P.I.E.S and Life Stages
- Created by: Proctor_Leah200
- Created on: 17-11-17 12:23
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- P.I.E.S and Life Stages
- Infancy (0-2)
- Gross motor skills
- Being able to move/control the larger limbs of the body like your legs
- Crawling
- Walking
- Running
- Crawling
- Being able to move/control the larger limbs of the body like your legs
- Fine motor skills
- Being able to move/control smaller limbs of the body like your fingers
- Holding a spoon
- Tying a shoelace
- Writing
- Holding a spoon
- Being able to move/control smaller limbs of the body like your fingers
- Language Development
- The process children go through when learning to communicate with others
- Egocentric
- To see the world only from your viewpoint/perspective
- Bond
- To form and attachment with a parent or carer
- Gross motor skills
- Early Childhood (3-8)
- Social Play
- The stage where children play together, sharing their toys.
- Role Models
- Someone who people copy because they admire the person's behaviour
- Social Play
- Adolescence (9-18)
- Abstract Thinking
- The ability to think about something that might not exist
- Peer Group
- The social group a person belongs to with influences behaviour
- Oestrogen
- A female hormone that controls the development of sexual characteristics and stimulates change in the reproductive system
- Testosterone
- A male hormone that controls the development of the male sexual characteristics
- Abstract Thinking
- Early Adulthood (19-45)
- Physical Peak
- When someone is physically at their fittest
- Menopause
- The natural permanent stopping of menstruation (periods) usually between the ages of 45-55
- Physical Peak
- Middle Adulthood
- Mid-Life Crisis
- A dramatic period of self-doubt caused by the passing of youth.
- Mid-Life Crisis
- Late Adulthood (65+)
- Dementia
- An illness that affect the brain and memory, which gradually makes you loose that ability to think for yourself
- Skin Elasticity
- Where the skin gets so stretched that it doesn't return to it's natural form, causing wrinkles.
- Dementia
- Infancy (0-2)
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