Development of Socio-Emotional Processing in Infancy and Early Childhood
Emma Jayne Jackson
Development of Socio-Emotional Processing in Infancy and Early Childhood

Welcome to the course!


In this course, we will learn about the development of socio-emotional processing, as well as methods and issues surrounding the research in this field, focusing primarily on the first year of life and toddlerhood. While ‘socio-emotional processing’ encompasses a range of skills, we will be focusing on face and vocalisation processing given their fundamental and essential nature—after all, how could we ever understand the inner lives of others without first understanding the channels of communication through which emotions are conveyed? We will learn about why these skills are so important, and how differences in these skills affect more complex processes. The research we examine will be both behavioural and physiological in nature, and these different methodologies will be a focus in and of themselves. Our primary focus will be how these skills emerge and what exactly drives them, as well as questions remaining in the field. Below is given a summary of each class, along with reading lists. Do not feel compelled to read all items on these in full—more important items are starred (*).

Lecturer: Emma Jayne Jackson, B.A., M.Res.

Class Format

The class will be in the format of four 3-hour zoom workshops—each of these will include an interactive component, so please prepare accordingly, and join the class on a device with a microphone if possible. This will typically involve group discussions on Zoom. We will take short comfort breaks in these sessions.

Zoom Links: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85819348192

Assessment

Submit your essay here:

The essay format and how to write the most effective essay possible will be discussed in-depth in the final session. The course is pass/fail.

  • The essay title is ‘Critically discuss factors influencing and constraining development of socio-emotional processing, including processing of emotional expressions’. This is an intentionally broad question, as it gives some scope in approach for answering.
  • The essay is a minimum of 1200 words and a maximum of 1500 words. Essays outside of this will not be accepted, so please double-check!
  • The essay should be in a word document format—essays in other formats are difficult to mark, and so won’t be accepted.
  • The essay deadline is xxxxx. Please get the essay ready to submit with plenty of time. If you need an extension, please email me at ejj515@york.ac.uk ahead of the deadline. Late essays without an extension requested won’t be accepted.

Please don’t hesitate to send me any questions about the essay guidelines or format!

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