Nature vs. Nurture Flashcards

1
Q

Tabula Rassa

A

means ‘blank slate’ in latin

- idea that when child is born they are a blank slate which gets added to by learning

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2
Q

Locke (1632 - 1704)

A

empiricist (based work on evidence and observation)
-viewed child as blank slate
-stated through social interaction children learn:
speech, emotion, moral, exist within society

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3
Q

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712 - 1778)

A

French philosopher interested in work by Locke

  • agreed with locke that society was a strong part in a childs development
  • saw society as a factor that corrupted a child
  • children are born ‘angelic’
  • coined the phrase ‘the noble savage’ = a good child who becomes corrupted by society and all that is wrong within it
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4
Q

How do the philosophy perspecitives contribute to modern perspectives of early childhood?
Early experiences are important (pointed out by philosophers)
– examples of modern research that shows this?

A

Ainsworths strange situation (links to adult relationships)

  • Piaget/ Vygotsky compared to Erikson (believes development continues throughout adulthood)
  • learning to walk/ play
  • learning emotion
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5
Q

Nature/ nurture is viewed as a behaviour continuum

A

so, not everything is driven by genetics and not everything is driven by experience

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6
Q

Nativism

A

the view that many skills or abilities are ‘native’ or hard wired into the brain at birth, the result of genetic inheritance (genetics)

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7
Q

Empiricism

A

the view that humans are not born with built in core knowledge or mental content and that all knowledge or mental content results from learning and experience (nurture)

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8
Q

IQ in relation to nature/ nurture
Binet (1905) - 1st intelligence test, MA
Stern - IQ

A

Binet - identified mental age (MA)
-an individuals level of ability relative to others
-if a child of 5 solves a problem a 7yr old should be able to do, they have a MA of 7, but chronological age (CA) of 5
-if MA is lower than CA they are likely to have learning difficulties at school
Stern - introduced term IQ = intelligence quotient
Mental Age/ Chronological age x 100
(therefore average IQ for ones age is 100)
eg. 10/10 = 1, 1x100 = 100

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9
Q

What is intelligence?

general intelligence def?

A

single ability or collection of abilities
-verbal abilities, problem solving, memory etc
if it was lots of individual things, we’d need lots of tests
–so, came up with describing it as ‘g’ (general intelligence)
g = your score/ ability on all different kinds of intelligence tests eg.lang/maths/shape rotation

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10
Q

heritability?

Jensen(1969) paper ‘how much can we boost IQ and scholastic achievement’ found?

A

found:white children were more intelligent than black and low SES children (controversial)
-> led to accusations of scientific racism
(changing results of experiments to make it look different for diff subgroups)
-more recent evidence shows similar 15-18 point IQ gap between black and white children (in USA)
-group differences are 50-80% heritable (Rushton + Jensen)
-we don’t know much more about why differences occur

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11
Q

Twin studies (heritability?)

A

monozygotic (identical) twins share all genes - correlation:
IQ and MZ =0.87 (same genes and developmental environment)
IQ and MZ = 0.75 (reared apart)
Dizygotic (Fraternal) share 1/2 genes
IQ+DZ = 0.55
IQ +DZ = 0.35 (reared apart)

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12
Q

Innate or acquired?

A

haven’t currently found a specific gene which is strongly associated with cognitive ability = ‘missing heritability’ = failure to find any genes associated with cognitive ability

  • BUT we do know IQ has a strong heritability component
  • 50% of variation in a populations (western world) IQ is accounted for by genetic differences
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13
Q

Gene x Environment interaction

-breastfeeding and gene

A

breastfed children are healthier and develop higher IQs (likely due to fatty acids in breast milk)
-there is a gene which is involved in the genetic control of fatty acid pathways and has been linked to brain development
- a variant of this gene allows breastfed kids to score around 7 points higher on IQ tests
-another variant shows no difference in breastfeeding and IQ
(so need this beneficial variant/ predisposition to benefit from breastfeeding)

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14
Q

Adoption studies

  • Minnesota study
  • Flynn effect
  • Ravens progressive matrices
A

Minnesota Transcranial Adoption study (1976) - longitudinal
tested IQ scores of black or interracial kids adopted by white advantaged families
-7yrs old = black and interracial kids scored above white population average
-Black children adopted by these families by 1 yrs old scored 20 points above black children raised in black communities in US
-17 yrs = IQ scores for all groups lower but differences remain
=environment is important for ability at school level
THE FLYNN EFFECT = environmental effects on cognitive development
-IQ rates increase by 3 points each decade in western societies (so IQ tests have to be re-standardised every few years to account for this)
RAVENS PROGRESSIVE MATRICES
- non-verbal test with items arranged in order of difficulty
-scores have increased by 20 points over 50 yrs
Reasons for this:
-smaller family size - more time spent with individual child
-improvements in education
-development of technology to support learning
-changes in diet eg. helps concentration
–Flynn effect is currently reducing in the UK, but increasing in china and india (UKless affected by environment)

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15
Q

Poverty, Malnutrition and education

A

-poverty and malnutrition have a negative effect on childrens development
-children who have an inadequate diet have reduced brain development
-children living in poverty have structural brain differences to those from higher SES families (found using SMRI)
-In UK a training programme called ‘sure start’ -training for parents including:
guidance on health and nutrition
improve child behaviour through parent-child interaction
setting expectations, limits and consistent strategies for behaviours management and non-compliance in children
–benefits seen in similar schemes worldwide
–some see limited benefits, but overall this is seen as a positive interaction

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16
Q

non-IQ example of something that can be affected by nature/nurture?

A

personality