Order Description
Cultural Differences in Caring for Infants
The major assumptions of Piaget’s theory of cognitive development are that infants are active agents in constructing knowledge and that the interaction of experience and biology leads to growth and development. The cultural-contextual view agrees with these assumptions but adds two more: (1) other people make active contributions to infant development, and (2) cultural practices, which reflect the dominant beliefs and values of a culture, shape infant interaction with others and, ultimately, shape cognitive development. Variations in sleeping and feeding behaviors reflect the role of infants in a culture. Beliefs about babies in different cultures determine how they are treated, who interacts with them, and, consequently, how babies experience their world.
Choose a culture other than your own, and fill in the chart with details contrasting how the 2 cultures care for infants. Use at least 2 resources, cited using APA style, to support your assertions about the different culture’s ways of caring for infants.
Fill the below chart out:
My own culture (give it a name):
A different culture:
Sleeping
Feeding
Who are primary caretakers
Games and toys
Role of father
The top of the chart is states my own culture and then the other side is A different culture.
With both culture you are filling in the blanks for Sleeping:
Feeding:
Who is the primary caretakers:
Games and toys:
Role of Father: