Educational Psychology

(Chris Devlin) #1

  1. Student development


Almost as soon as this crisis is resolved, however, a new one develops over the issue of autonomy and shame.
The child (who is now a toddler) may now trust his or her caregiver (mother), but the very trust contributes to a
desire to assert autonomy by taking care of basic personal needs, such as feeding, toileting, or dressing. Given the
child’s lack of experience in these activities, however, self-care is risky at first—the toddler may feed (or toilet or
dress) clumsily and ineffectively. The child’s caregiver, for her part, risks overprotecting the child and criticizing his
early efforts unnecessarily and thus causing the child to feel shame for even trying. Hopefully, as with the earlier
crisis of trust, the new crisis gets resolved in favor of autonomy through the combined efforts of the child to exercise
autonomy and of the caregiver to support the child’s efforts.


Eventually, about the time a child is of preschool age, the autonomy exercised during the previous period
becomes more elaborate, extended, and focused on objects and people other than the child and basic physical
needs. The child at a day care center may now undertake, for example, to build the “biggest city in the world” out of
all available unit blocks—even if other children want some of the blocks for themselves. The child’s projects and
desires create a new crisis of initiative and guilt, because the child soon realizes that acting on impulses or
desires can sometimes have negative effects on others—more blocks for the child may mean fewer for someone else.
As with the crisis over autonomy, caregivers have to support the child’s initiatives where possible, but also not make
the child feel guilty just for desiring to have or to do something that affects others' welfare. By limiting behavior
where necessary but not limiting internal feelings, the child can develop a lasting ability to take initiative. Expressed
in Erikson’s terms, the crisis is then resolved in favor of initiative.


Even though only the last of these three crises overlaps with the school years, all three relate to issues faced by
students of any age, and even by their teachers. A child or youth who is fundamentally mistrustful, for example, has
a serious problem in coping with school life. If you are a student, it is essential for your long-term survival to believe
that teachers and school officials have your best interests at heart, and that they are not imposing assignments or
making rules, for example, “just for the heck of it.” Even though students are not infants any more, teachers
function like Erikson’s caregiving parents in that they need to prove worthy of students’ trust through their initial
flexibility and attentiveness.


Parallels from the classroom also exist for the crises of autonomy and of initiative. To learn effectively, students
need to make choices and undertake academic initiatives at least some of the time, even though not every choice or
initiative may be practical or desirable. Teachers, for their part, need to make true choices and initiatives possible,
and refrain from criticizing, even accidentally, a choice or intention behind an initiative even if the teacher privately
believes that it is “bound to fail”. Support for choices and initiative should be focused on providing resources and on
guiding the student’s efforts toward more likely success. In these ways teachers function like parents of toddlers
and preschoolers in Erikson’s theory of development, regardless of the age of their students.


The crisis of childhood: industry and inferiority


Once into elementary school, the child is faced for the first time with becoming competent and worthy in the
eyes of the world at large, or more precisely in the eyes of classmates and teachers. To achieve their esteem, he or
she must develop skills that require effort that is sustained and somewhat focused. The challenge creates the crisis
of industry and inferiority. To be respected by teachers, for example, the child must learn to read and to behave
like a “true student”. To be respected by peers, he or she must learn to cooperate and to be friendly, among other


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