
Social and Personality Development
by Shaffer, David R.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Preface | |
Introduction | p. 1 |
The Universal Parenting Machine-A Thought Experiment | p. 3 |
Social-Personality Development in Historical Perspective | p. 6 |
Childhood in Premodern Times | p. 6 |
Children as Subjects: The Baby Biographies | p. 7 |
Emergence of a Psychology of Childhood | p. 8 |
The Role of Theory in the Scientific Enterprise | p. 8 |
Questions and Controversies About Human Development | p. 10 |
Early Philosophical Perspectives on Human Nature | p. 11 |
Nature Versus Nurture | p. 11 |
Activity Versus Passivity | p. 12 |
Continuity Versus Discontinuity | p. 12 |
Is Development Universal or Particularistic? | p. 13 |
Research Methods | p. 15 |
The Scientific Method | p. 15 |
Gathering Data: Basic Fact-Finding Strategies | p. 15 |
Detecting Relationships: Correlational and Experimental Designs | p. 21 |
The Correlational Design | p. 21 |
The Experimental Design | p. 23 |
The Natural (or Quasi-) Experiment | p. 25 |
Designs for Studying Development | p. 26 |
The Cross-Sectional Design | p. 26 |
The Longitudinal Design | p. 28 |
The Sequential Design | p. 29 |
Cross-Cultural Comparisons | p. 30 |
Postscript: On Becoming a Wise Consumer of Developmental Research | p. 32 |
Summary | p. 33 |
Classical Theories of Social and Personality Development | p. 36 |
The Psychoanalytic Viewpoint | p. 37 |
Freud's Psychosexual Theory | p. 37 |
Contributions and Criticisms of Freud's Theory | p. 40 |
Erikson's Theory of Psychosocial Development | p. 40 |
Contributions and Criticisms of Erikson's Theory | p. 41 |
Psychoanalytic Theory Today | p. 43 |
The Behaviorist (or Social-Learning) Viewpoint | p. 43 |
Watson's Behaviorism | p. 43 |
Skinner's Operant-Learning Theory (Radical Behaviorism) | p. 44 |
Bandura's Cognitive Social-Learning Theory | p. 44 |
Social Learning as Reciprocal Determinism | p. 48 |
Contributions and Criticism of the Social Learning Perspective | p. 49 |
Piaget's Cognitive-Developmental Viewpoint | p. 50 |
Piaget's View of Intelligence and Intellectual Growth | p. 51 |
Four Stages of Cognitive Development | p. 52 |
Contributions and Criticisms of Piaget's Theory | p. 63 |
Summary | p. 65 |
Recent Perspectives on Social and Personality Development | p. 67 |
Ethology: A Modern Evolutionary Perspective | p. 68 |
Assumptions of Classical Ethology | p. 69 |
Ethology and Human Development | p. 69 |
Contributions and Criticisms of Evolutionary Viewpoints | p. 71 |
Behavioral Genetics: Biological Bases for Individual Differences | p. 73 |
Methods of Estimating Hereditary Influences | p. 74 |
Estimating the Contributions of Genes and Environment | p. 75 |
Hereditary Contributions to Personality and Mental Health | p. 78 |
Heredity and Environment as Developmental Co-Conspirators | p. 82 |
Contributions and Criticisms of the Behavioral Genetics Approach | p. 84 |
Ecological Systems Theory: A Modern Environmentalist Perspective | p. 86 |
Bronfenbrenner's Contexts for Development | p. 88 |
Contributions and Criticisms of Ecological Systems Theory | p. 90 |
Modern Cognitive Perspectives | p. 91 |
Vygotsky's Sociocultural Theory | p. 91 |
Contributions and Criticisms of the Sociocultural Perspective | p. 93 |
The Social Information-Processing (or Atributional) Viewpoint | p. 94 |
Contributions and Criticisms of the Social Information-Processing Viewpoint | p. 97 |
Theories and World Views | p. 98 |
Summary | p. 102 |
Early Social and Emotional Development I: Emotional Growth and the Establishment of Intimate Relationships | p. 104 |
An Overview of Emotional Development | p. 105 |
Displaying Emotions: The Development and Regulation of Emotional Expressions | p. 105 |
Recognizing and Interpreting Emotions | p. 110 |
Emotions and Early Social Development | p. 112 |
Temperament and Development | p. 112 |
Hereditary and Environmental Influences on Temperament | p. 113 |
Stability of Temperament | p. 114 |
Early Temperamental Profiles and Later Development | p. 115 |
What Are Emotional Attachments? | p. 116 |
Early Emotional Bonding | p. 118 |
Establishment of Interactional Synchrony | p. 119 |
How Do Infants Become Attached? | p. 121 |
The Growth of Primary Attachments | p. 121 |
Theories of Attachment | p. 122 |
Two Attachment-Related Fears of Infancy | p. 126 |
Stranger Anxiety | p. 127 |
Separation Anxiety | p. 127 |
Why Do Infants Fear Strangers and Separations? | p. 127 |
Reactions to the Loss of an Attachment Object | p. 131 |
Summary | p. 133 |
Early Social and Emotional Development II: Individual Differences and Their Implications for Future Development | p. 135 |
Individual Differences in Attachment Quality | p. 136 |
Assessing Attachment Security | p. 136 |
Cultural Variations in Attachment | p. 139 |
Factors That Influence Attachment Security | p. 139 |
Quality of Caregiving | p. 140 |
Infant Characteristics | p. 142 |
Fathers as Attachment Objects | p. 145 |
Fathers as Caregivers | p. 145 |
Fathers' Influence on Early Intellectual Development | p. 146 |
Fathers as Contributors to Early Social and Emotional Development | p. 146 |
Attachment and Later Development | p. 147 |
Long-Term Correlates of Secure and Insecure Attachments | p. 147 |
Why Might Attachment Quality Forecast Later Outcomes? | p. 148 |
Is Attachment History Destiny? | p. 150 |
The Unattached Infant | p. 151 |
Effects of Social Isolation in Dogs | p. 151 |
Harlow's Studies of Socially Deprived Monkeys | p. 152 |
Social Deprivation in Humans | p. 153 |
Maternal Employment, Day Care, and Early Emotional Development | p. 157 |
Benefits of High-Quality Alternative Care | p. 158 |
The Importance of High-Quality Parenting | p. 159 |
How Might We Assist Working Parents? | p. 159 |
Summary | p. 161 |
Development of the Self and Social Cognition | p. 163 |
Development of the Self-Concept | p. 165 |
The Emerging Self: Differentiation, Discrimination, and Self-Recognition | p. 165 |
Who Am I?: Responses of Preschool Children | p. 168 |
Children's Theory of Mind and Emergence of the Private Self | p. 169 |
Conceptions of Self in Middle Childhood and Adolescence | p. 171 |
Self-Esteem: The Evaluative Component of Self | p. 172 |
Origins and Development of Self-Esteem | p. 173 |
Social Contributors to Self-Esteem | p. 177 |
The Development of Self-Control | p. 178 |
Emergence of Self-Control in Early Childhood | p. 179 |
Delay of Gratification in Childhood and Adolescence | p. 181 |
Who Am I to Be?: Forging an Identity | p. 183 |
Developmental Trends in Identity Formation | p. 184 |
How Painful Is Identity Formation? | p. 185 |
Personal and Social Influences on Identity Formation | p. 186 |
The Other Side of Social Cognition: Knowing About Others | p. 188 |
Age Trends in Person Perception | p. 189 |
Theories of Social-Cognitive Development | p. 191 |
Summary | p. 196 |
Achievement | p. 199 |
The Concept of Achievement Motivation | p. 200 |
The Motivational View of Achievement | p. 201 |
A Behavioral View of Achievement | p. 201 |
Early Reactions to One's Accomplishments: From Mastery to Self-Evaluation | p. 202 |
Theories of Achievement Motivation and Achievement Behavior | p. 203 |
Need Achievement Theories | p. 204 |
Weiner's Attribution Theory | p. 207 |
Dweck's Learned Helplessness Theory | p. 211 |
Reflections on Theories of Achievement | p. 213 |
Cultural and Subcultural Influences on Achievement | p. 215 |
Individualistic Versus Collectivistic Perspectives on Achievement | p. 215 |
Ethnic Variations in Achievement | p. 216 |
Social Class Differences in Achievement | p. 218 |
Home and Family Influences on Achievement | p. 222 |
Quality of Attachments on Achievement | p. 222 |
The Home Environment | p. 222 |
Child-Rearing and Achievement | p. 224 |
Configural Influences: Birth Order, Family Size, and Children's Achievement Behavior | p. 225 |
On Sex Differences in Achievement and a Look Ahead | p. 227 |
Summary | p. 228 |
Sex Differences, Gender-Role Development, and Sexuality | p. 230 |
Categorizing Males and Females: Gender-Role Standards | p. 232 |
Some Facts and Fictions About Sex Differences | p. 234 |
Actual Psychological Differences between the Sexes | p. 234 |
Cultural Myths | p. 236 |
Do Cultural Myths Contribute to Sex Differences in Ability (and Vocational Opportunity)? | p. 238 |
Developmental Trends in Gender Typing | p. 239 |
Development of the Gender Concept | p. 240 |
Development of Gender-Role Stereotypes | p. 240 |
Development of Gender-Typed Behavior | p. 242 |
Subcultural Variations in Gender Typing | p. 244 |
Theories of Gender Typing and Gender-Role Development | p. 245 |
Money and Ehrhardt's Biosocial Theory | p. 246 |
Evidence for Social-Labeling Influences | p. 249 |
Freud's Psychoanalytic Theory | p. 252 |
Social Learning Theory | p. 253 |
Kohlberg's Cognitive-Developmental Theory | p. 255 |
Gender Schema Theory | p. 256 |
An Integrative Theory | p. 257 |
Psychological Androgyny: A Prescription for the Future? | p. 259 |
Do Androgynous People Really Exist? | p. 259 |
Are There Advantages to Being Androgynous? | p. 260 |
Applications: On Changing Gender-Role Attitudes and Behavior | p. 260 |
Sexuality and Sexual Behavior | p. 263 |
Cultural Influences on Sexuality | p. 263 |
Adolescent Sexual Attitudes and Behaviors | p. 263 |
Personal and Social Consequences of Adolescent Sexual Activity | p. 266 |
Summary | p. 269 |
Aggression and Antisocial Conduct | p. 271 |
What Is Aggression? | p. 272 |
Aggression as an Instinct | p. 272 |
Behavioral Definitions of Aggression | p. 273 |
Aggression as a Social Judgment | p. 274 |
Theories of Aggression | p. 274 |
Instinct Theories | p. 274 |
Learning Theories | p. 277 |
Dodge's Social Information-Processing Theory | p. 281 |
Developmental Trends in Aggression | p. 284 |
Early Conflict and the Origins of Aggression | p. 284 |
Age-Related Changes in the Nature of Aggression | p. 284 |
Is Aggression a Stable Attribute? | p. 288 |
Sex Differences in Aggression | p. 289 |
The Biological Viewpoint | p. 289 |
The Social-Learning Viewpoint | p. 290 |
The Interactive Viewpoint | p. 291 |
Cultural and Subcultural Influences on Aggression | p. 291 |
Family Influences on Aggression | p. 294 |
Parental Child-Rearing Practices and Children's Aggression | p. 294 |
Family Climate and Children's Aggression | p. 296 |
Methods of Controlling Aggression and Antisocial Conduct | p. 300 |
Catharsis: A Dubious Strategy | p. 300 |
Creating "Nonaggressive" Environments | p. 301 |
Eliminating the Payoffs for Aggression | p. 301 |
Social-Cognitive Interventions | p. 302 |
Summary | p. 303 |
Altruism and Moral Development | p. 305 |
What Are Altruism and Prosocial Behavior? | p. 306 |
The Motivational (or Intentional) Definition of Altruism | p. 307 |
A Behavioral Definition of Altruism | p. 307 |
Theories of Altruism and Prosocial Development | p. 308 |
Biological Theories: Are We Programmed for Prosocial Conduct? | p. 308 |
Psychoanalytic Theory: Let Your Conscience (Superego) Be Your Guide | p. 309 |
Social-Learning Theory: What's in It for Me? | p. 309 |
Cognitive Theories of Altruism: Maturity Is the Medium | p. 311 |
Developmental Trends in Altruism | p. 313 |
Origins of Prosocial Behavior | p. 313 |
Age-Related Changes in Altruism | p. 314 |
Cognitive and Affective Contributors to Altruism | p. 315 |
Role-Taking and Altruism | p. 316 |
Prosocial Moral Reasoning | p. 316 |
Empathy: An Important Affective Contributor to Altruism | p. 317 |
Viewing Oneself as Altruistic | p. 319 |
Cultural and Social Influences on Altruism | p. 320 |
Cultural Influences | p. 320 |
Reinforcing Altruism | p. 321 |
Modeling Influences: Practicing and Preaching Altruism | p. 322 |
Who Raises Altruistic Children? | p. 324 |
What Is Morality? | p. 326 |
How Developmentalists Look at Morality | p. 326 |
Psychoanalytic Explanations of Moral Development | p. 327 |
Freud's Theory of Oedipal Morality | p. 327 |
Evaluating Freud's Theory and Newer Psychoanalytic Ideas About Morality | p. 328 |
Cognitive-Developmental Theory: The Child as a Moral Philosopher | p. 328 |
Piaget's Theory of Moral Development | p. 329 |
An Evaluation of Piaget's Theory | p. 331 |
Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development | p. 333 |
Support for Kohlberg's Theory | p. 336 |
Criticisms of Kohlberg's Approach | p. 339 |
Morality as a Product of Social Learning (and Social Information Processing) | p. 344 |
How Consistent Are Moral Conduct and Moral Character? | p. 344 |
Learning to Resist Temptation | p. 345 |
Who Raises Children Who Are Morally Mature? | p. 348 |
Summary | p. 352 |
The Family | p. 355 |
Functions of the Family | p. 356 |
The Family as a Social System | p. 358 |
Direct and Indirect Influences | p. 359 |
Families Are Developing Systems | p. 360 |
Families Are Embedded Systems | p. 361 |
A Changing Family System in a Changing World | p. 361 |
Parental Socialization During Childhood and Adolescence | p. 363 |
Two Major Dimensions of Parenting | p. 363 |
Four Patterns of Parenting | p. 364 |
Social Class and Ethnic Variations in Child-Rearing | p. 367 |
The Quest for Autonomy: Renegotiating the Parent/Child Relationship During Adolescence | p. 371 |
The Influence of Siblings and Sibling Relationships | p. 373 |
Changes in the Family System When a New Baby Arrives | p. 373 |
Sibling Relationships over the Course of Childhood | p. 375 |
Positive Contributions of Sibling Relationships | p. 377 |
Characteristics of Only Children | p. 378 |
Diversity in Family Life | p. 379 |
Adoptive Families | p. 379 |
Gay and Lesbian Families | p. 380 |
The Impacts of Family Conflict and Divorce | p. 380 |
Remarriage and Blended Families | p. 385 |
Maternal Employment Revisited | p. 387 |
When Parenting Breaks Down: The Problem of Child Abuse | p. 390 |
Who Are the Abusers? | p. 391 |
Who Is Abused? | p. 391 |
Social-Situational Triggers: The Ecology of Child Abuse | p. 392 |
Consequences of Abuse and Neglect | p. 393 |
How Can We Solve the Problem? | p. 394 |
Reflections on the Family | p. 397 |
Summary | p. 398 |
Extrafamilial Influences I: Television, Computers, and Schooling | p. 400 |
The Early Window: Effects of Television on Children and Adolescents | p. 401 |
Television and Children's Lifestyles | p. 401 |
Development of Television Literacy | p. 402 |
Effects of Televised Violence | p. 403 |
Other Potentially Undesirable Effects of Television | p. 408 |
Television As an Educational Tool | p. 410 |
Should Television Be Used to Socialize Children? | p. 412 |
Child Development in the Computer Age | p. 413 |
Computers in the Classroom | p. 413 |
Concerns About Computers | p. 415 |
The School as a Socialization Agent | p. 416 |
Does Schooling Promote Cognitive Development? | p. 416 |
Determinants of Effective (and Ineffective) Schooling | p. 417 |
The Teacher's Influence | p. 422 |
Do Our Schools Meet the Needs of All Our Children? | p. 427 |
How Well-Educated Are Our Children? Cross-Cultural Comparisons | p. 431 |
Summary | p. 433 |
Extrafamilial Influences II: Peers As Socialization Agents | p. 435 |
Who Is a Peer and What Functions Do Peers Serve? | p. 437 |
The Significance of Peer Interaction | p. 437 |
Frequency of Peer Contacts | p. 438 |
Peers as Promoters of Positive Developmental Outcomes | p. 439 |
The Development of Peer Sociability | p. 440 |
Peer Sociability in Infancy and Toddlerhood | p. 441 |
Sociability During the Preschool Period | p. 442 |
Peer Sociability in Middle Childhood and Adolescence | p. 444 |
Personal and Social Influences on Sociability | p. 448 |
Peer Acceptance and Popularity | p. 452 |
Measuring Children's Popularity with Peers | p. 453 |
Why Are Children Accepted, Neglected, or Rejected By Peers? | p. 454 |
On Improving the Social Skills of Rejected Children | p. 459 |
Children and Their Friends | p. 461 |
On the Development of Friendship | p. 461 |
Social Interactions Among Friends and Acquaintances | p. 462 |
Are There Distinct Advantages to Having Friends? | p. 463 |
How Do Peers Exert Their Influence? | p. 466 |
Peer Reinforcement and Modeling Influences | p. 466 |
Peers as Critics and Agents of Persuasion | p. 466 |
The Normative Function of Peer Groups | p. 467 |
Peer Versus Adult Influences and the Question of Cross-Pressures | p. 468 |
Summary | p. 470 |
Epilogue | p. 472 |
Major Themes in Human Social and Personality Development | p. 473 |
Human Development Is an Holistic Enterprise | p. 473 |
We Are Active Contributors to Our Own Development | p. 473 |
There Is Both Continuity and Discontinuity in Development | p. 474 |
There Is Much Plasticity in Human Development | p. 475 |
The Nature-Nurture Distinction Is a False Dichotomy | p. 475 |
Both Normative and Idiosyncratic Developments Are Important | p. 476 |
We Develop in a Cultural and Historical Context | p. 477 |
Development Is Best Viewed from Multiple Perspectives | p. 477 |
Patterns of Parenting (and Adult Guidance) Clearly Matter | p. 478 |
Many Social Forces Conspire to Shape Development | p. 480 |
We've Come a Long Way, Baby ... but Have So Far to Go | p. 481 |
References | p. 492 |
Glossary | p. 483 |
Name Index | p. 533 |
Subject Index | p. 551 |
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