The Psychology of Social and Emotional Development (PSY341 Section O) Flipse Building (5665 Ponce de Leon, attached to Parking Garage) Room 301 Working Syllabus - Spring 2005 You are responsible for having an up-to-date copy of this syllabus (only available on-line) http://www.psy.miami.edu/faculty/dmessinger/c_c/SD/sd_syll.html |
Daniel
Messinger,
Ph.D. (DMessinger@Miami.edu)
(Homepage) Teaching Assistant: Sara Vagi [svagi@msn.com] Flipse #363, 305-284-1742. Office Hours: Tues 3:30 -4:30 and Wed 12:00-1:00 |
Readings are available on-line (click the indicated reading; they are in Acrobat which can be downloaded here). Other readings will be distributed in class. If a reading assignment does not specify page numbers, the entire article is assigned. If a reading assignment is marked as "Extra," it is not required. Almost all lectures will be available from the links below, usually after class. |
All regular weekly writing assignments should be 300 words and should not be longer than 1 single-spaced page. (Honors credit is available and includes a more elaborate empirical and final project. Ask me.) All assignments should be submitted before the class for which they are due and a hard copy should be turned in at the beginning of class. The class is structured so that regular weekly writing assignments are due Tuesdays. Assignments related to your final projects are due Thursdays (additional references for final projects are the syllabi of my graduate student courses which you can find here). Writing Resources |
Session Reading & Assignments Due |
Critical Questions |
1. Tuesday, 1/18 |
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2. Thursday, 1/20 Reading: Greenspan & Shanker (2004). Extra: Thompson (2001). Development in the first years of life. The Future of Children, 11(1), 20-33. Final Project. Choose a preliminary (non-binding) final topic question from this syllabus (or select one of your own). A) Bring a copy of your question to class. B) Go to blackboard --> Discussion Board and go to the appropriate Forum; then add a thread to post your assignment on the class BlackBoard site. C) If you do not get these emails or have any other difficulties, change your preferred email address using the Easy system. |
Overview:
Temperament, emotion, attachment, the self, and the broader context of social
and emotional development.
Greenspan & Shanker. Describe Greenspan and Shanker's (G&S) description of the transformation in emotional and intellectual growth. How do they relate to Erikson's (E) levels? Using G&S (or E), identify times in your own development that correspond to their levels? Describe times in the development of someone younger than yourself and someone older than yourself in terms of Greenspan and Shanker's levels. Use the "developmental highlights" video from class to illustrate your discussion. |
3. Tuesday, 1/25 Reading: Caspi 2000 Extra: Kagan, J. (1997). Temperament and the reactions to unfamiliarity. Child Development, 68(1), 139-143. Weekly Paper 1: Greenspan & Shanker. A) Bring a copy of your question to class. B) Go to BlackBoard --> Assignments and go to Weekly 1 to upload the file containing your assignment. Then click Submit (not Save).
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What are pros and cons of laboratory behavioral and parent report measures of temperament? What are three types of infants distinguished by Fox/Henderson and how do they develop? Reference the DVD illustrating these infants from class. What is a person-centered approach? What are Caspi's three main categories and which one are you? What does 3 year old behavioral type predict? What does it mean that the child is father to the man? |
4. Thursday, 1/27 Reading: Fox, N. A., & Henderson, H. A. (1999). Does infancy matter? Predicting social behavior from infant temperament. Infant Behavior & Development, 22(4), 445-455. [Behavioral styles that appear early in life as a direct result of neurobiological factors, play a significant role in the development and expression of social behavior] Extra (see me): Eliot 290-303 (neural basis of emotion) 316-321 (temperament). Development 328-344. Final Project. A) Select and read first final project article (article search) (see also http://www.library.miami.edu/research/r_p.html). (Go to http://www.library.miami.edu/remote.html to learn more about doing research from off-campus.) B) Post citation (author, year, title, journal, volume, pages) of article to class along with your current version of your final topic question. Guidelines on how to cite research articles. C) Extra Credit: Bring baby picture |
Discrete
emotions. What evidence suggests suggests facial expressions of emotion are universal and what are the limitations of that evidence? Do you think infants can have emotions without being reflectively aware of what they are feeling? [Extra: What are the biological bases of emotion? Are there feelings before there is a sense of self?] What is discrete emotion theory? What are some alternatives? What evidence suggests infant emotion is discrete? What evidence suggests it is not discrete? Describe a study distinguishing between emotion and facial expression. Extra: What is emotion? Do facial expressions express emotions? Does this change with age? What emotions exist at what ages? How does emotion become regulated with age? What does facial expression exist among children and adults? |
5. Tuesday, 2/1 Reading: Messinger ('Positive and negative' & 'Afterword') Weekly Paper 2. Temperament or Emotion Facial expression site: |
Intensification: What evidence suggests that some smiles are more positive than others? What evidence suggests that the same facial actions are associated with more intense of stronger positive and negative emotions? What implications does this have for discrete emotion theory and how we understand the link between facial expression and emotion? What do portraits of facial expressions in time tell us about emotion and what program creates them? What do joystick ratings tell us about emotion and interaction? |
7. Thursday, 2/3 Keltner: Summary Extra: Keltner: Year-book smiles; Adolescents Final 1: Write out your final project question. Summarize article. Indicate how first article answers question. Indicate your next reading. (300 words). How to write your summary. Example of analysis of a research article. |
Emotion Outcomes: How might positive emotion and its expression affect life outcomes? Describe how expressed emotion relates to: a) Adolescent behavior problems; b) The course of grieving in widows; c) Life outcome in college women. What is a functionalist emotion theory? What is emotion regulation? |
6. Tuesday, 2/8 Reading: Maccoby. Extra: Weinberg Weekly 3. Intensification or Emotion Outcomes
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Sex differences. What factors influence sex differences? Describe biological factors, differential social expectations, face-to-face results. Describe Maccoby’s theory of peer group sex-segregation and socialization. That is, how does children's peer play reflect and create gender differences? What is relational victimization?
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8. Thursday, 2/10 Reading: Rogoff Final 2: Write out your final project question. Summarize article. Indicate how second article answers question, integrate with previous article(s), and indicate your next reading (300 words). |
Social class and expectations, "28 Up". How does social class affect social development? |
9. Tuesday, 2/15 Reading: PrenatalExposure Extra: Bolger Weekly 4. Gender differences |
Child maltreatment. Susan Acosta. Define the four types of maltreatment? What are some features that of families in which maltreatment occurs? What are potential consequences of maltreatment? What did Bolger find were the consequences of maltreatment? Why might these consequences occur? How might a child be “buffered” from adverse effects? |
10. Thursday, 2/17 Reading: Tronick. Extra: Yale_et_al_2003 Final 3: Write out your final project question. Indicate how previous articles answered questions (stating what they found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate how third article answers question (300 words). Reference these articles (APA) and put citations at end and indicate your next proposed reading. |
Early interaction: Process and Prediction Face-to-face
interaction and still-face: What does it mean that interaction is bidirectional? How, specifically, do baby and parent influence each other? What does early interaction predict? How does conscience develop? What factors predict internalization of parental and cultural roles? |
11. Tuesday, 2/22 Reading: Kochanska1, Child-care outcomes Extra: Moore_et_al.Kochanska2 NICHD overview Weekly 5. Child Maltreatment or Face-to-face |
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12. Thursday, 2/24 Reading: Extra: Messinger & Freedman Final 4: Write out your final project question. Indicate how previous articles answered questions (stating what they found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate how fourth article answers question (300 words). Reference these articles (APA) and put citations at end and indicate/label your next proposed reading. |
nWhat
is cultural psychology (give examples)?
nIs
psychology we’ve been studying cultural psychology?
nHow
are toddlers’ desires for objects handled differently in Salt
Lake City and San Pedro? Do toddlers or siblings end up with
object in each community and what do mothers believe about this?
nWhat
are differences between American and Japanese toddlers in toddler
task and do they reflect differences in autonomy and
interdependence – have reference to videotapes examples
nWhat
types of attributions characterize traditional Japanese
child-rearing? What is the developmental discontinuity in Japanese
development?
nChild
care
nHow
is the quantity and quality of child care associated with peer
competence?
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13. Tuesday, 3/1 Reading: Lamb et al. Development 371-393 Weekly 6: Cultural Psychology Attachment site: http://johnbowlby.com Follow links for how to code the Strange Situation. |
Attachment
defined: What is the difference between being attached and being securely
attached? What is the evidence (review Harlow) that attachment is a primary
motivational system? How does it work and what is its evolutionary function?
What is the difference between attachment behaviors, the attachment system,
and the attachment bond?
Attachment through the life cycle: What predicts security and what security predicts |
14. Thursday, 3/3 Reading: Development 385-393 Final 5: Write out your final project question. Indicate how previous articles answered questions (stating what they found in a total of 3-5 sentences), then indicate how fourth article answers question (300 words). Reference these articles (APA) and put citations at end and indicate/label your next proposed reading. |
Describing secure and insecure attachment: How is security of attachment assessed in the Strange Situation? Describe secure attachment and avoidant, anxious, and disorganized attachment? Use descriptions of strange situations observed in class to inform your paper. |
15. Tuesday, 3/8 Reading: De_Wolff Weekly 7: Define attachment and describe secure and insecure attachment. |
Predicting
attachment security: What different roles might infant temperament have in predicting security of attachment? |
16. Thursday, 3/10 Reading: van IJzendoorn et al (Child_Outcomes or Infant_Parent) Final: Propose your empirical project (300 words) and a draft of your consent letter if you are using human subjects. Submit a draft of your questionnaire for your empirical project (if you are using one) and a draft Consent Form. You may not conduct your empirical project with live human beings without an approved Consent Form.
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What does secure attachment predict? What evidence is there for the stability (or instability) of infant attachment security within infancy and on to adulthood? What does insecure and disorganized attachment predict in childhood? Describe and explain correspondences between parental and infant security of attachment. |
17. Tuesday, 3/22 Reading: Hazan and Shaver (1994) Extra: Furman (2002). Collins & Sroufe (1999). Capacity for Intimate Relationships: A Developmental Construction
Weekly 8: Predicting security of attachment or what security of attachment predicts |
What attachment processes are active in adulthood? How do they impact intimate relationships? |
8. Thursday, 3/24 Reading: Final: Outline of your final project integrating readings and outlining empirical project. 300 words indicating how you will answer your final project question. A sentence here will correspond to a paragraph of the final paper. EXTRA CREDIT:
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Workshop on empirical project: You can collect data during this class session.
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19. Tuesday, 3/29 Weekly 9: Peer relationships |
Workshop on empirical project: You can collect data during this class session. |
20. Thursday, 3/31 Final: First draft of your empirical project. Indicate what steps you will take to finish the project.. |
Special Class. Workshop on empirical project: You can collect data during this class session. |
21 . Tuesday, 4/5 Reading: Venezia et al.
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Gesture (give and
take): Is infant communication necessarily verbal? What is the gestural advantage? What is the evidence that gestures have different social approach & instrumental functions? Do they change with age differently? Do they involve different expressive behaviors? How do Anticipatory Smiles unite dyadic and triadic communication From joint attention to self-concept. : |
22. Thursday, 4/7 Research & Creativity Forum Mundy Final: Empirical project due on-line Blackboard at 10:00 pm. Also briefly describe poster or talk at Research & Creativity Forum and what it taught you about empirical project.
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Research & Creativity Forum |
23. Tuesday, 4/12 Read: Development 279-285 & 296-327 Weekly 11: Gesture |
Gesture, Language, Autism, and Theory of Mind: What are infant initiated joint attention (IJA) and receptive joint attention (RJA)? How are they measured and what do they predict? How might early deficits in IJA associated with autism lead to more long-term deficits? What is theory of mind? How do autistic infants and infants with Down Syndrome differ? |
24. Thursday, 4/14 Final. Summary hand-out of poster.
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Peers. Are siblings similar and do they share exactly the same environment? |
25. Tuesday, 4/19 Last Weekly. Gesture, Language, Autism, and Theory of Mind: or Peers
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Aggression:
Sibling and Peer
Relationships: Pro-social and anti-social influences through adolescence.
In the relational model, what is the function of aggression and what determines whether there will be reconciliation?
Describe genetic and environmental factors that could influence the stability of aggressive behaviors Describe similarities in attachment representations of parents, peers, and intimate partners. What is relational victimization?
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26. Thursday, 4/21 Final. Prepare and display poster with summary hand-out (please bring 30 summary hand-outs) (24 point font is smallest allowed). |
Poster Session. Overview of Poster and Presentation |
27. Tuesday, 4/26. By the date of your presentation, please submit complete (revised) PowerPoint handout. Present 5 slides: 1) Question 2) Abstract (could be intro) which - point-by-point tells us what you will cover 3 & 4) 2 slides of studies and/or empirical project which demonstrate those points, 5) conclusion which answers question and mirrors your initial point-by-point (with more depth because now we know more). Please bring 25 summary hand-outs (24 point font is smallest allowed). |
Oral presentations. More info on Oral Presentations
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28. Thursday, 4/28 Prepare and email PowerPoint presentations of final projects. Example |
Oral presentations. More info on Oral Presentations |
Friday, 4/29, 11:59 pm Final Project paper due |
Final Project Paper Due Paper Example |
Thursday, 5/5, 8:00 - 10:30 am
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Final Exam |