PSYC10004 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Intellectual Disability, Phenylketonuria, Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health And Development Study
Document Summary
Developmental changes are products of a complex interplay between nature and nurture. Conceptualizes the environment as a set of nested structures, each inside another. Each structure emphasizes a diff level of influence. Environmental forces at each level vary in effect on each child. Complex interconnectedness among levels, which are called systems. Microsystem: immediate physical and social environment (eg. parents, grandparents, child-care centre) Mesosystem: interrelationships or linkages b/w two or more microsystem (eg. problems a teenager experiences at school may affect home life) Exosystem: linkages involving social systems individuals do not experiences directly (eg. changes in parents workplaces may affect home life) (no direct contact) Macrosystem: larger cultural context in which microsystem, mesosystem and exosystem are embedded (eg. cultural beliefs, customs, laws etc. Chronosystem: changes in people and their environments occurring across time (eg. attitudes to child-rearing in the 20th century compared to present day) *only included in bronfenbrenner"s model day) *only included in bronfenbrenner"s model.