(A)typical Social (& Emotional) Development (PSY624,1) Fall 2009, Mondays & Wednesdays 09:00-10:15, Flipse 302 Daniel Messinger, Ph.D. (DMessinger@Miami.edu) (Homepage) 305-284-8443 Office: 5665 Ponce de Leon (Psych. Annex), Room 308 Office Hours: Wednesdays 09:00-11:00 and by appointment. 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_Grad/grad_sd_syll09.html BlackBoard |
Objective:
The goal of the course is to review contemporary theory, research, and
methods relevant to understanding social and emotional development,
especially during childhood. The course focuses on both normative and
atypical development because an understanding of one enriches an
understanding of the other. Individual differences, sociocultural diversity,
and a historical perspective on the study of all these themes, will be
emphasized throughout. Topics:
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Readings: Empirical and review articles from the literature 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 suggested but not required. Almost all lectures will be available from the links below.
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Class Sessions. I will provide overview and basic background material to inform our discussion. Some of this material will be in the form of PowerPoint slides that I will review in class and post on-line (I will also include links to some interesting supplementary web-sites). Illustrative videos and in-class activities will help us get a real-flavor for some of the topics (i.e. coding security of attachment). In addition, there will be some memorization of basic points and there will be testing related to the readings and key points. Preparing readings for class discussion. Review the reading as a starting point for leading a class discussion. Summarize the central point and the main points (main points!) of the article; then tell us what the most interesting issues for discussion emerge from the article. Limit your presentations to 5 minutes. End with a couple of questions about the meaning of this article and its message in terms of other readings, larger issues, your own work, etc. Please write-up your notes that summarize the reading and suggest discussion points in 2-3 PowerPoint slides. These should be emailed to the class the evening before class and brought to class with handouts for all. Download the PowerPoint slides that I have prepared for the class and think about how your material can be integrated. The goal is to encourage class participation and discussion. |
The final project should concern typical or atypical
social/emotional development. You
should find a project that interests you and will help you professionally
(consult with your adviser). Alternatives for a final project: 1) A publication quality research project such as a draft of a thesis. The idea is to learn about social and emotional development by doing research that will facilitate your career goals. 2) A NIH R03 or similar grant proposal (~11 pages, typically single-spaced). The idea here is to tie together your knowledge of an area with a proposal to do research in this area. 3) A publication quality literature reviews in summary-article/chapter format (i.e., organized by theme, not by reading). During the last class session(s), you will make a
verbal presentation of their projects. Collaborative proposals and presentations are allowed. They must include a significant component of individual work for each collaborator and must result in proportionately more substantial final project (e.g., 2-3 people could collaborate on a NIH-style regular RO1 grant, ~ 24 pages). Class Attendance: Class attendance is mandatory. Unexcused absences will lower the class presentation portion of your grade. Make-up exams: There will be no make-up exams. Dates to remember: 9/14: One paragraph single-spaced summary. 9/30: One page single-spaced abstract of intended final project. 10/21: 2 page single-spaced abstract of your final project is due . 11/0: First draft of final paper. 11/25. PowerPoint presentations of final project. 11/30 Final paper due. |
Session Reading & Assignments Due |
Critical Questions to Think About |
1. Wednesday, 8/26 |
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2. Monday, 8/31 Reading: . Eisenberg. Introduction. Emerging themes. sc
Erikson, E. (1950). Eight Ages of Man, Childhood and Society (pp. 247-254): Norton.jc
Extra:
Thompson (2001). Development in the first years of life. The Future of Children, 11(1), 20-33. Cephalo-pelvic proportionality, Cro-Magnon. Choose a preliminary (non-binding) final project and email to me.
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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. Wednesday, 9/2 Reading:
Extra: Caspi, et al., maltreated genotype 2002 Schmidt, L., Fox, N. et al., (2009). Social Regulation of Human Gene Expression (p
132-137) Spencer et al., (2009) "...Whey we should no longer abide the nativist-empiricist debate" Nelson, C. A. (1999). Neural plasticity and human development. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 8(2), 42-45. [Caspi, C. & Silva, P. (1995b). Temperamental
qualities at age three predict personality traits in young adulthood:
Longitudinal evidence from a birth cohort. Child Development, 66, 486-498. or Http://www.erin.utoronto.ca/~w3bio380/ an embryology course. See also http://www.ornl.gov/TechResources/Human_Genome/project/info.html |
Environmental and genetic interaction What are the advantages (name some forms of genetic transmission) and disadvantages of thinking of genes as blueprints? How do environmental and genetic influences interact during prenatal development (provide examples)? What is the difference between transactional and a behavioral genetics approach to gene * environment interactions? |
4. Wednesday, 9/9 Reading: Beyond Nature & Nurture? Review:: Caspi, A. (2000). The Child Is Father of the Man Extra (see me): Eliot 290-303 (neural basis of emotion) 316-321 (temperament). Development 328-344. Lamb et al. Development 371-393 Fox, N. A. (1991). If it's not left, it's right: Electroencephalograph asymmetry and the development of emotion. American Psychologist, 46(8), 863-872. Extra: Kagan, J. (1997). Temperament and the reactions to unfamiliarity. Child Development, 68(1), 139-143. Kagan. Handbook. Biology and the child. Pp. 203-227.
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Temperament:
What is temperament? Describe your temperament using theoretical constructs
presented. What is goodness-of-fit (give examples)? |
5. Monday, 9/14. One paragraph summary and 5 minute verbal summary of your intended final project. Email to myself and your mentor.
Messinger ('Positive and negative') wm
Extra: Segal et al. Messinger, D. & Fogel, A. (2007). The interactive development of social smiling. In Robert Kail (ed.), Advances in Child Development and Behavior, 35, 327-366. Oxford: Elsevier. “Smiling” entry. In Neil J. Salkind (Ed.), (2005), The Encyclopedia of Human Development. Sage Publications. Facial expression site: http://www2.cs.cmu.edu/~face/index2.htm
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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? 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? |
6. Wednesday, 9/16
Reading: Oveis,
C., Gruber, J., Keltner, D., Stamper, J. L., & Boyce, W. T. (2009). Smile
intensity and warm touch as thin slices of child and family affective style.
Emotion, 9(4), 544-548. sk Cohn, Fredrickson, 2009. Emotion. jf Extra: depression/mania (joorman) Izard, C. E. (2002). Translating Emotion Theory and Research Into Preventive Interventions. Psychological Bulletin, 128(5), 796-824. Keltner, D., Moffitt, T. E., & Stouthamer-Loeber, M. (1995). Facial expressions of emotion and psychopathology in adolescent boys . Journal of Abnormal Psychology, 104(4), 644-652. Raver (2002). Emotions matter. . .. School readiness. Social Policy Report. |
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? |
Early Emotional Interaction Reading: Mesman, J., M. H. van Ijzendoorn, et al. (2009). "The many faces of the Still-Face Paradigm: A review and meta-analysis." Developmental Review 29(2): 120-162. sc Extra Adamson, & Frick, J. E. (2003). The Still-Face: A History of a Shared Experimental Paradigm. Infancy, 4(4), 451-474. Tronick, E. Z., Messinger, D. S.,
Weinberg, K. Lester, B. M., LaGasse, L. & Seifer, Bauer, R. C.,
Shankaran, S., Bada, H., Wright, L. L., Smeriglio, V. L., Poole, K., Liu, J.
(2005). Cocaine
Exposure Is Associated with Subtle Compromises of Infants’ and Mothers’
Social Emotional Behavior and Dyadic Features of their Interaction in the
Face-to-Face Still-Face Paradigm. Developmental Psychology, 41,
711-722. Moore, G. A., & Calkins, S. D. (2004). Infants' Vagal Regulation in the Still-Face Paradigm Is Related to Dyadic Coordination of Mother-Infant Interaction. Developmental Psychology, 40(6), 1068-1080. Campbell, S. B., Cohn, J. F., & Meyers, T. (1995). Depression in
first-time mothers: Mother-infant interaction and depression chronicity. Developmental
Psychology, 31(3), 349-357. Striano, T. (2004). Direction of Regard and the Still-Face Effect in the First Year: Does Intention Matter? Child Development, 75, 468-479. Striano, T.; Brennan, P. A.; Vanman, E. J. (2002). Maternal depressive symptoms and 6-month-old infants' sensitivity to facial expressions. Infancy, 3, 115-126. Carvajal, F., & Iglesias, J. (2002). Face-to-face emotion interaction studies in Down syndrome infants. International Journal of Behavioral Development, 26(2), 104-112. |
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? Timing early expressive behaviors: How do infants coordinate expressive actions in time and how does this change with age? What is an event-based approach? Which pairs of infant expressive behaviors are coordinated in time (facial expressions and vocalizations, facial expressions and gazes at a parent’s face, and/or vocalizations and gazes) and what does this suggest for the role of facial expressions? Indicate two patterns in which infant gazes and smiles are coordinated with mother smiles? How do all these patterns change with age? What does this suggest about infant-mother interaction? |
8. Wednesday, 9/23 Reading: Kochanska, Aksan et al. (2006).Children’s Conscience and Self-Regulation. sk
Beebe, B. Rhythms of dialogue in infancy: Coordinated timing in development. |
What does early interaction predict? How does conscience develop? What factors predict internalization of parental and cultural roles? |
Cole et al. (2004) is a more current review and discusses issues with the field, definitions. vf Feldman 2009 is current with empirical content for discussion. jf Extra: seminal works: Kopp, Thompson, |
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10. Wednesday, 9/30
Due: One page abstract of final project.
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Final project abstract presentations. |
11. Monday, 10/5 Reading: Mundy, P. & Newell, L. (2007). Attention, joint attention and social cognition. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 16, 269-274. (The importance of joint attention to social cognition.) in
Parlade, M. V., Messinger, D. S., van Hecke, A., Kaiser, M., Delgado, C., & Mundy, P. (2009). Anticipatory Smiling: Linking Early Affective Communication and Social Outcome. Infant Behavior & Development, 32, 33-43. (The meaning of initiating joint attention with a smile.) df
Leavens, D. A.; Hopkins, W. D.; Bard, K. A. (2005). Understanding the Point of Chimpanzee Pointing: Epigenesis and Ecological Validity. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14, 185-189. AND Liszkowski, U., Schäfer, M., Carpenter, M., & Tomasello, M. (2009). Prelinguistic infants, but not chimpanzees, communicate about absent entities. Psychological Science, 20(5), 654-660. (Together, a portrait of the capabilities and limitations of chimps' referentiality.)
Extra: Striano, T.; Stahl, D. (2005). Sensitivity to triadic attention in early infancy. Developmental Science, 8, 333-343. 2. Rakoczy, H.; Tomasello, M.;
Striano, T. (2005). On tools and toys: How children learn to act on and
pretend with 'virgin objects'. Developmental Science, 8, 57-73. |
Gesture
(give and take): Is infant communication necessarily verbal? |
12. Wednesday, 10/7 Read: Development 279-285 & 296-327
Early behavioral intervention, brain plasticity,and the prevention of autism spectrum disorder. GERALDINE DAWSON. in What are infant siblings teaching us about autism in infancy? Rogers, S. wm Baron-Cohen, S.; Belmonte, M. K. (2005). Autism: A Window Onto the Development of the Social and the Analytic Brain. Annual Review of Neuroscience, 28, 109-126.
Nichols, K. E.; Fox, N.; Mundy, P. (2005). Joint Attention, Self-Recognition, and Neurocognitive Function in Toddlers. Infancy, 7, 35-51. |
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13. Monday, 10/12 Reading:
S.
Hrdy. Comes the Child before Man: How Cooperative Breeding and Prolonged
Postweaning Dependence
de_Waal, F. B. M. (2000). Primates--a natural heritage of conflict resolution. Science, 289(5479), 586-590. vf
de Waal, F.B.M. (2008). Putting the altruism back into altruism: The evolution of empathy. Annual Review of Psychology, 59, 279–300. A wonderful and user-friendly review of empathy in many animal species.df
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14. Wednesday, 10/14
Reading: Lamb et al. Development 371-393
Barry et al., 2008 5htt and attachment. jf
Anisfeld, E., Casper, V., Nozyce, M., & Cunningham, N. (1990). Does infant carrying promote attachment? An experimental study of the effects of increased physical contact on the development of attachment. Child Development, 61(5), 1617-1627.
Extra: http://pantheon.yale.edu/~kw77/HamlinWynnBloomNature2007.pdf
Attachment site: http://johnbowlby.com
Follow links for how to code the Strange Situation: Overview of attachment classifications (on p. 11) and coding. Attachment site: http://johnbowlby.com Follow links for how to code the Strange Situation.
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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 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. Monday, 10/19 NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2001b). Child-care and family predictors of preschool attachment and stability from infancy. Developmental Psychology, 37(6), 847-862. Extra: Seifer et al. Belsky & Fearon. attachmentVSsensitivity
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Predicting
attachment security: What different roles might infant temperament have
in predicting security of attachment? |
16. Wednesday, 10/21 Reading: Stability and Change in Attachment Security Across Adolescence
NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network (2006). "Infant-mother attachment classification: Risk and protection in relation to changing maternal caregiving quality." Developmental Psychology 42(1): 38-58. more recent or no
Extra: Collins & Sroufe (1999). Due: 2 page single-spaced abstract of your final project. VF IN WM SC SK JF DF |
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.
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17. Monday, 10/26. Correa-Chavez, & Rogoff (2009). Children’s Attention to Interactions Directed to Others: Guatemalan Mayan and European American Patterns. Dev Psychol, 45(3), 630-641. SK Tronick, E. Z., Morelli, G. A., & Ivey, P. K. (1992). The Efe forager infant and toddler's pattern of social relationships: Multiple and simultaneous. Developmental Psychology, 28(4), 568-577. WM Correa-Chávez, M.; Rogoff, B.; Arauz, R. M. (2005). Cultural Patterns in Attending to Two Events at Once. Child Development, 76, 664-678. Chavajay, P.; Rogoff, B. (2002). Schooling and traditional collaborative social organization of problem solving by Mayan mothers and children. Developmental Psychology, 38, 55-66. Social class and expectations, "28 Up". How does social class affect social development?
Messinger & Freedman, Richman, A. L., Miller, P. M., & LeVine, R. A. (1992). Cultural and educational variations in maternal responsiveness. Developmental Psychology, 28, 4, p 614-621
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Cultural
PsychologyDM. |
18. Wednesday, 10/28 Bulotsky-Shearer, R. J., J. W. Fantuzzo, et al. (2008). "An investigation of classroom situational dimensions of emotional and behavioral adjustment and cognitive and social outcomes for Head Start children." Developmental Psychology 44(1): 139-154. VF NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2006). Child-Care Effect Sizes for the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development. American Psychologist, 61(2), 99-116. Fantuzzo, J. W., Bulotsky-Sheare, R., Fusco, R. A., & McWayne, C. (2005). An investigation of preschool classroom behavioral adjustment problems and social-emotional school readiness competencies. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 20(3), 259-275.
n Extra: NICHD Early Child Care Research Network. (2001). Child care and children's peer interaction at 24 and 36 months: The NICHD study of early child care. Child Development, 72(5), 1478-1500. NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2002). Child-care structure-->process-->outcome: Direct and indirect effects of child-care quality on young children's development. Psychological Science, 13(3), 199-206. NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network (2003). "Does quality of child care affect child outcomes at age 4 1/2?" 39(3): 451-469. NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2002). Early child care and children's development prior to school entry: Results from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care. American Educational Research Journal, 39(1), 133-164. NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network. (2001). Nonmaternal care and family factors in early development: An overview of the NICHD Study of Early Child Care. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 22(5), 457-492. Extra: Examination of a structured problem-solving flexibility task for assessing approaches to learning in young children: Relation to teacher ratings and children's achievement. |
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19. Monday, 11/2 Reading:
Baker, & Crnic (2009).
Thinking about feelings: Emotion focus in the parenting of children with early
developmental risk. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 53(5),
450-462. Guy Roth and Avi Assor (2009). The Emotional and Academic Consequences of Parental Conditional Regard: Comparing Conditional Positive Regard, Conditional Negative Regard, and Autonomy Support as Parenting Practices. VF Reiss, D. (2005). The Interplay Between Genotypes and Family Relationships. Reframing Concepts of Development and Prevention. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14(3), 139-143. Parenting, Coparenting, and Effortful Control in Preschoolers. Annemiek Karreman, Cathy van Tuijl, Marcel A. G. van Aken, and Maja Dekovic Extra. Adam, E. K. (2004). Beyond Quality:. Parental and Residential Stability and Children's Adjustment. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13(5), 210-213. Crouter, A. C., & Bumpus, M. F. (2001). Linking Parents' Work Stress to Children's and Adolescents' Psychological Adjustment. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 10(5), 156-159. Deutsch, F. M. (2001). Equally Shared Parenting. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 10(1), 25-28.
Serbin, L., & Karp, J. (2003). Intergenerational studies of parenting and the transfer of risk from parent to child. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 12(4), 138-142.
The Role of Mothers’ and Fathers’ Adrenocortical Reactivity in Spillover Between Interparental Conflict and Parenting Practices. Melissa L. Sturge-Apple and Patrick T. Davies |
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20. Wednesday, 11/4
Outline of your final project containing a topic phrase or sentence for each paragraph of the final product. A draft of your final PowerPoint is a good way to do this. (ALL). Reading:
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Final project abstract presentations. |
21. Monday, 11/9 Due: First draft of your final project. WM, SK, IN, VF, DF, JF Reading:
Pollak, Vardi, Bechner, & Curtin (2005). Physically Abused Children's Regulation of Attention in Response to Hostility. Child Development, 76(5), 968-977. Bolger, & Patterson (2001). Pathways from child maltreatment to internalizing problems: Perceptions of control as mediators and moderators. Development and Psychopathology, 13(4), 913-940. Margolin, G., & Gordis, E. B. (2004). Children's Exposure to Violence in the Family and Community. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 13, 152. WM Kazdin, A. E., & Benjet, C. (2003). Spanking children: evidence and issues. Current directions in psychological science, 12 (3), 99. Lansford, J. E.; Chang, L.; Dodge, K. A.; Malone, P. S.; Oburu, P.; Palmérus, K.; Bacchini, D.; Pastorelli, C.; Bombi, A. S.; Zelli, A.; Tapanya, S.; Chaudhary, N.; Deater-Deckard, K.; Manke, B.; Quinn, N. (2005). Physical discipline and children's adjustment: Cultural normativeness as a moderator. Child Development, 76, 1234-1246. |
Child
maltreatment. 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?
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22. Wednesday, 11/11
Cillessen, A. H. N., & Rose, A. J. (2005).
Understanding
Popularity in the Peer System. CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL
SCIENCE, 14(2), 102-105. VF NICHD_Early_Child_Care_Research_Network (2004). "Trajectories of Physical Aggression From Toddlerhood to Middle Childhood." Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development 69(4): vii-129.
Dodge, K. A.; Lansford, J. E.; Burks, V. S.; Bates, J. E.; Pettit, G. S.; Fontaine, R.; Price, J. M. (2003). Peer rejection and social information-processing factors in the development of aggressive behavior problems in children. Child Development, 74, 374-393. Pettit, G. S.; Dodge, K. A. (2003). Violent children: Bridging development, intervention, and public policy. Developmental Psychology, 39, 187-188. Dodge, K. A.; Pettit, G. S. (2003). A biopsychosocial model of the development of chronic conduct problems in adolescence. Developmental Psychology, 39, 349-371.
EXTRA: Hoyt, W. T., Fincham, F. D., McCullough, M. E., Maio, G., & Davila, J. (2005). Responses to interpersonal transgressions in families: Forgivingness, forgivability, and relationship-specific effects. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 89(3), 375-394. McCullough, M. E., Tsang, J.-A., & Emmons, R. A. (2004). Gratitude in Intermediate Affective Terrain: Links of Grateful Moods to Individual Differences and Daily Emotional Experience. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 86(2), 295-309. Coie & Dodge (1998). Handbook. “Aggression” 786-794 (development), 799-840 (determinants) (not necessary to read every word of these sections).
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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
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23. Monday, 11/16 Reading:
Larson, Hansen, & Moneta (2006).
Differing profiles of developmental experiences across types of organized
youth activities. Developmental Psychology, 42(5), 849-863. Wood, Larson, & Brown (2009).
How
adolescents come to see themselves as more responsible through participation
in youth programs. Child Development, 80(1), 295-309. Jaccard, J.; Blanton, H.; Dodge, T. (2005). Peer Influences on Risk Behavior: An Analysis of the Effects of a Close Friend. Developmental Psychology, 41, 135-147.
Coplan, R. J., & Armer, M. (2007).
A “multitude” of solitude: A closer look at social withdrawal and nonsocial
play in early childhood. Child Development Perspectives, 1, 26-32.
IN
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Social isolation.
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24. Wednesday, 11/18 Larson, & Brown (2007). Emotional development in adolescence: What can be learned from a high school theater program? Child Development, 78(4), 1083-1099. DF
Popp, D., Laursen, B., Burk, W. J., Kerr, M., & Stattin, M. (2008). Modeling homophily over time with an actor-partner interdependence model. Developmental Psychology, 44, 1028-1039. JF
Laursen, B., Bukowski, W.M., Aunola, K., & Nurmi, J.-E. (2007). Friendship moderates prospective associations between social isolation and adjustment problems in young children. Child Development, 78, 1395-1404.
Eisenberg on peers
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Are siblings similar and do they share exactly the same environment?
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25. Monday, 11/23 Hazan & Shaver. La Greca, A. M.; Harrison, H. M.
(2005). Adolescent
Peer Relations, Friendships, and Romantic Relationships: Do They Predict
Social Anxiety and Depression? Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent
Psychology, 34, 49-61. Kuttler, A. F.; La Greca, A. M. (2004).
Linkages
among adolescent girls' romantic relationships, best friendships, and peer
networks. Journal of Adolescence, 27, 395-414.
Kuttler, A. F.; La Greca, A. M.; Prinstein, M. J. (1999). Friendship qualities and social-emotional functioning of adolescents with close, cross-sex friendships. Journal of Research on Adolescence, 9, 339-366.
Diamond, L. M. (2008). Female bisexuality from adolescence to adulthood: Results from a 10-year longitudinal study. Developmental Psychology, 44, 5-14. IN
Extra: Ruble & Martin (1998), Handbook.
Extra Yamaguchi on infant predictors of theory of mind |
Romantic relationships and 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? What attachment processes are active in adulthood? How do they impact intimate relationships?
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26. Wednesday, 11/25 Donnellan, M. B., Trzesniewski, K. H., Robins, R. W., Moffitt, T. E., & Caspi, A. (2005). Low Self-Esteem Is Related to Aggression, Antisocial Behavior, and Delinquency. Psychological Science, 16(4), 328-335. Robins, R. W., & Trzesniewski, K. H. (2005). Self-Esteem Development Across the Lifespan. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 14(3), 158-162. IN
Wainryb, C.; Shaw, L. A.; Langley, M.; Cottam, K.; Lewis, R. (2004). Children's Thinking About Diversity of Belief in the Early School Years: Judgments of Relativism, Tolerance, and Disagreeing Persons. Child Development, 75, 687-703. Wainryb. SRCD Monograph. Shweder,
Neuropsychology of morality. Haidt. Lieberman, D., Tooby, J. & Cosmides, L. (2007). The architecture of human kin detection. Nature, 445, 727-731. WM
Due email PowerPoint presentations of final projects |
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27. Monday, 11/30
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Oral presentations with summary hand-out. |
28. Wednesday, 12/2
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Oral presentations with summary hand-out. |
Friday, 12/4. Classes end. Final Project due |
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Thursday, 12/, 11:00 am
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Final Exam |
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