Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
LEARNERS AND
LEARNING PRINCIPLES
(EDUC 101)
Module I
2
Lesson 4
In this lesson, we shall learn what developmental task means and how
important it is in education. Robert L. Havighhurst (1953) stated: “a
development task is a task which arise at or about a certain period in the life
of the individual, successful achievement of which leads to his happiness and
to success with later tasks, while failure leads to unhappiness and difficulty
with later task. It implies that it is a task which an individual has to and would
like to perform in a specific period in life. Havighurst further writes, “a
developmental-task is the midway between an individual need and a social
demand. It assumes an active learner interacting with an active social
environment”. Taking from an educational and scientific perspective, the
concept of developmental task is in a lot of ways helpful in education. Its
implication is that children and/or young people are active learners who
desire to learn themselves. Physical maturation process together with socially
influenced development must be considerations in applying the theory in
education. The assertion of Havighurst agrees with behavioural principles that
social and educational arrangements do obstruct or reinforce the learning
process.
Developmental tasks arise from three different sources (Havighurst,
1948, 1953). First, some are mainly based on physical maturation (e.g.,
learning to walk). Another source of developmental tasks relates to
sociostructural and cultural forces. Such influences are based on, for instance,
laws (e.g., minimum age for marriage) and culturally shared expectations of
development e.g., age norms (Neugarten, Moore, and Lowe, 1965),
determining the age range in which specific developmental tasks have to be
mastered. The third source of developmental tasks involves personal values
and aspirations. These personal factors result from the interaction between
ontogenetic and environmental factors, and play an active role in the
emergence of specific developmental tasks (e.g., choosing a certain
occupational pathway).
EDUC 101 – The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
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EDUC 101 – The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles
4
THINK!
EDUC 101 – The Child and Adolescent Learners and Learning Principles