- by Diane Clark Johnson
Development is given in a range of years. Each child develops as an individual. Ask yourself, are you expecting too much or too little?
Your child's behavior "problem" may be just one of his/her important and normal developmental tasks. Awareness of these tasks should reassure you that your child’s development is normal and likely to change again soon. A behavior "problem" often lasts more than 6 months, happens in more than one place consistently, and appears as a pattern.
Normal Expectations:
During the past 15-20 years intrauterine development has become very important. Prior to this time, environmental effects on fetal development were not considered important.
Piaget’s Sensorimotor Period (Birth to 2 years)
0-1 years
- Trust of caregiver/parent
- Forming a secure attachment now is critical for later years
- World view is expanding
1-3 years
- Focus Oriented, can now experience outrage
- Self-control/self-management are key
- Impulses are out of control
- Parallel play normal
- Peers are competitors or providers
- Perspective taking is just beginning
- Able to learn cause and effect
- Thinking is relatively concrete
Piaget’s Preoperational Period (2-7 years)
2-5 years
- During the first five years of life, children are egocentric -- they can only see their own perspective
- Increasing ability to tolerate frustration and to delay gratification
- Important for them to say NO, allows them to have feeling of control
- Normal to have focused aggression
- Play is critical, imaginary friends are useful and normal
- External to internal control begins to develop/ more able to self-regulate
- Socialization learned; learning what is socially appropriate
- Language development
- Gender identity
5-7 years
- A very sensitive time for child when making mistakes
- Parent needs to allow mistakes and help teach that mistakes are opportunities to learn
- Parents can have influences setting cultural bias
- Parent can begin to plants seeds for empathy, through modeling
Piaget’s Period of Concrete Operations (7-11 years)
6-12 years
- Latency, this period sexual and aggressive drives diminish
- Generally a stable period
- Beginning of our continuous memory/Can begin to develop expectations
- Most memories are happy
- Adaptive functions solidified, habits and patterns develop now
- Child is often able to organize and get along on their own
- Social skills and ego functions develop now
- Peer relationships are key
- Develop "social markers" or labels i.e.: fat, left-handed
- Mastery is important, being good at something is critical
- Interest in the outside world
Important tasks during latency
- Friendships
- Self control (body, emotions)
- Mastery of environment
- Clear distinction between public and private life (secrets)
- External and internal life (fantasy)
- Reassuring during this period to know there is a "Higher Authority"
- Hobbies and organized collections offer opportunity for control, organization and order
- Personality traits develop now
8-9 years
- Competition enables self evaluation
- Peer rivalry
- Clear gender barriers in spite of efforts to avoid
- Able to be both caring and mean
- Teasing between sexes important -- helps set boundaries
Piaget’s Period of Formal Operations (12 and On)
12-18 years
- Social and moral development
- Rebellion, self identity or expression
- They want to be trusted
When considering your child’s behavior it is important to consider:
- normal developmental tasks, listed above
- external factors; family stress, parenting style, environment
- internal factors; temperament, biological vulnerability
If you suspect a behavior problem, it is important to get a thorough diagnosis. Only through a psychological evaluation can you rule out learning disabilities, ADD, ADHD, perceptual problems or genetic disorders.
Diane Clark Johnson is a Family Life Educator and director of A Family Resource in Oakland, California and co-author of Temperament Tools: Working with your Child’s Inborn Temperament Traits.
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