Page 29 - Advanced Biblical Counseling Student Textbook
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5.3 Development through your lifespan

                                Developmental Psychology examines how people are continually developing –
                                physically, cognitively, and socially – from infancy through old age.  Much of its
                                research centers on three major issues:

                                1.   Nature/nurture: How does our nature (genetic) inheritance and our nurture
                       (environment) influence our development?

                   2.  Continuity/stages: Is development a gradual process or does it proceed through a sequence of
                       separate stages?

                   3.  Stability/change: Do our early personality traits continue through life or do we become
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                       different people as we age?

               The Newborn
               “What are some newborn abilities? Newborns come equipped with automatic responses ideally suited
               for survival.  Can you think of some examples of this? Newborns are born with sensory reflexes (crying,
               breathing, sucking) that facilitate their survival and their social interactions with adults. We have a
               coordinated sequence of reflexes by which a baby gets food.  Babies have a coordinated sequence of
               reflexive tonguing, swallowing and breathing to nurse.  A hungry baby may learn to cry when hungry.
               Newborns turn heads in the direction of human voices.  Within days, our brain’s neural networks were
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               stamped with the smell from our mother’s body.”

               Infancy and Childhood
               “During infancy and childhood, how do the brain and motor skills develop?
               Cognitive Development refers to all mental activities associated with
               thinking, knowing, remembering and communicating. In your mother’s
               womb, your developing brain formed nerve cells at the explosive rate of
               nearly one-quarter million per minute. The developing brain cortex actually
               overproduces neurons, with the number peaking at 28 weeks and then
               subsiding to a stable 23 billion or so at birth. On the day you were born, you
               had most of the brain cells you would ever have. However, your nervous
               system was immature: After birth, the branching neural networks that
               eventually enabled you to walk, talk, and remember had a wild growth
               spurt. From ages 3 to 6, the most rapid growth was in your frontal lobes,
               which enables rational planning. This helps explain why preschoolers display a rapidly developing ability
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               to control their attention and behavior.”
               (photo: mybrownbaby.blogspot.com)


               “As a flower unfolds in accord with its genetic instructions, so do we, in the orderly sequence of
               biological growth processes called maturation. Maturation decrees many of our commonalities – from



               34  Myers, 2012
               35  Myers, p. 67, 2012
               36  Ibid.

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