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Child Psychology

Lifelong Learning
6N2023
Award Name Level 6 Component Award (Level 6 NFQ)
NFQ Classification Minor
Awarding Body QQI
NFQ Level Level 6 NFQ
Award Name NFQ Classification Awarding Body NFQ Level
Level 6 Component Award (Level 6 NFQ) Minor QQI Level 6 NFQ
Course Provider:
Location:
Dublin 18
Attendance Options:
Part time, Online or Distance
Apply to:
Course provider
Number of credits:
NFQ Credit Value: 15 Credits

Duration

This QQI validated Child Psychology 6N2023 course is completed through Distance Learning Course and there are no lectures to attend.

Students can complete this course within 8 weeks which is ample time and can start it at any time of the year that is convenient. If students need to extend this period for any reason during or near the end of the course they can request an extension through the college.

Entry Requirements

Entry Requirements / Prerequisites:
Level 5 Award or equivalent in a relevant subject area (Childcare) and/or relevant practical experience (3 years minimum) – Please ask about our requirements surrounding Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) for entry.

Mature students (over 23 years) may be exempt from the above prerequisites.

English Language Requirement: Students entering programmes leading to awards at Level 6 are expected to be able to: fluently read, draft, prepare and understand complex information, including quantitative information, that is personally relevant and reflecting a broad knowledge base. For example, this might include text and other information relating to abstract theoretical ideas, concerns or procedures, such as local planning concerns in relation to broader spatial strategy, political issues in relation to particular agenda, budget plans/ specifications.

Learners undertaking this programme must have basic IT skills and access to the necessary equipment to enable them to undertake an online programme: computer, broadband, email, Microsoft, recording equipment necessary for some skills demonstration tasks, and where applicable any other specialised software/equipment.

Course Web Page

Further information

Students can start this course at any time of the year that is convenient.

Special Offer price: Only – €309.00 or
Easy Payments: Only €156 per month over 2 months with our unrivalled Easy Payment Plans. First payment is taken upon enrolment and second / final payment a month later.

Course fee includes all documentation, lecturing, assessments, learner registration and QQI certification fees. No other hidden accreditation or certification fees to pay!

Apply via our website (see "Application Weblink" below).

Course Description
The aim of this distance learning QQI Child Psychology Level 6 course is to provide the learner with the necessary theoretical knowledge relating to child psychology, as well as an understanding of how that theoretical knowledge is relevant in applied contexts as reflected, for example, in best educational practice being tied to the cognitive level of the child. Thus, until a requisite developmental level has been achieved, certain educational goals, such as basic mathematics, may not be obtainable.

Furthermore, the child’s social and emotional development shall also be explored. By the end of the course the learner will have a broad understanding of child psychology and how it forms a foundation for adult psychology and lifespan development. The course content will thus be applicable to any job role where children and their care is a focus, and where child development and growth is fostered with an aim towards wider societal goals.

Learner Profile:
Although interest in psychology is common, it is envisioned that the following learner profiles will form the bulk of the course:
•Childcare workers and Crèche personnel who wish to gain a greater understanding of child psychology to inform their work and thus enable best practice.
•Individuals interested in psychology broadly, and child psychology in particular.
•Parents, or prospective parents, who wish to gain a greater understanding of their child’s development, and ways to foster optimal cognitive and socio-emotional growth.
•Other learners working towards a major qualification of which child psychology is a component.

Topics Covered:
Unit 1: Child and Developmental Psychology
• Provides a context for further elaboration in later units and introduces the main themes of development such as change and continuity, nature and nurture, and the situation of the child in a wider ecology. E.g.,
• What is Child and Developmental Psychology?
• Influences in development and the ecology of development (e.g., Biopsychosocial interaction; Bronfenbrenner)
• Research Designs and Methods (e.g., cohort designs)
• Ethical issues in child research.

Unit 2: Early Socialisation
• Discussion of the major milestones in social and emotional development and their relation to parental and familial interactions. (E.g., social smiling; stranger anxiety etc.)
• Understand the nature and importance of attachment via the theoretical perspectives of John Bowlby and other researchers, as well as critical perspectives on maternal deprivation in light of more recent research on children and their resilience.
• Appreciate the Strange Situation as a measure of attachment in infancy.
• How important, therefore, is early experience for later life and adult relationships? Sexist language aside, is the child father to the man, as Freud believed?
• What role does play and positive emotional interaction have in childhood? Should we take play seriously?
• The biological reminder: the role of genes and biology.

Unit 3: Cognitive Development
• Piaget’s theory of cognitive development.
• Consider and contrast with other approaches to development, such as Vygotsky and Bruner.
• What are the educational implications for these various theories? Do they conflict or complement one another? What lessons should we derive from the research to date for best practice in child-related work contexts?
• Extended from the previous, critically examine the research and theories on language acquisition. Are there advantages and disadvantages for cognitive development for bilingualism.
• The biological reminder: the role of genes and biology.

Unit 4: Social Development
• Psychodynamic theory (e.g., structure of the personality; psychosexual stages).
• Learning theory (e.g., classical and operant conditioning; the case of Little Albert; observational learning – Bobo Doll experiment).
• The cognitive-developmental approach (e.g., how the child’s developing thought processes impacts their social and emotional development, such as via perspective taking).
• The biological reminder: the role of genes and biology.

Unit 5: Social Behaviour
• Moral development (psychodynamic, social-learning and cognitive-developmental approaches). Are there gender differences in moral reasoning?
• Gender development: Linking with above, the unit will continue with a discussion of gender development as distinct from biological sex. Thus we shall consider: gender identity; stereotypes; and sex differences in behaviour. What factors influence gender role development? What theories and evidence enter in to this debate most strongly? How do these issues link with wider societal issues, such as adoption laws and homophobia?
• Self and Others: self-concept and esteem; social transitions and self; theory of mind. A focus on autism as a developmental disorder which may exemplify certain theoretical perspectives (e.g., theory of mind) and yet which is treated or managed from other perspectives, such as applied behavioural analysis (ABA). Is there a theoretical conflict here (cognitive versus behavioural), or a deep unity at the level of the brain? Autism in an Irish context.
• The biological reminder: the role of genes and biology.

Unit 6: Adolescence and the Road to Adulthood
• Is adolescence a time of storm? – physical and psychological changes; traditional and sociological views.
• What is the nature of adolescent identity formation? (e.g., Erikson; Marcia)
• How do parents influence identity formation via parental style?
• Adolescent experience I: cognitive growth and existential awareness.
• Adolescent experience II: peer relationships and their function.
• The road to adulthood and beyond: Erikson’s psychosocial development; Levinson etc. Young, Middle, and Late Adulthood. From this content, which goes beyond childhood and adolescence briefly, the learner will be able to critically evaluate and reflect on their own attitudes, beliefs and values regarding best practice in light of the theory covered in past units, as well as to reflect on how their own childhood and life-stage is illumined by the lifespan theories. By seeing themselves in a wisdom role perhaps the learner may see how such matters return full circle to the child, thus leaving them with a new sense of responsibility armed with knowledge.
• The biological reminder updated: nature and nurture entwine.

This distance learning, QQI accredited course means that Students can study flexibly at home, or at any convenient place and time, and can gain an Internationally Recognised Qualification. Students receive a comprehensive Course Manual, Assignments, Efficient Studyguide, and unlimited one-to-one Tutor Support for the course duration.

Assessment:
Assignment 40%
Project 60%

Assignment:
• There will be two assignments required. Both assignments shall be theoretical and will relate to a topic from the content covered e.g. Discuss Autism and It’s Management. The two assignments carry equal weighting at 20% each.

Project:
• The project will enable learners who may work in relevant contexts to gain skills in case formulation and working with multidisciplinary teams by simulating a needs assessment for a child. Other learners with different backgrounds will still benefit from the simulation.

The Project will be written up in the form of a needs assessment report. The brief will set out a scenario where the learner is part of a group meeting with a social worker in order to help assess the needs of a particular child. The history of the child will be presented in the brief, and key features mentioned from which the learner will devise a needs assessment based on evidence and relevant theory from the indicative content covered. This project carries 60% of the total marks.

6N2023 Child Psychology

Accreditation
Following successful completion you will receive a QQI Level 6 component Certificate in Child Psychology (6N2023).

QQI (Quality & Qualifications Ireland) is the national awarding body for further education and training in Ireland. The Open College is registered with QQI to offer programmes leading to QQI awards in the National Framework of Qualifications in Ireland.

The Learning Centre,
Leopardstown,
Dublin 18.
Tel: 01 206 1828
Email: info@theopencollege.com

Course Provider:
Location:
Dublin 18
Attendance Options:
Part time, Online or Distance
Apply to:
Course provider
Number of credits:
NFQ Credit Value: 15 Credits