Childhood development means the physical, psychological, and emotional change of a child from birth (or pregnancy) to adolescence. In the meantime, children depend on family support. Only at the beginning of puberty will children begin to acquire autonomy. It is the process of forming your own identity and making your own decision. In the meantime, parents have a big influence on the mental and physical development of the child. They are the most useful resources.
Antisocial behavior can be divided into two parts. The existence of behavior of antisocial behavior (ie anger, attack or rebellion) and the lack of behavior of social behavior (ie communication, affirmation or cooperation). Most children show some antisocial behavior during development and different children show various degrees of social and antisocial behavior. Some children show high levels of anti-social behavior and social behavior, such as popular but rebellious children. However, some behaviors, such as recurrent and thoughtful children, may indicate both behaviors at a low level. High levels of antisocial behavior are considered clinical illnesses. Young children may show hostility to authority and are diagnosed as opposing provocative symptoms. Children older than the age may be diagnosed with lying, stealing, acting violently or behavior disorder
Various diagnostic devices are developed to identify children's antisocial behavior based on evidence. The seizure, frequency and severity of antisocial behavior such as theft, lying, cheating, despair, refusal of fellowship, poor academic achievement, negative attitude, aggressive behavior, etc. are used to determine appropriate interventions and treatments You can get to. Teaching school-based courses, conflict resolution, emotional literacy skills, and anger management skills has proven to hinder the development of anti-social behavior of low-risk students. Students who may be at high risk due to family or environmental problems will benefit from more personalized preventive efforts such as counseling, academic support, social skills training, behavioral contracts.