contribute to other disorders or difficulties than their TD counterparts.

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