Health Sciences 2700A/B Chapter Notes - Chapter 10: Albert Bandura, Trait Theory, Neuroticism
Document Summary
Chapter 10: social and personality development in middle childhood. According to the psychoanalytic perspective, children vary greatly in the ways that they respond. For freud, the challenge of the middle childhood years was to form emotional bonds with peers. The psychosocial task of the 6-12 year old is the development of industry though. He went beyond freud"s perspective and further characterized middle childhood as the. In this stage, children develop a sense of their own competence through the achievement. Proposed that children who lack success in school can develop it by participating in. The emergence of stable traits in middle childhood are known the willingness to work to accomplish goals. If they fail, they will enter adulthood with feelings of inferiority to contribute to the development of feelings of competence culturally valued pursuits outside of academic settings. Trait: a stable pattern of responding to situations. Big five personality traits: extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, neuroticism, openness/intellect.