An example of quantitative change in development is a child growing taller over time. This change is easily measurable and can be quantified by tracking the child's height at different ages.
multidirectional -apex
Quantitative physiological change refers to measurable alterations in the body's functions or processes, usually recorded in numerical values. This can include changes in heart rate, blood pressure, hormonal levels, or other physiological parameters that can be quantified and analyzed. These changes are often assessed to monitor health status, track progress, or evaluate the impact of interventions.
A Likert scale is considered a quantitative measurement tool because it assigns numerical values to responses and allows for numerical analysis of data.
Developmental Psychology is: 1. Age-related quantitative and qualitative change. 2. A lifelong process. 3. Behavioral reorganizations. 4. Orderly. 5. Cumulative. 6. Directional. 7. Development is both Normative and Individual: i.e. each person develops on generally the same patterns and shows certain general changes and reorganizations in behaviour which all people share as they develop/grow. However, there are individual differences in personality traits according to hereditary traits and experiences. 8. Development is an interplay of nature and nurture. 9. Development is also an interplay of early experiences and current experiences. 10. There are different phases of development from conception to birth to death. 11. There are also different aspects of development and all the aspects are inter-related with each other.
Quantitative
a change in development that reflects a major shift
An example of a quantitative change in a science lab could be measuring the increase in temperature of a reaction as it progresses over time using a thermometer. This change can be quantified with numerical values to track how the temperature changes.
Quantitative development is what we call ''growth development'' wherein this is the changes of individual as he/she progresses in chronological ways. ---increases in size or weight... Cristel Caisio
No it's quantitative because it has to do with numbers and is an exact calculation. Qualitative would be, for example, change in color
Some theories that focus on qualitative change rather than quantitative change include Piaget's theory of cognitive development, Vygotsky's sociocultural theory, and Erikson's psychosocial development theory. These theories emphasize how individuals go through specific stages or phases where they exhibit distinct qualitative changes in their thinking, behavior, and understanding of the world.
An example of quantitative data would be the number of people born in 1 hour.
Numbers. Quantitative observance? This car travels at # miles per hour.
A qualitative change is a transformation of one thing to a different kind of thing. Making flour out of grain is a qualitative change. A quantitative change is a change in the amount of something. Changing 5 pounds of grain to 2 pounds of grain is quantitative.
Quantitative data deals with numbers. It is data that can be measured. An example of this is: 51% of the world's population is female.
temperature
An example of a quantitative observation is measuring the temperature of a substance using a thermometer and finding it to be 25 degrees Celsius.
The word "quantitative" is from the root word quantity. So, a quantitative observation is one that can be quantified or counted. Any time you count or physically measure something, it is a quantitative observation. Since it is your homework you should come up with your own examples :)