theory: the multiple intelligences emphasizes the importance of valuing and recognizing all them and adapting to teach strategies to help reserve learners.
main idea: people dont have just an intellectual capacity, but have many kinds of intelligence.
theory: theory thag focuses on how children develop morality and moral reasoning.
main idea. the thinking process thag occurs when one decides whether a behavior is right or wrong.
theory: women come tp prioritize an "ethics of care" as their sense of morality rvolves aling with their sense of self while men prioritize an "ethics of justice".
main idea: women make moral and ethical decisions based on how they will affect others in mind.
theory: how we understand universal language and Grammer.
main idea: we are pre-wired to learn languages and in fact are born with the basic rules for language intact.
theory: children and infants need to develop a secure dependence on their parents before seeking unfamiliar situations.
main idea: a child needs an established secure base or dependence, with their caregivers beofre venturing into the exploration of thr world around them.
theory: infants are biologically wired to form attachments, a mechanism that serves as a survival strategy.
main idea: the emotional and social development of an infant is shaped by their relationship with their primary caregivers.
theory: children's intelligence undergoes changes as they grow.
main idea: children develop through a continuous drive to learn and adapt mental templates that help them understand things.
theory: human personality develops through a series of stages, each qre centered around the satisfaction of certain physical or psychic needs.
main idea: the human psyche consists of 3 components; id, ego and superego.
theory: your ego identity develops throughout your entire life during 8 specific stages.
main idea: humans personalities continued to develop past the age of 5.
theory: theory of more knowledgeable others-by pairing a child with a "more knowledgeable other"
main idea: intellectual development is a social process that occurs through interaction with others.
theory: picking up new habits by watching others and copying theor actions.
main idea: observation and modeling play a primary role in how and why people learn.
theory: explicit about how nurses can apply its principles to their practice.
main idea: only behaviors which could observed by the human eye were valid in scientific study of psychology.
theory: pairing a neutral stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus to bring out a conditioned response.
main idea: to study and demonstrate the concept of classical condition.
theory: his theory emphasizes the importance of both the micro-and marco-dimensions of the environment in which an individual lives, it consists of 5 environmental systems.
main idea: the environment you grow up in, affects every part of your life.
theory: the approach that emphasizes individual instructions and self-paced learning.
main idea: teaching each child at theor own pace, and hands-on learning.
theory: the need for a mother's love is not physical but rather emotional.
main idea: the relationship between mother and child was created by the mother providing comfort.
the importance of human beings of socio-emotional bonds with available, sensitive and supportive others for effective emotion regulation, mental health, and psychological functioning.
birth order affects one's personality and life outcomes including educational success and future carrier.
we are born with something in our genes that allows us to learn languages. the best time to learn a language(s) is duting the forst 6 year sof life.
an individual's tendency tp respond emotionally and behaviorally to environmental events. nature and nurture plays a role i shaping our temperament.
social: its the ability to get along well with others and to get them to cooperate with you.
emotional: the ability to perceive, control and evaluate emotions.
it involves thoughts, feelings, and behaviors and has both intrapersonal and interpersonal components.
drugs, alcohol, chemicals, toxic substances, tobacco, certain infections, so meds.
the process by which we acquire the beliefs, values and behaviors deemed significant and appropriate by the older members of our society.
its the continuous process of acquiring norms, values and behaviors. it begins when we grow up, the influence around us shape out behavior.
culture - theyre expected to follow instructions, hsve responsibilities, achievements and independence.
children go through distinct stages of cognitive development, each characterized by specific cognitive abilities and ways of thinking.
neurons make connections with other neurons to form the information processin networks that are responsible for all thoughts.