What Is Child Psychology And Why Is It Important?

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What Is Child Psychology And Why Is It Important?

Getting to know your child as they develop can be one of the most rewarding parts of being a parent. Learning how your child views the world, teaching them new skills, and guiding them as they process new feelings and big changes is all part of being a parent. But it’s not easy.

As your child develops, they go through progressive developmental stages, from birth into adulthood. Environmental, genetic, and cultural factors can all affect a child’s development, and how quickly they progress from one stage to the next.

It’s difficult for children to explain what they’re going through, much less to analyze their feelings. That’s where child psychology can help give you highly important and valuable information on your child’s mental, physical, cognitive, and emotional health as they grow.

What Is Child Psychology?

Child psychology is the study of subconscious and conscious childhood development. Child psychologists observe how a child interacts with their parents, themselves, and the world, to understand their mental development.

Why Is It Important?

Everyone wants their child to have healthy development, but it’s not always clear if a child’s behavior is a symptom of a normal stage in development or a sign of an abnormality. Child psychologists can help you understand the difference. Understanding the normal and abnormal psychological patterns of a child can help parents understand how to best communicate and connect with their child, teach their child coping mechanisms for managing emotions, and help their child progress and thrive in each new developmental stage.

Child psychologists can also identify abnormal behaviors early, help detect the root of common behavioral issues such as learning issues, hyperactivity, or anxiety, and help children work through early childhood trauma. They can also help to prevent, evaluate, and diagnose mental health and learning problems, developmental delays or conditions such as autism.

Child psychology studies the interaction of a few main areas of development:

Physical Development

Physical development in children is typically a predictable sequence of events. Your child holds their head up, rolls over, crawls, walks, and runs, in that order. Your Child Psychologist can aid your family medicine provider in observing your child’s physical development, and identify any abnormalities that indicate developmental irregularities.

Child Psychologists will observe your child’s progression toward the milestones of development to ensure that your child is physically developing normally. Major delays in physical development may reveal other underlying issues that can then be addressed early on.

Cognitive Development

The medical understanding of childhood cognitive development has greatly changed over the recent years. We now know that even newborn babies are aware of their environment and are interested in it, even before they have the language to express that.

Cognitive development refers to the intellectual learning and thought processes of a child. It includes the observation and understanding of the world around them, language learning, memory, decision-making, problem-solving, how the child uses their imagination, and how the child uses basic reasoning. All of these factors are influenced by a child’s genetics and environment.

Social-Emotional Development

Emotional and social development are deeply intertwined. Emotional development refers to how the child feels, understands, and expresses their emotions. It is demonstrated in very young children through the expression of basic emotions like fear, joy, anger, and sadness. As the child develops, more complex emotions such as confidence, hope, guilt, and pride emerge.

Emotional development also includes a child’s ability to feel and understand the emotions of other people through empathy. Learning to regulate and express emotions appropriately is difficult for many children. Helping children understand their emotions early can have a powerful impact on current and future emotional development. A Child Psychologist can help your child understand and express their emotions in a healthy, positive way.

Social development is about how the child develops the values, awareness, and social skills necessary to relate to the people around them; their parents, peers, authority figures, and animals. Trust, friendship, conflict management, and respect for authority are examples of social development.

Social development is strongly related to emotional development. The way a child feels, understands, and expresses their feelings has a direct impact on how they interact with other people. A child’s early relationships can have a huge impact on their development of age-appropriate social skills.

Child Psychology At WWMG

Child Psychology is an important branch of family health. It gives parents the resources to help their children advance through the stages of development and gives physicians a deeper look into the mental health and possible challenges a child might face in regards to learning or social differences, or developmental delays.

If you’re concerned about your child’s mental health and development, contact one of our Primary Care Clinics to schedule an appointment today. Our caring providers will evaluate your child and discuss appropriate treatment options, including referral to one of our many Psychologists if needed.