Cards (17)

    • What does social perspective talking mean?
      Understanding what someone else is feeling and/or thinking (i.e. social cognition)
    • What differed between what seillman and Piaget believed?
      Piaget believes in domain-general cognitive development → physical and social perspective taking will occur hand in hand wheras Selman proposed that the development of social perspective taking is a separate process = domain specific approach to cognitive development
    • What did selman look at regarding what occurred with age?
      changes that occurred with age in children’s responses to scenarios in which they were asked
      to take the role of different people in social situations
    • What was the procedure is Selmand procedure?
      30 boys and 30 girls took part (20 = 4, 20 = 5, 20 = 6)
      All were individually given a task designed to measure role-
      taking ability (how each person felt in various scenarios)
      e.g. Holly and the kitten
    • What’s was the findings of selmans research ?
      A number of distinct levels of role-taking were identified
      Selman found that this correlated with age, suggesting a
      clear developmental sequence
    • What were some of the questions the researcher asked about the holly scenario?
      How will Holly/her dad/Holly’s friend feel if Holly climbs the tree to rescue the kitten?’
    • What did seilmann find from the holly scenario?
      that the younger children (e.g. four year-olds) used egocentric thinking to understand how other people might feel e.g. they used information that they themselves were aware of but which other characters in the scenario could not have been aware of e.g. Holly’s dad will not know that she has climbed the tree to rescue the kitten
    • Understanding Selman’s ideaS Really Makes Sense
      Undifferentiated
      Social Informational
      Self Reflective
      Mutual
      Societal
    • What happened in stage 0 (3-6 yr) ?
      Undifferentiated perspective taking
      Socially egocentric
      The child in this stage cannot reliably distinguish between their own
      emotions and those of others.They will be unable to explain the
      emotional states of others.
    • What happened in Stage 1 (6-8 years) ?
      Social informational role taking
      Children understand that different perspectives may result because people have access to different
      information. However, they can usually only
      focus on one of these perspectives at a time
    • What happened in Stage 2 (8-10 years) ?
      Self-reflective role taking
      Now the child can put themselves in the position of another person and fully appreciate their perspective.They also recognise that others can do this too
    • What happened in stage 3 (10-12 years)
      Mutual role-taking
      Children are now able to look at a situation from their own
      and another’s point of view at the same time
      i.e. step outside of a two- person situation and imagine
      from the POV of a third,impartial party
    • What happened in stage 4 (12 years +) ?
      Social and conventional system role-taking
      Young people become able to see that sometimes understanding others’ viewpoints is not enough to allow people to reach agreement.Therefore, social conventions are needed keep order.
    • What were the 3 stages that Schulz, Selman and La Russo (2003) that were added to social development?
      1.Interpersonal understanding
      2. interpersonal negotiation strategies
      3. Awareness of personal meaning of relationships
    • Interpersonal understanding
      Measured in earlier research i.e. if we can take on
      different roles then this shows we can
      understand social situations
    • interpersonal negotiation strategies
      As well as understanding what others think in social
      situations we also have to develop skills in how to
      respond to them.We therefore develop social
      skills e.g. asserting our position and managing
      conflict
    • Awareness of personal meaning of
      relationships
      As well as understanding social situations and how to manage them,social development also requires the
      ability to reflect on social behaviour in the context of life history and the full range of relationships.Therefore, a violent gang member may have an advanced social understanding
      and good social skills, but choose a simple approach to conflict (violence) because of their role in the gang.
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