RAC-SCC Cluster E 019R-1 - Assignment 1 - Reference Table for Biopsychosocial Development
PHYSICALYoung Children
0-5 years / Children
6-11 years / Adolescence
12-18 years / Early Adulthood
18-40 years / Middle Adulthood
40-65 years / Older Adults
65 years+
- Rapid growth during first two years
- Learn to walk alone around 9-17 months
- Can lift head by self between 3 weeks – 4 months
- Start to lose primary teeth
- Draw more complex pictures as fine motor skills develop
- Onset of puberty for boys around 13 years old
- Changes in brain regulation of sleep
- Rapid growth spurt for height and weight gain in girls and boys
- Biological aging begins once body structure reaches maximum capacity and efficiency
- Athletic skills requiring speed, strength, peak in the early twenties
- Middle-age adults are at higher risk of eye problems such as glaucoma
- Bone density declines in both sexes
- Women start to enter menopause at the end of menstruation
- Taste and odour sensitivity decline, making food less appealing
- Touch sensitivity deteriorates, particularly in fingertips
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RAC-SCC Cluster E 019R-1 - Assignment 1 - Reference Table for Biopsychosocial Development
AFFECTIVEYoung Children
0-5 years / Children
6-11 years / Adolescence
12-18 years / Early Adulthood
18-40 years / Middle Adulthood
40-65 years / Older Adults
65 years +
- Babies at birth show emotions of interest, distress, disgust and contentment
- Develop more complex emotions in 2nd year including embarrassment, shame, guilt, envy, pride
- Erikson:
- Children begin to describe themselves in terms of their inner and enduring psychological attributes
- Empathic responding increases
- Erikson:
- Feelings of relational self-worth, romantic appeal, and quality of close friendships important aspects of self-esteem development
- Strongest determinants are relationships with peers, close friends and prospective romantic partners
- Erikson:
- Marriage in a variety of forms is universal and meets basic economic, emotional, sexual, social and child-raising needs
- Most young adults have friends but have increasingly limited time to spend with them
- Erikson:
- Reassessment of relationships
- Sense of self is more solid
- Erikson:
- Have more secure and complex self-concepts
- Social interaction declines because of loss and death of friends and relatives
- Decision to retire depends on affordability and health status
- Erikson:
RAC-SCC Cluster E 019R-1 - Assignment 1 - Reference Table for Biopsychosocial Development
COGNITIVEYoung Children
0-5 years / Children
6-11 years / Adolescence
12-18 years / Early Adulthood
18-40 years / Middle Adulthood
40-65 years / Older Adults
65 years +
•At 3-4 years: actively seek information through why and how questions; attend to an activity for a 5-15 minutes; and show awareness of past and present
•4-5 year olds actively seek information and new experiences from people in their environment
•Piaget: /
- Focused on learning the rules of society, school, games
- Egocentric at this stage
- Children in this stage have the ability to develop logical thought about an object, if they are able to manipulate it
- Children can reason and abstract more than before
- When faced with a complex problem, the adolescent speculates about all possible solutions before trying them out in the real world
- Are able to make vocational choices
- Pragmatic thought: use logic as a tool to solve problems
- Piaget:
- Speed of cognitive processing slows down with age
- Reaction time slows down (performs less well on complex memory, reasoning and problem-solving tasks)
- Piaget:
- Individual differences in cognitive functioning are greater in late adulthood than at any other time in life
- Decline in recalling temporal order of events
RAC-SCC Cluster E 019R-1 - Assignment 1 - Reference Table for Biopsychosocial Development
LANGUAGE & LEARNINGYoung Children
0-5 years / Children
6-11 years / Adolescence
12-18 years / Early Adulthood
18-40 years / Middle Adulthood
40-65 years / Older Adults
65 years +
- 10-13 months: pre-linguistic phase of language development
- Become increasingly attuned to rhythms of language
- Most 2-3 year-olds can join familiar words into phrases and point to common objects when they are named
- Children’s language becomes increasingly complex grammatically
- Begin using referential communication skills
- Increasing metalinguistic awareness – an ability to think about language and to comment on its properties
- Social language skills become increasingly important
- Adolescent dialect with peers often using jargon of slang
- Increased use of sophisticated words
- Increased ability to use metaphors and satire
- Adults in middle adulthood are returning to college and universities in record numbers
- Learning a new language at this age is more of a talent rather than an intelligence and may be a special ability like art or music
- In late adulthood retrieving words from long-term memory and planning what to say and how to say it become more difficult
- Age-related losses occur in two aspects of language: retrieving words from long-term memory, and planning what to say and how to say it
RAC-SCC Cluster E 019R-1 - Assignment 1 - Reference Table for Biopsychosocial Development
SEXUALYoung Children
0-5 years / Children
6-11 years / Adolescence
12-18 years / Early Adulthood
18-40 years / Middle Adulthood
40-65 years / Older Adults
65 years +
- Infants are in the oral stage of development as emphasis of action is on sucking.
- 4-year olds explore and touch their private parts, and show them to others
- Freud:
- Latent stage of psychosexual development; energies are directed toward school and learning the rules of society
- Puberty in girls starts at age 8; girls and boys at this age are often at different points in their sexual development
- Freud:
- Adolescence a time of great hormonal changes and body growth for both girls and boys. May lead to an increase in sex drive
- Without knowledge or education, teenage pregnancy is a risk, as are STDs
- Freud:
- Quantity and motility of sperm decrease in men after 20, and quantity of semen diminishes after 40
- With age, understand sexuality as connected to commitment and planning for the future
- Freud:
- Women enter into menopause in middle adulthood usually in early 50s
- Sexuality which involves physical intimacy, sexual satisfaction, passion, romance, and closeness and love is important in middle age
- Most older couples report continued regular sexual enjoyment, feel more emotionally connected to their partner
- Sexual changes in vagina can shorten and narrow sexual function and pleasure