Things
that should be measured in middle childhood would be cognitive
development, physical development,, social development
cognitive
developmental- Brain development needs to be measured in order to
help children cognitively in middle childhood. The reasons for this
would be the child would be able to retain more information, have
more control over their actions. The child should also be able to be
adaptable to new situations.
“II.
INFORMATION PROCESSING .
A.
Brain development contributes to two basic changes in information
processing.
1.
Increase in information-processing capacity. A fairly rapid decline
in time needed to
process
information occurs during middle childhood.
2.
Gains in inhibition. Inhibitory control-the ability to resist
interference from irrelevant
information
makes great strides during middle childhood.
B.
Attention .
1.
During middle childhood, attention becomes more controlled,
adaptable, and planful.
2.
Selectivity and Adaptability . a. Through the elementary years,
children become better
at
deliberately attending to just those aspects of a situation that are
relevant to task goals. b.
Older
children can flexibly adjust their attention to the momentary
requirements of situations. C.
Attention
strategy development follows a predictable, four-step sequence: 1)
Production
deficiency-preschoolers
fail to produce strategies when they could be helpful. 2). Control
deficiency-young
elementary school children fail to control, or execute, strategies
effectively. 3).
Utilization
deficiency-slightly older children apply strategies consistently, but
their performance
does
not improve. 4). Effective strategy use-by mid-elementary school
years, children use
strategies
consistently, and performance improves.
3.
Planning. a. School-age children scan detailed pictures and written
materials for
similarities
and differences more thoroughly than do preschoolers. b. On complex
tasks, schoolage children make decisions about what to do first and
next in an orderly fashion. C. The
development
of planning illustrates how attention becomes coordinated with other
cognitive
processes.
d. Attentional difficulties are at the heart of the problems of
children with attention
deficit
hyperactivity disorder , a disorder in which children have great
difficulty staying on task,
act
impulsively, and may be hyperactive.
C.
Memory Strategies .
1.
Memory strategies are the deliberate mental activities we use to
store and retain
information.
“ (http://psych.ku.edu/dennisk/CP333/Cognitive%20Middle.pdf
)
Physical
development
Physically
the child should be gaining weight, have bladder control, should be
at their age appropriate weight and have age appropriate small and
large motor skills. Without being measured these could be signs of
juvenile diabetes, rickets, abuse or neglect. Loss or non-retention
of small and large motor skills could be signs of delays.
“Growth
slow in middle childhood, and wide differences in height and weight
exist.
- Children with retarded growth due to growth hormone deficiency may be given synthetic growth hormone.
- Proper nutrition is essential for normal growth and health.
- The permanent teeth arrive in middle childhood. Dental heath has improved, in part because of use of sealants on chewing surfaces.
- Malnutrition can affect all aspects of development.
- Obesity, which is increasingly common among U.S. children, entails health risks. It is influenced by genetic and environmental factors and can be treated.
- Concern with body image, especially among girls, may lead to eating disorders.
- Because of improved motor development, boys and girls in middle childhood can engage in a wide range of motor activities.
- About 10 percent of schoolchildren's play, especially among boys, is rough-and-tumble play.
- Many children, mostly boys, go into organized, competitive sports. A sound physical education program should aim at skill development and fitness for all children.
- Many children, especially girls, do not meet fitness standards.”(http://psych.ku.edu/dennisk/CP333/Cognitive%20Middle.pdf )
“Children
want to do things by and for themselves, yet they need adults who
will help when asked or when needed."(http://psych.ku.edu/dennisk/CP333/Cognitive%20Middle.pdf
)
- Social Emotional Development - I always say in social emotional that it is better to use this skill than memorize information. In order to succeed in life a person has to have social skills. They need to be able to work out problems and to have autonomy.
- Seven to nine-year-old children of the same age and sex help each other:
- have fun and excitement by playing together,
- learn by watching and talking to each other,
- in time of trouble by banning together,
- by giving support in time of stress, and
- understand how they feel about themselves.
- Children need guidance, rules, and limits.
- They need help in solving problems.
- They are beginning to see things from another child's point of view, but they still have trouble understanding the feelings and needs of other people.
- Many children need help to express their feelings in appropriate ways when they are upset or worried.
- They need more love, attention, and approval from parents and you than” criticism.”(http://www.nncc.org/child.dev/mid.dev.html )
In
what ways are school-age children assessed in other parts of the
world? (Choose a country or region of the world for which you have a
personal affinity. I wanted to compare American Middle Childhood to
African forager Middle Childhood. The assessments are different
because these children are being judged on their productivity
instead of their social skills and how much they know.
“ The
Aka acknowledges two stages of development corresponding to out
notion of middle childhood; mona (weaning-7) and mona bokala and mona
ngonda (males and females 8-12 respectively) In the Aka camp. There
is nearly always at least one adult present, although this is not
dependent upon there being children to look after, where there are
few adults around, will they necessarily be a child's parent. Girls
spent a mean of 36.8 percent of their time with a same-sex child as
one their nearest neighbors, and boys spent about 45.4 percent of the
time nearest to one other boy. Aka children performed twice as much
work independent of adults than adult-dependent work, excluding
childcare and work for villagers. They also spent more time emulating
work in play than performing adult-dependent work.” (retrieved from
http://anthro.vancouver.wsu.edu/media/PDF/boyette_hn_draft_6-09.pdf)
1 comment:
Nice post, great ideas on areas that should be tested.
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