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Social and Behavioral Socialization Outcomes (Antisocial Behavior:…
Social and Behavioral Socialization Outcomes
Self-regulation: the ability to regulate or control one's impulses, behavior, and emotions until an appropriate time, place or object is available for expression.
Antisocial Behavior: Aggression
Biological Theories
Evolution
Genetics
Neuroscience
Social Cognitive Theories
Learning Theory
Information Processing: the way an individual attends to. perceives, interprets, remembers, and acts on events or situations.
Sociocultural Theories
Peers
Community
Ecological Theories
Prosocial Behavior: Altruism
Biological Theories
Social Cognitive Theories
Learning Theory
Instruction
Learning by Doing
Cognitive Developmental Theories
Perspective-taking
Moral Reasoning
Social Interactional Theories
Communication Style
Parenting Style
Morals and Morality
Moral Development
Piaget's Theory
heteronomous morality: Piaget's stage of moral development in which children think of rules as moral absolutes that cannot be changed.
autonomous morality: Piaget's stage of moral development in which children realize that rules are arbitrary agreements that can be changes by those who have to follow them.
Kohlberg's Theory
Preconventional level: Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning in which the individual considers and weighs the personal consequences of the behavior.
Conventional level:Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning in which the individual can look beyond personal consequences and consider others' perspectives
postconventional level: Kohlberg's stages of moral reasoning in which the individual considers and weighs the values behind various consequences from various points of view
Development of Gender Roles
Sex typing: classification into gender roles based on biological sex
Theory of Gender-Role Development
Psychoanalytic Theory: how one comes to feel like a male or female.
Social Cognitive Theory: how one comes to behave as a male or female.
Cognitive Development Theory: how one comes to reason about oneself as a male or female.
Gender Schema Theory: how one come to process information about oneself as a male or female by perceiving and interpreting gender-linked information.