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The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

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Page 1: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

The Play Years

Biosocial Development for ages

2 to 6

Page 2: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Three primary factors influencing physical growth• Genetic Background• Health care• Nutrition

– this factor accounts for differences in size of children between rich and poor nations

Page 3: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Dietary issues

• For all preschoolers, rate of growth slows during this developmental stage

• This results in intake of fewer calories

• How these calories are used becomes an important issue for developing bodies

Page 4: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Dietary issues for US children• Iron deficient anemia

– related to low intake of iron rich foods: leafy vegetables, raisins and other dried fruits, whole grains, eggs, high quality meats

• Too much sugar intake• Too much fat intake• Too little fruit and vegetable intake

Page 5: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Experience and the Brain

• Rapid rate of myelination of neurons occurs at this stage

• Increasing neural connections due to experience

• Specific areas of brain expanding relating to emotions, motor functioning, and intellect

• Corpus callosum increases in size at age 5

Page 6: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Improved brain functioning • These physical developments allow

preschoolers greater control of emotions, muscle coordination, and reaction time

• Corpus Callosum growth allows hemispheres of brain better communication and the child can successfully involve both hemispheres in coordination,sensory, emotion, thinking and reaction tasks

Page 7: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Readiness for Reading and Math• Development of hemispheres and

increased myelenation also aids with the visual pathway, strengthening cognitive abilities to recognize symbols while improving eye-hand coordination and enabling effective writing

• These changes occur simultaneous to reading, writing, and math instruction in schools

Page 8: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Implications for learning

• While maturation makes reading, math and writing tasks salient to the child, early exposure to rich language, literature and math concepts are recommended

• Educational programs which keep activities at the appropriate developmental stage will increase motivation by providing early successful academic experiences

Page 9: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Injury control

• Preventing injuries by planning ahead, controlling circumstances, preventing certain dangerous activities and adding safety features to other activities– regulation of child proof safety caps– car seat laws– mandatory fencing around pools– helmets worn by cyclists– flame-retardant sleep wear

Page 10: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Mastering Gross Motor Skills• Learned by teaching themselves

and from other children, rather than through adult instruction

Page 11: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Children’s Art

• Expresses symbolic understanding• Requires fine motor coordination• Enhances feelings of accomplishment• Provides a medium for self-correction• Detail in drawings parallel cognitive

development• Encourages expression of self

Page 12: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Child Maltreatment

• Abuse: any action harmful to an individual’s well-being

• Neglect: any inaction that harms or endangers a person

• both terms include either physical and/or psychological harm

• Maltreatment: any intentional harm or endangerment to anyone under 18 years

Page 13: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Cultural Values that protect children from Maltreatment• Children are not held responsible

for their actions• Children are highly valued• Children are not the sole

responsibility of parents• Aggression of any kind is frowned

upon

Page 14: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Family contextual factors contributing to maltreatment• Poverty• Social Isolation

Page 15: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6
Page 16: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Possible Consequences of Maltreatment• Underweight• Slower to talk• Less able to concentrate• Delayed academic growth• Negative perception of others• Use of drugs• Enter poor relationships

Page 17: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Possible Consequences of Maltreatment• Become aggressors or victims• Sabbotage their careers• Establish unhealthy eating

patterns• Engage in self-destructive behavior

Page 18: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Intergenerational Transmission• A destructive and inaccurate assumption

that children who are abused will abuse their own children

• Between 30% and 40% do become abusers, but the majority do not

• This is a higher rate than the majority population

• Adults who have processed and healed their own abuse are less likely to abuse

Page 19: The Play Years Biosocial Development for ages 2 to 6

Public Policies that may Prevent Maltreatment• Primary Prevention:

– Build neighborhoods that support children and families (both financially and relationally)

– Encourage planned parenthood– Encourage building of communities– Close the gap between rich and poor