During week
1 and week 2 in Teaching Practicum I , we were discussing about childhood
development. We focused on the three different stages in childhood which are
Infancy (birth to 2 years), Early childhood (3 to 8 years) and Middle childhood
(9 to 11 years). In these lessons, I
learned how the physical, cognitive and psychosocial processes develop in
childhood. Through this development children are able to acomplish with some
tasks also there are some characteristics in ech of the process. Moreover, it
is important to highlight that all children have to experience each of the process
in the different stages mentioned above. If children skip a process of
development during childhood, then they will be affected on the following stage.
For example, if a child does not develop fine motor skill, he will have
problems on taking a pencil properly, cutting with scissors, painting, etc. In
addition, as parents as teachers have to be aware that children do not develop
the stages at the same time; culture, law, religion, values might influence on
children’s development.
Characteristics
of Childhood Development
- Physical
Gross motor skill
Fine motor skill
-
Language
- Cognitive
- Psychosocial
Furthermore,
on week 2 we did some research about four important theorists on teaching
field. They are Jean Peaget, Lev Vygotsky, Lawrence Kolhberg and Erik Erikson.
Personally, I think it is important for we, teachers to know about different
theories and the difference between each stage in childhood.
- Jean Peaget his theory descibes the cognitive development. In other words, it explains how children think at the different stages. He also established four important stages. (Sensorimotor, preoperational, Concrete operational and Abstract operational).
- Lev Vygotsky describes the social process , interpersonal and linguistic factors in facilitating children’s development . (How children learn through interaction).
- Lawrence Kolhberg focused his theory in Moral development which is the process to discriminate right from wrong. He stated three stages: Pre-conventional morality, Conventional morality and Post-conventional morality.
- Erik Erikson argued on how people’s sense of identity develops. He explained eight different stages; however, four of them belong to childhood development. (Trust vs mistrust, Autonomy vs shame, Initiative vs guilt and Industry vs inferiority)