Early specialization and intense participation on select teams, say child psychologists, may interfere with
normal identity development, increasing the risk that a child will develop what psychologists call a one - dimensional self - concept in which she sees herself solely as an athlete instead of sports being just a part of who she is.
Early specialization can thus interfere with
normal identity development, increasing the risk that a child will develop what psychologists call a one - dimensional self - concept in which they see themselves solely as an athlete instead of just a part of who they are.
Not exact matches
Remember, though, that frequent «NOs» from your toddler are a
normal part of
development and actually help him establish his own
identity.
Perhaps during
normal inflorescence
development, SMs poised to become bristles accumulate higher levels of BR, resulting in local increased cell division and expansion, loss of boundary
identity genes, and repression of the SM
identity program.
Perhaps at later stages of
normal spikelet
development, a similar localized action represses floral
identity genes in the lower floret.
Some degree of fear is rather
normal given the way humans approach risk, particularly with something like the risks from radiation, and particularly given inherent trust that comes from for - profit overlay onto the «common good» and (IMO) laying that fear exclusively at the feet of environmentalists, or simply labeling it as irrational, is more a product of ideologically - driven
identity - protective cognition and tribalism on the part of nuclear proponents than a useful ingredient for making progress on energy policy
development.