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We’ve all heard about the “mid-life crisis” – it is depicted in all sorts of media, books, advertisements, and so forth. Considering how ubiquitous this idea is, perhaps we should stop and ask ourselves: does such a thing really happen?

Research the literature and discuss the stereotype and myths around the notion of the mid-life crisis. How do we define this kind of “crisis”? What, exactly, do people in this kind of crisis do? Are these crises common? Are there factors or events that predict such a crisis? Does the media accurately portray this phenomenon?

***APA STYLE ***

wk 10 response

  

Response 1

Discussion, Week 10: A Deficit or a Difference?

        As noted, school settings can be challenging for children and adolescents with a disability thus consideration is given as to whether such a disability is a deficit or a difference. The determination of this could affect the type of intervention(s) and the accommodations available in addition to how the individual is treated by others. The following presents how a disability in childhood or adolescence could be considered a deficit or a difference in terms of developmental trajectory.

Disability: A Deficit or a Difference

Disabilities come in many forms: mental, learning, and physical (Laureate, 2014). Although the effects on the individual may be similar, there remains a distinction between what is deemed to be a learning deficit or a difference in terms of developmental trajectory. People can overcome a learning deficit through remediation such as in academic intervention services (Economic Services Administration, n.d.). Comparatively, a learning disability is not reversible therefore remaining a life-long issue (Economic Services Administration, n.d.). However, accommodation skills and strategies may be put in place to aid in the lessening of the impact of the disability. Such accommodations for children and adolescents are developed into an IEP or Individualized Education Program and are tailored to the individual’s specific needs and goals (U.S. Department of Education, 2019). 

        The distinctions made between the two will reflect the developmental trajectory. For instance, a student diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder or ASD does not imply academic difficulties although impairments in social communication, or restrictive, repetitive, or stereotypical behaviors may be predictive in the individual’s academic achievements (Estes, Rivera, Bryan, Cali, & Dawson, 2011). A developmental deficit by diagnosis, ASD for the child or adolescent could be considered a difference based upon the severity of the deficit thus impacting terms of the developmental trajectory; it would be addressed as a heterogeneous disorder with heterogeneous developmental pathways (Fleury et al., 2014). Subsequently, educators are expected to recognize the cognitive abilities of learners with ASD thereby developing an academic plan which simultaneously targets the specific learning needs of the individual (Fleury et al., 2014).

Conclusion 

        Regardless of the disability of the child or adolescent, the fostering of an anti-bias and inclusive learning community is integral to the individual’s development (Derman-Sparks & Olsen Edwards, 2010). The developmentally appropriate practice requires the educator to cultivate each individual child’s fullest learning potential, inclusive, and promoting of encouragement, nurturing, and respect. The maintaining of an anti-bias learning community will present equitability for all students despite the consideration of the disability being a deficit or difference or the developmental trajectory. 

References

Derman-Sparks, L., & Olsen Edwards, J. (2010). Anti-bias education for young children and 

        ourselves. Washington, DC: National Association for the Education of Young Children.

Economic Services Administration. (2019). Learning disabilities and deficits. Retrieved from

https://www.dshs.wa.gov 

Estes, A., Rivera, V., Bryan, M., Cali, P., Dawson, G. (2011). Discrepancies between academic 

        achievement and intellectual ability in the higher-functioning school-aged children with   

        autism spectrum disorder. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 41, 1044–

        1052.

Fleury, V. P., Hedges, S., Hume, K., Browder, D. M., Thompson, J. L., Fallin, K., … & Vaughn, 

        S. (2014). Addressing the academic needs of adolescents with autism spectrum disorder in 

        secondary education. Remedial and Special Education, 35, 68–79. 

Response 2

Development is a process of growth through which children learn skills and abilities that help them to understand and function in their world. The normal trajectory of development enables a child to progress from complete dependency on others to complete independency of his/her needs. Although there is great variability in development, in general the majority of individuals progress within typical limits. However, certain disabilities may cause individuals to move along at a different pace or on a different path. 

Research indicates that individuals with disabilities start life with delays and those delays remain constant and consistent as they move through developmental stages (Kritzer, 2012). For example, individuals who are deaf, deafened, or hard of hearing are behind their typical peers in preschool in literacy and math skills due to communication challenges. These deficits continue as they progress into elementary school, middle, and high school. In fact, when they graduate into middle school, their math skills are on average at a second grade, when they graduate to high school their math skills are at a third fourth grade level, and if they graduate from high school, they perform math skills at a sixth grade level (Kritzer 2012). 

Another disability that have a different developmental trajectory than typical peers is Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD).  One area that individuals with ASD develop differently is with their adaptive skills. Specifically, due to difficulties interacting, they have overall adaptive skills that are weaker than individuals with intellectual disabilities, mood disorders, personality disorders, learning disabilities, and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (Mouga et al., 2015). The low adaptive skills are present starting at the age of two years of age and the trajectory of these skills is slower than typically developing individuals. In fact, the adaptive skill tend to become more profound and the gap in skill level between those with ASD and typically developing individuals grows (Pathak, Bennett, & Shui, 2017). 

Individuals with Intellectual Disability (ID) also have a different developmental trajectory than typically developing individuals.  ID usually begins at birth and negatively affects the trajectory of the individual’s physical, intellectual, and/or emotional development (National Institute of Health, 2016). According to Mash & Wolfe (2016), although they follow a similar developmental path as normally functioning peers, they move through the paths at slower pace. Plus, their upper limits are different. 

References

Kritzer, K. L. (2012). The story of an outlier: A case study of one young deaf child and his journey towards early mathematical competence. Deafness and Education International, 14(2), 69–77.

Mash, E. J., & Wolfe, D. A. (2016). Abnormal child psychology (6th ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.

Mouga, S., Almeida, J., Café’, C., Dugue, F., Oliveira, G., (2015). Adaptive profiles in Autism and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 45, 1001-1012. 

Bronfenbrenner's Systems

  Bronfenbrenner’s Systems

Analyze Bronfenbrenner’s systems theory framework and how it affects child and adolescent development. Your analysis should focus on at least two of the following areas: society, family, school, and peer relationships. Support your analysis using examples from an article found through research in the unit study. Media and library guide resources are provided to assist you.

Apply principles of effective composition and APA formatted citations in your post.

6 page paper on recreational drugs and its effect on human body

6 page paper on recreational drugs (examples: marijuana, cocaine, LSD) and its effect on the human body. plus one cover sheet, abstract page, reference page. Must have access to EBSCO AND GALE databases. 4 references from EBSCO and 1 reference from GALE is required. APA style but professor also wants a title per paragraph.

Human Growth and Development Assignment#2

Answer the following questions from the material in your textbook. Each of the questions below are described in your textbook. Be sure to explain your example using the psychology terms that are used and answer each part of the question. Each question should be answered with a short paragraph. Your answers should be in your own words.  Each Assignment will be checked by SafeAssign to check for plagiarism and originality.

Each answer is worth up to 10 points and the assignment is worth up to 50 points.

Submit your assignment by attaching a pdf or doc file. 

1. Describe and give an example of the invincibility fable described by Piaget.

2a.) How does identity foreclosure differ from identity moratorium. 2b.) Explain what occurs with identity achievement.

3. Describe and give an example of problem-focused coping and emotion focused coping.

4. Explain what is meant by the sandwich generation.

5. Explain the emotions experienced by dying people and their loved ones as described by Kubler-Ross.

**KIM WOODS** wk4 q2

Which one of the following is an example of an expectation that can cause bias in an experiment? Explain why you think that is so (See instructions below).

 

a)     Experimenter behaves inconsistently with participants

b)     Participant wants to look good in the eyes of the experimenter

c)     Experimenter is unaware of the hypothesis

d)     Participant reads the hypothesis in the informed consent form

e)     All of the above

 

Instructions: Make selection, provide a concept definition (text), and support your opinion on the selection with an example from research that illustrates the concept. Do so in a maximum of 250 words. Make use of the participation rubric, found in the Instructor Policy document, as a personal checklist. By answering this question and wrestling with answers given from others in class, we ought to achieve a level of UOPX Learning Objectives/competencies 4. 2 which can be related to 4.5 as well.

Psychology Week 4 Journal

How Does This Relate to Me?

Prior to beginning this journal entry, read “The Development of Expertise in Performance: The Role of Memory, Knowledge, Learning, and Practice” and “Transitions and the Development of Expertise,” as well as review all other required resources. It is important for you to have already completed your initial post in the “Learning Trends” discussion before you compose this journal entry.

Part 1: As you were reading this week, what vocabulary was used that was unfamiliar to you or might be to your peers? Identify three to five words from this week’s content and research each word in the context of learning and cognition. Explain, in your own words, what each word means and how it is used in the context of learning and cognition.

Part 2: Based on the week’s discourse and content, you will access the Ashford University Library and research one scholarly article pertaining to expertise that was published within the last 10 years. Provide a summary explanation of the findings on “expertise” in the context of your article. What implications should scholars consider based on this information? Support your explanation utilizing this week’s resources and your researched article.

Part 3: Consider the events from the past week of your life. How does expertise, or the perception of it, affect our behaviors, actions, and knowledge development? Describe one personal real-life example of an occurrence that supports the implications of actual expertise, or the perception of it, on our behaviors and actions toward others. As you share this information, consider and apply the professional standards found in “12.06 Anonymity of Sources”found in the AERA Code of Ethics (Links to an external site.) Links to an external site. .

Part 4: Review “Principle A: Professional Competence” in the AERA Code of Ethics (Links to an external site.) Links to an external site. . What implications should be considered in your scholarly writing and observations? How might you check for competence of the research in articles and research studies you read? Explain the public impression(s) and misconception(s) that can occur when secular articles or studies (e.g., Yahoo survey results, newspaper reports) are used instead of findings from peer-reviewed sources.

Each journal entry should be 400 to 700 words in length and should establish your understanding of the content, apply appropriate methods of ethical practices, and exhibit appropriate scaffolding of personal experience to the week’s content.

Making a Differential Diagnosis

Prior to beginning work on this assignment, please read Chapter 1: Differential Diagnosis Step by Step in DSM-5: Handbook of Differential Diagnosis and review the same case study you used to write your Weeks One and Two discussion forums and Week Three Assignment.  For this assignment, you will create a differential diagnosis for the patient in your chosen case. This assignment continues the work you started in the Weeks One and Two discussion forums and the Week Three assignment. Be sure to follow the instructions in Chapter 1: Differential Diagnosis Step by Step when creating your differential diagnosis. Your assignment must include the following: •Recommend a diagnosis based on the patient’s symptoms, presenting problems, and history. •Assess the validity of your diagnosis using a sociocultural perspective. •Compare at least one evidence-based and one non-evidence-based treatment option for the diagnosis. Research a minimum of two peer-reviewed sources to support your choices. •Propose and provide an explanation for a minimum of two historical perspectives and two theoretical orientations that are inappropriate alternates for the conceptualizations in this case.  The Making a Differential Diagnosis assignment •Must be three to five double-spaced pages in length (not including title and references pages) and formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.. •Must include a separate title page with the following: ◦Title of paper ◦Student’s name ◦Course name and number ◦Instructor’s name ◦Date submitted •Must use at least two peer-reviewed sources in addition to the course text. •Must document all sources in APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center. •Must include a separate references page that is formatted according to APA style as outlined in the Ashford Writing Center.