Friday, October 17, 2008
October 17: Review Test and Socratic Seminar
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Notes. You wrote a new question on sensation.
2) Developmental Activities. Some of you presented your Freudian fairy tale or your video of testing a child's conservation. Fun!
3) Review Test on Development. We went over the tricky questions from the test on chapters 3 & 4.
4) Socratic Seminar on the issue: "Does Divorce of Parents Harm Their Children?" After reading the two sides of this argument, we sat in a circle and had a very intelligent discussion to btter understand the text. WAY TO GO! You guys are really good at this!
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 5 pages .199-211
2) Make notecards on chapters 5 and 6. This unit is one of the hardest so please make sure you review and review and review!
1) Neuron Notes. You wrote a new question on sensation.
2) Developmental Activities. Some of you presented your Freudian fairy tale or your video of testing a child's conservation. Fun!
3) Review Test on Development. We went over the tricky questions from the test on chapters 3 & 4.
4) Socratic Seminar on the issue: "Does Divorce of Parents Harm Their Children?" After reading the two sides of this argument, we sat in a circle and had a very intelligent discussion to btter understand the text. WAY TO GO! You guys are really good at this!
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 5 pages .199-211
2) Make notecards on chapters 5 and 6. This unit is one of the hardest so please make sure you review and review and review!
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
October 14: Development Test on Ch.3 and Ch. 4
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Notes. You didn't need to write a new question, but I gave you the responses about aging.
2) Review. We went through the chapters and highlighted each point.
3) Collect Development Activity. You shared your experience testing and analyzing Piaget's stages, Kohlberg's moral ladder, or Freud's personality development. Great job!
4) Chapters 3 and 4 Test. 100 multiple choice questions on the development. If you were absent, you will take the test at the beginning of class on Friday while we go over the correct answers. Please come early so you can get settled and get it completed without missing too much of the rest of class.
5) Sensation/Perception Outline. You received the new outline for this next unit. Please get organized. We'll have some great conversations about all of your senses and how you perceive the world. The next test will cover both chapter 5 and chapter 6. Start making those notecards this week!
6) Taking Sides Articles. Please read both sides to the question "Does the Divorce of Parents Harm Their Parents?" and complete the handout so you can participate in our Socratic Seminar next class.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 5 up to page 199.
2) Taking Sides articles and handout
1) Neuron Notes. You didn't need to write a new question, but I gave you the responses about aging.
2) Review. We went through the chapters and highlighted each point.
3) Collect Development Activity. You shared your experience testing and analyzing Piaget's stages, Kohlberg's moral ladder, or Freud's personality development. Great job!
4) Chapters 3 and 4 Test. 100 multiple choice questions on the development. If you were absent, you will take the test at the beginning of class on Friday while we go over the correct answers. Please come early so you can get settled and get it completed without missing too much of the rest of class.
5) Sensation/Perception Outline. You received the new outline for this next unit. Please get organized. We'll have some great conversations about all of your senses and how you perceive the world. The next test will cover both chapter 5 and chapter 6. Start making those notecards this week!
6) Taking Sides Articles. Please read both sides to the question "Does the Divorce of Parents Harm Their Parents?" and complete the handout so you can participate in our Socratic Seminar next class.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 5 up to page 199.
2) Taking Sides articles and handout
Friday, October 10, 2008
October 9: Finish Adolescence and then OLD people
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me one more question about development and you read the answers to your last questions.
2) Frontline "Inside the Teenage Brain." We finished watching this.
3) Sing-A-Long. We looked at songs that talk about moving to adulthood and we listened to the perfect song called "Father and Son" by Cat Stevens. Adolescence is the final severing of the umbilical cord for parents and you. It usually isn't easy, but you all can do it! :)
4) Notes on OLD. We talked briefly about what happens as you age and how our culture sees aging as a negative event.
5) "Never Say Die" Video Clip. Alan Alda and Scientific American Frontiers has some great programs and this one is fascinating. What if we "cure" aging!? We watched the segment on Roy Walford M.D.'s calorie restriction diet for longevity. For more information, read: http://www.walford.com/ and http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/17572/
Assignments:
1) Finish chapter 4.
2) Developmental Activity. Due on Tuesday. You can try to test object permanence or conservation and better understand Piaget. Or you can ask people the Heinz dilemma and analyze their responses using Kohlberg's moral ladder. Or you can analyze a fairytale using Freud's psychosexual stages of personality development.
3) Test over chapters 3 and 4 is on Tuesday, October 14.
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me one more question about development and you read the answers to your last questions.
2) Frontline "Inside the Teenage Brain." We finished watching this.
3) Sing-A-Long. We looked at songs that talk about moving to adulthood and we listened to the perfect song called "Father and Son" by Cat Stevens. Adolescence is the final severing of the umbilical cord for parents and you. It usually isn't easy, but you all can do it! :)
4) Notes on OLD. We talked briefly about what happens as you age and how our culture sees aging as a negative event.
5) "Never Say Die" Video Clip. Alan Alda and Scientific American Frontiers has some great programs and this one is fascinating. What if we "cure" aging!? We watched the segment on Roy Walford M.D.'s calorie restriction diet for longevity. For more information, read: http://www.walford.com/ and http://www.technologyreview.com/biomedicine/17572/
Assignments:
1) Finish chapter 4.
2) Developmental Activity. Due on Tuesday. You can try to test object permanence or conservation and better understand Piaget. Or you can ask people the Heinz dilemma and analyze their responses using Kohlberg's moral ladder. Or you can analyze a fairytale using Freud's psychosexual stages of personality development.
3) Test over chapters 3 and 4 is on Tuesday, October 14.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
October 7: Adolescence
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me a new question about adolescence and I answered your questions from the last two classes. We spent lots of time reading these answers since many were interesting.
2) Parenting Styles. We reviewed Baumrind's parenting styles: authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative. We discussed our own parents and their styles and how you might be a parent.
3) Adolesence Notes. We talked about puberty, adolescent egocentrism concepts of imaginary audience and invincibility fable, and what stage you are at with each theorist (Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson).
4) James Marcia's Identity States. You took a survey of repeating questions about gender roles, religion, politics, lifestyle, dating, occupation, etc. to see what stage of identity you are at.
Foreclosure = you have an identity, you are not searching, it is what you have been raised to be
"I am a Republican, my parents are Republican, my grandparents are Republicans."
Diffusion = you do not have an identity, you are not searching.
"I don't know. I don't care about politics. Whatever."
Moratorium = you do not have an identity, you are searching.
"I'm not sure who I support in the election, but I think I'll watch the debate. I'm curious about the candidates. What do Democrats and Republicans believe?"
Achievement = you have an identity, it is your own.
"I know who I am voting for in the election. I know where I stand on the issues. I can articulate my position and give examples from my own life to explain why I believe what I do."
5) Frontline "Inside the Teenage Brain." We were only able to watch the first ~20 minutes of this GREAT program. We'll finish it on Thursday.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 up to page 188 (or just finish it!).
2) Developmental Activity. You received a detailed explanation of this assignment. You can try to test object permanence or conservation and better understand Piaget. Or you can ask people the Heinz dilemma and analyze their responses using Kohlberg's moral ladder. Or you can analyze a fairytale using Freud's psychosexual stages of personality development. It is due next Tuesday.
3) Test over chapters 3 and 4 is on Tuesday, October 14.
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me a new question about adolescence and I answered your questions from the last two classes. We spent lots of time reading these answers since many were interesting.
2) Parenting Styles. We reviewed Baumrind's parenting styles: authoritarian, permissive, and authoritative. We discussed our own parents and their styles and how you might be a parent.
3) Adolesence Notes. We talked about puberty, adolescent egocentrism concepts of imaginary audience and invincibility fable, and what stage you are at with each theorist (Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson).
4) James Marcia's Identity States. You took a survey of repeating questions about gender roles, religion, politics, lifestyle, dating, occupation, etc. to see what stage of identity you are at.
Foreclosure = you have an identity, you are not searching, it is what you have been raised to be
"I am a Republican, my parents are Republican, my grandparents are Republicans."
Diffusion = you do not have an identity, you are not searching.
"I don't know. I don't care about politics. Whatever."
Moratorium = you do not have an identity, you are searching.
"I'm not sure who I support in the election, but I think I'll watch the debate. I'm curious about the candidates. What do Democrats and Republicans believe?"
Achievement = you have an identity, it is your own.
"I know who I am voting for in the election. I know where I stand on the issues. I can articulate my position and give examples from my own life to explain why I believe what I do."
5) Frontline "Inside the Teenage Brain." We were only able to watch the first ~20 minutes of this GREAT program. We'll finish it on Thursday.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 up to page 188 (or just finish it!).
2) Developmental Activity. You received a detailed explanation of this assignment. You can try to test object permanence or conservation and better understand Piaget. Or you can ask people the Heinz dilemma and analyze their responses using Kohlberg's moral ladder. Or you can analyze a fairytale using Freud's psychosexual stages of personality development. It is due next Tuesday.
3) Test over chapters 3 and 4 is on Tuesday, October 14.
Friday, October 3, 2008
October 3: Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson, Freud
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me a new question about Piaget, attachment, and the other development concepts.
2) Did you watch the VP Debate? Keep up with what is going on in the world! When is a child, developmentally old enough to tackle controversational issues?
3) Lecture on Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson, Freud. I gave you notes on the overhead over these stage theorists. Hopefully, we did enough to make it interesting. I gave you lots of life examples of my own children who are different stages at ages 1, 3, 6. We analyzed Kohlberg's moral dilemma with Heinz. I think Freud in just fascinating on his own to talk about. Make sure you know the different stages!
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 pp. 159-170.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch B days this week and next week.
1) Neuron Note. You wrote me a new question about Piaget, attachment, and the other development concepts.
2) Did you watch the VP Debate? Keep up with what is going on in the world! When is a child, developmentally old enough to tackle controversational issues?
3) Lecture on Piaget, Kohlberg, Erikson, Freud. I gave you notes on the overhead over these stage theorists. Hopefully, we did enough to make it interesting. I gave you lots of life examples of my own children who are different stages at ages 1, 3, 6. We analyzed Kohlberg's moral dilemma with Heinz. I think Freud in just fascinating on his own to talk about. Make sure you know the different stages!
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 pp. 159-170.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch B days this week and next week.
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
October 1: Gus! Prenatal, Neonatal, Child Development
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Note. You read answers to your questions from the last two classes. We are back up to speed with your questions and my answers.
2) LIFE book. We looked at amazing photos of conception, blastocytes, embryos, fetuses. Check it out in the IMC.
3) Gus. My one-year-old joined us today to demonstrate some of his abilities. We looked at the next reading assignment and Gus showed you what he can do from that section! We talked about motor development, object permanence (and we hid toys until a cloth napkin to see what stages he has mastered), attachment (I wore him in a baby carrier when he got crabby), temperament (he is a social child, not inhibited...Jerome Kagan), and self-concept (we made his nose blue to see if he would wipe it off when he looked in the mirror...he didn't...maybe in a few months). Thank for being so good to Gus. I think he had a blast! You are all qualified to be babysitters! :)
4) Child Development Video. We watched the Philip Zimbardo video that showed babies abilities, nature/nurture, Piaget, and some great research on children.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 pp. 143-159.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch B days this week and next week.
1) Neuron Note. You read answers to your questions from the last two classes. We are back up to speed with your questions and my answers.
2) LIFE book. We looked at amazing photos of conception, blastocytes, embryos, fetuses. Check it out in the IMC.
3) Gus. My one-year-old joined us today to demonstrate some of his abilities. We looked at the next reading assignment and Gus showed you what he can do from that section! We talked about motor development, object permanence (and we hid toys until a cloth napkin to see what stages he has mastered), attachment (I wore him in a baby carrier when he got crabby), temperament (he is a social child, not inhibited...Jerome Kagan), and self-concept (we made his nose blue to see if he would wipe it off when he looked in the mirror...he didn't...maybe in a few months). Thank for being so good to Gus. I think he had a blast! You are all qualified to be babysitters! :)
4) Child Development Video. We watched the Philip Zimbardo video that showed babies abilities, nature/nurture, Piaget, and some great research on children.
Assignments:
1) Read chapter 4 pp. 143-159.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch B days this week and next week.
Monday, September 29, 2008
September 29: Gender Differences
In-Class Activities:
1) Neuron Note. You read answers to your questions about heritability and more.
2) Striking Similarities. You finished your conversation with your neighbor trying to find similarities between you. Have you traveled to the same places? Do you like the same foods? Are you interested in the same books? The point of this activity is to show that even though identical twins who were separated at birth and reunited might have some striking similarities, so do you when you sit down and talk to someone who is not genetically close to you.
3) Gender Differences Fishbowl Conversation. You wrote anonymous questions to ask the opposite sex and I collected them. They all the ladies got together in a circle, with the guys listening on the outside, to have an honest conversation about them. And then we switched with the guys answering the ladies' question in the circle in order to find out their responses. This allows each gender to get a chance to talk amongst themselves honestly. In the end, we came to the conclusion that all females are not the same and all males are not the same.
Assignments:
1) Start chapter 4.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch all week
1) Neuron Note. You read answers to your questions about heritability and more.
2) Striking Similarities. You finished your conversation with your neighbor trying to find similarities between you. Have you traveled to the same places? Do you like the same foods? Are you interested in the same books? The point of this activity is to show that even though identical twins who were separated at birth and reunited might have some striking similarities, so do you when you sit down and talk to someone who is not genetically close to you.
3) Gender Differences Fishbowl Conversation. You wrote anonymous questions to ask the opposite sex and I collected them. They all the ladies got together in a circle, with the guys listening on the outside, to have an honest conversation about them. And then we switched with the guys answering the ladies' question in the circle in order to find out their responses. This allows each gender to get a chance to talk amongst themselves honestly. In the end, we came to the conclusion that all females are not the same and all males are not the same.
Assignments:
1) Start chapter 4.
2) Chapter vocabulary notecards (optional)
3) Extra credit video at lunch all week
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