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Psychology Week 8: Whowell

This week's assigned reading was Chapter 13, putting it all together. This week the chapter covered making lifespan development all about you, putting it in to practice. Lifespan development can be applied to every day life, like passing a homeless man. I thought this example tied it together really well for me. Some people might engage with the homeless man, while other's might avoid eye contact. The chapter refers to Maslow's hierarchy of needs  how people are challenged to self-actualized when basic needs aren't met. The book defines stakeholders as individuals who are affected by actions of a larger group or organization. Within the field of lifespan development invovles stakeholders of all ages and levels of power within our soical framework. According to the chapter, some of the current issues that we face is with teachers. It talks about teacher "teaching to the tests." This is about teachers trying to ensure children hit different marks or test level...

Psychology Week 7: whowell

This week's readings were about late adulthood, dying, and spirituality. In Chapter 11, we talked about late adulthood and we were asked to identify key aspects of physical delevopment among the elderly. There is a variety of physiological theories regarding elderly and death. One of the theories included that stuck out to me was homeostatic imbalance. This is a concept that there isn't much of a difference between a young person and an old person in reference to systems. However we see older body simply aren't as effective as reacting to stressors in the process fails.  Training, nutrition, illness stress level, and personality type also affect one's rate of aging. This stuck out to me because I definitely want to pay attention to all of these things, so that I personally age well. Hormone production slows down during late adulthood, and in one of the most debilitating conditions of the elderly is Alzheimer's disease. One of the other big things that stuck out to m...

Psychology Week 6:Whowell

 This week's reading was about introduction to adulthood and middle adulthood. I found a lot of things interesting. The first thing that stuck out to me was the insert about american rights of passage. I think  I have seen or experienced a lot of these myself already.  Events such as prom, sweet 16s, confirmations, sororities, and getting a car were such defining events in my life. There were also things, that I personally have not yet to experience like getting married, or having a baby.  I think a lot of people almost fantasies about these things that have happened to them. The events become huge momentous things that define our life by, and people look back at as golden ages. Examples of physical changes that happen during your introduction to adulthood is reaching your maximum height, or I n terms of speed and strength adults reach their peak condition at this time.  This chapter also talks about physical fitness, which I think is huge for young adults right...

Psychology Week 5: Whowell

This week the reading was on chapters 8 and 9. Chapter 8 was about adolescence. The first thing that caught my eye, was that I did not know a period was called a menarche. The overall development for adolescence is hard to track. Physical development is the easier to track, however stating when exactly puberty starts is hard. An example of this is when a girl gets her period at 11 or 12, puberty may have physically happened but mentally will still take a while. Alternatively, an eighteen year old girl who hasn't gotten her period yet, has still gone through puberty without the physical period. Another cool fact is that girls typically get taller sooner, and weight changes before boys. Girl hips widen as boys' shoulder broaden. The chapter covers eating disorders, like bulimia and anorexia, that girls starve themselves, or binge eat and then throw up to maintain "skinny" or "perfect" body image.  Piaget theory, specifically the formal operational stage was co...

Psychology Week 4: Whowell

  This weeks reading of chapter 6 and 7! Was fun just like last weeke. I like being able to read about children and really identify with the children within my family. A lot of personal examples were brought to mind as I read. This week the goal within our reading was to understand how children acquire a sense of self, understand the meaning of gender and play in regards to children development and learning and finally defining major stressors in childhood.        The first goal is how children develop a sense of self. Initially children identify with their physical attributes, like hair color or eye color. Their identities slowly change through cognitive and social maturity. Roles the family and roles of siblings are two main contributors to this. Parents, specifically parenting styles, can mold children. There are four parenting styles; authoritarian, authoritative, permissive, and uninvolved.  I can most easily identify with authoritative parenting, the...

Psychology Week 3. Whowell Babieesss

 This week was a very fun chapter for me. I myself am a huge fan of babies, a lot of my friends have had babies and I  almost live vicariously through them once I find out they are pregnant. I like to pay attention to every detail from their morning sickness all the way to being there for their actual birth and helping them take care of the babies watching and babysit him as well. I think this chapter was so much fun because it confirmed a lot of the stuff I already know however it also help me learn new things.  This week the goal was to be able to gain knowledge on the fertilization process, the prenatal period, the flow of the birthing process, and the characteristics of newborns. I just want to take the time to go through each and what specifically excited me or was new information to me.   The first process was fertilization this starts with a woman's menstrual cycle, which is the process of ovulation which is the ripening of eggs. Also preparing of the uterine...

Psychology Week 2: Whowell. Theories of Development

 This week we read chapter 2 talked about the theories of development. There were three goals that we wanted to take away from the reading. One,  who is Freud and what is his psychoanalytic theory? Two, what relationship did we take away the psychosocial crises and lifespan delevelopnent? And three, what where Maslow's heirachy of needs and what did importance is it to me? First,  Frued was one of the most influential theologist. He was one of the first people to come up with these powerful ideas of  development, and how each of person has the same stages of development. He breaks it down into five stages the oral stage, the Anal stage, the phallic stage, the latency stage, and the genital stage.  Each stage is broken down by age but also by a pleasure center.  Each person moves from stage to stage as each pleasure center is satisfied. A person moves from stage to stage as each a pleasure center is satisfied. The big things I took away from this is how ...