Educ 50 (The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles)
Educ 50 (The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles)
PRINCIPLES)
Aprell L. Abellana
OVERVIEW
This module is design in response to the need for universities to come up with a
new learning delivery mode that would enable the students to continue learning while
the government is trying to contain the spread of COVID-19. It focuses on child and
adolescent development with emphasis on current research and theory on biological,
linguistic, cognitive, social and emotional dimensions of development. Further, this
includes factors that affect the progress of development of the learners and appropriate
pedagogical principles applicable for each developmental level.
Psychologistworld.com
INTRODUCTION
Every living creature is called to become what it is meant to be. The caterpillar is
meant to become a butterfly; a seed into a full-grown herb, bush or tree; and a human
baby into a mature person, the person “who is fully alive, the glory of God” in the words
of ST. Irenaeus.
TIME ALLOTMENT
6 hours
ACTIVITY
Here is a picture of seven-year old Nicole and two-year old Gab. Each one is a bundle of
possibilities. Describe what they were before birth (their point of origin) and who they will
possibly be after birth unto adulthood. What will they possibly become? Expound on your
answers.
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Analysis
1. When you gave your own predictions as to the kind of child, adolescent and adult Nicole and
Gab may become and hypothesized on who they once were, you were referring to human
development. What then is development?
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2. Will two-year old Gab be able to do all that seven-year old Nicole can do? Why or why not?
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3. Will there be anything common in the pattern of development of Nicole and Gab? If yes,
what?
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4. Will there be differences in their development, e.g. pace or rate of development? What and
why?
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5. Will the process of development take place very fast or gradually? Expound on your answer.
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6. Do you believe that Nicole and Gab will continue to develop even in adulthood? Or will they
stop developing in adulthood?
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ABSTRACTION
1. Physical development: the growth of the body and its organs during childhood; the
functioning of physiological systems; the appearance of physical signs of aging during
adulthood; gains, losses, and continuities in motor abilities; and so on.
Even though developmentalists often specialize in one or another of these three aspects
of development, they appreciate that humans are whole beings and changes in one area affect
the others. The baby who develops the ability to crawl, for example, now has new opportunities
to develop her mind by exploring the contents of shelves and cabinets and to hone her social
skills by accompanying her parents from room to room.
How do you think humans typically change from birth to old age? Many people picture
the life span this way: First there are tremendous positive gains in capacity from infancy to
young adulthood; then there is little change at all during young adulthood and middle age; and
finally, there is only loss of capacities – a process of deterioration – in the later years. This
stereotyped view of the life span is largely, although not entirely, false. It has some truth for
biological and physical development. Traditionally, biologists have defined growth as the
physical changes that occur from conception to maturity. We do indeed become biologically
mature and physically competent during the early part of the life span. Aging, in a biological
sense, is the deterioration of organisms (including human beings) that leads inevitably to their
death. Biologically, then, development does not involve growth in early life, stability in early
adulthood, and the declines associated with aging in later life.
Most developmental scholars today have rejected this simple model of the life span,
however. When they speak of development, they now mean more than positive changes that
occur in infancy, childhood and adolescence. They believe that developmental change consists
of both gains and losses or may simply represent a difference between earlier and later
behavior (as when a four-year-old who once feared loud noises comes to fear hairy monsters
under the bed instead). Also, developmentalists today use the term aging to refer to a wide
range of changes, both positive and negative, in the mature organism. They maintain that both
positive and negative changes – gains and losses – occur in every phase of the life span, and
so we should not associate aging only with loss.
Consider this: From early childhood to young adulthood, although we certainly do gain
many new abilities, we also experience negative changes such as increased rates of depression
and suicide. From our teenage years to our 40s, when we are supposedly not changing much,
we are typically gaining self-confidence and other psychological strengths, and we are aging as
well. And, although many elderly adults do find themselves becoming somewhat slower
mentally, many are also still acquiring knowledge and expertise that young people lack. In short,
development involves gains, losses, just plain changes, and samenesses in each phase of the
life span. Above all, we should abandon the idea that aging involves only deterioration and loss.
Maturation is the biological unfolding of the individual according to a plan contained in the
genes (the hereditary material passed from parents to child at conception).
Learning is the process through which experience brings about relatively permanent change in
thoughts, feelings or behavior.
If you believe that Nicole and Gab will show extensive change from birth to adolescence,
little or no change in adulthood and decline in late old age, your approach to development is
traditional. In contrast, if you believe that even in adulthood developmental change takes place
as it does during childhood, your approach is termed life-span approach.
APPLICATION
1. State five characteristics of human development from a life-span perspective and their
implications to the child care, education and parenting.
2.
3.
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5.
2. Growth is an evidence of life” or “development is an evidence of life.” What does this mean?
What does this imply to a person’s development?
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4. Below are the principles of child development and learning which are the bases of
developmentally appropriate practice (DAP) in early childhood program for children from
birth through age 8, which were stated in the position paper of the National Association for
the Education of Young Children (2009). They affirm the characteristics of life-span
development approach we just discussed. Find out which one is a re-statement of the
principles of human development by stating the characteristics of human development from
life-span perspective in the second column.
SYNAPSE STRENGTHENER
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III. Put a ✔ before a correct statement and an ✘ before a wrong one. If you put ✘, explain why.
Write your explanation below the statement.
___ 4. In the development process, these are things that hold true to all people.
REFERENCES/SUGGESTED READINGS
1. Acero, V., Javier, E., & Castro, H. (2008). Child and Adolescent Development. First
Edition. Manila: Rex Book Store.
2. Corpuz, B., Lucas, M., Borado, H., Lucas, M. R. & Lucido, P. (2018). Child and
Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles. OBE - and K to 12 – Based. Manila:
Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
3. Corpuz, B., Lucas, M., Borado, H., Lucas, M. R. & Lucido, P. (2015). Child and
Adolescent Development: Looking at Learners at Different Life Stages. OBE - and
PPST – Based. Manila: Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
4. Lucas, M. R., Borabo, M., Bilbao, P. and Corpuz, B. (2020). Field Study.
Observations of Teaching-Learning in Actual School Environment. OBE- and PPST-
Based. Manila: Lorimar Publishing, Inc.
6. Human Development
https://courses.lumenlearning.com/wmopen-lifespandevelopment/chapter/human-
development/