PSY 430-P (7406)
Psychology of Infancy, Fall 2021
Tu & Th 11:20AM - 12:35PM
Flipse Room 402 or virtually via Zoom
Department of Psychology, University of Miami
Objective: Review contemporary theory, research, and methods relevant to the scientific study of infant development. Topics include physiological, cortical, motor, perceptual, cognitive, emotional, and social development in infancy. Human and other animal models will be considered. The course focuses on both normative and atypical (e.g., autism) development because an understanding of one enriches an understanding of the other. Readings and participation will be supplemented by a project involving syntheses of the research literature.
Required weekly readings: The class is a seminar with students reading and discussing key journal articles and reviews, which are linked to this syllabus. Readings are chosen to provide exposure to the theory, methods, and findings of current developmental research. One reading will be assigned for each class. Reading assignments marked "Extra" are suggested but not required.
Format. The instructor will introduce key concepts, issues, and lines of research. Students are expected to take an active role in discussing and developing topics under consideration. Everyone is expected to complete all assigned readings and actively contribute to discussion. In this class I welcome all students regardless of race, ethnicity, color, national origin, religion, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, age, disability, or veteran status.
Participation. Participation refers to your level of engagement in class (25 points).
Participation includes submission of at least 10 substantive questions/comments /responses to the Blackboard Discussion Board throughout the semester. Participation also includes attendance, having done the required reading, asking pertinent questions, offering informed responses to questions, and constructive debate.
Use of electronic devices during class time for anything except class work is prohibited.
Attendance. Attendance is mandatory. Based on their needs and concerns, students may opt to attend virtually via zoom or in person.
Coronavirus (COVID-19): Everyone—including faculty, staff, and students—is required to wear face coverings on campus. Students are required to do this at all times in the classroom and when physical distancing cannot be guaranteed. Faculty have the right to restrict a student from participating in class if the student does not follow
University COVID-19 policies. COVID-19 vaccination reduces your risk and your risk to those around you. This is a
manuscript on COVID-19 risk in preschool classrooms that may be relevant.
Office Hours. Office hours (listed above) or a meeting scheduled after class by email are an ideal setting for me to assist you with your final paper, exam(s), discussion facilitation, or class participation.
Main Project. There are two main project choices: textbook and/or handbook scientific communication (65 points). They are designed to teach critical reading, analysis, and scientific communication. We will devote class time and specific class meetings to the project.
Textbook scientific communication
This project will be the development of text suitable for a revision of
Infant Development: A Topical Approach (2nd Ed), which is
on reserve at the library. You will choose sections of one of six chapters (Cognition, Communication, Emotion, Parenting, Family, and Individual Differences). The choice of chapters and the entire assignment will be a collaborative exercise. This will yield an annotated bibliography which I hope will support my revision of the textbook. I intend to acknowledge all individuals who submit an annotated bibliography in the textbook. Here are the steps:
1. Introduction. I will provide you with a section of the chapter and/or the entire chapter as a Word document. That section may contain citations of additional research articles--with hyperlinks to the source articles--and summaries of those articles. I will provide access to the reference section as a google doc.
2. Citations. Develop a list of approximately 30 agreed upon citations of empirical articles that update the citations found in the text and cover roughly the same material as the previous citations and expand upon them. When you submit, I will indicate which articles should be replaced by new articles that I will work with you to identify.
3. Summaries. Write a 5 sentence relatively simple summary of each article that identifies the age of the infants and describes the study methods (what was done) in two sentences, the primary findings of the article in two sentences, and a one sentence take-home message in one sentence. This is an exercise in digesting and disseminating results.
4. Using your summaries rewrite your summaries as a draft of textbook content. This content should be accurate and mesh with surrounding text and the points being made there. It will typically be 2-3 sentences in length.
5. Rewrite other summaries that I will provide you with as a draft of textbook content. This content should be accurate and mesh with surrounding text and the points being made there. It will typically be 2-3 sentences in length.
6. In all these steps, your work is a part of a collaborative process. Attend to how the part of the document you are working on is formatted and has been edited. Maintain that formatting when you do your work.
Handbook scientific communication. Summarize five chapters in
The Cambridge Handbook of Infant Development (Eds. Lockman & Tamis-LeMonda) available through the
library and
bookstore. The chapters are contained in these Handbook sections: Foundations, Perceptual Development, Cognitive Development, Action, Language, or Emotional and Social Development. Summaries will be 3 single-spaced pages and will follow the headings and subheadings of the target chapter. In other words, include the headings and subheadings of the target chapter—retitling them in your own words if possible—in your summary so that your summary has the same structure as the target chapter.
Observation project. Students will spend at least two hours observing an infant or infants (0-3 years of age) in 1-2 sessions (2 is ideal) and write up their observations. The goal of the write-ups is to be as descriptive as possible. The write-ups will be 1-2 pages. A convenient option for conducting these observations is the Linda Ray Intervention Center
https://www.fdlrs-um.miami.edu/, an early intervention, center-based provider. Hours of operation are 8:30a.m to 2:15 p.m. To conduct observations at LRIC, which is a few blocks east of medical campus, you will need to coordinate with the onsite Executive Director, Ms. Isabel Chica. You may also make other arrangements for your observation (a family member or friend who has an infant, for example).
In either event, describe your plan for your observation project in 1-2 sentences and I will approve your plan or suggest changes.
Observation project write-up instructions. The first paragraph should explain what you decided to observe. If there is more than one infant in the setting where you’ll be (e.g., a preschool classroom), decide which infants you will be observing. Use an iPhone or similar to make 30 second or 60 second blocks separated by an audible tone. Observe for one block and then write down what you observed for one block of time. (Here is a more formal description of this method, time sampling,
https://dictionary.apa.org/time-sampling, for background.) Do at least 30 minutes of observation structured in this way. This will be several pages of observations. These observations could be on different days or could be focused on different infants. You should have 2-4 paragraphs describing the days and times you observed, what you focused on, and what you saw. In addition, include a figure (it could be a little screenshot or a table), showing the actual observations that you made. Finish with a paragraph about what you learned doing the observations. The final project should 1-2 pages.
Project assignments. Written assignments must be single spaced with an additional space between paragraphs (1†margins, 12 point font).
Only assignments turned in on time will be graded. Most assignments will be submitted on
Blackboard, typically using SafeAssign as an originality check.
Honor Code. Exams and final papers are governed by the honor code. They will be submitted through
BlackBoard SafeAssign. They are governed by the Honor code. Please review the graduate honor code
here.