Biological predisposition is a presumed hereditary readiness, or preparedness, for humans to learn certain skills, or to behave in a certain way.
EXAMPLE
When they're born, babies have certain behaviors that are programmed into them; they do these things innately, without any learning. If you brush babies' lips, then they'll start to suck. When you touch their hands or their feet, they start to grasp or move their fingers.These behaviors are programmed into people to help them survive in certain ways. The sucking obviously helps the babies to get food if they want milk, and the grasping is supposedly a leftover behavior from when we were primates, and we had to grasp trees.
There are mental or cognitive abilities that are also pre-programmed, or that humans have a biological predisposition to display.
EXAMPLE
This occurs with language, which we'll cover more in-depth when we discuss linguistics. According to Noam Chomsky, language is a pre-organized, or predisposed, ability of people. He says that each person has a language acquisition device built into the brain, which allows language to be learned more easily and efficiently. Because we are beings that must use language, we need to have something in our brains to help us do that.There are a lot of developmental theories that are also built on this idea of biological predisposition. Any theory that has developmental steps involved, such as Erikson's or Piaget's theories, is essentially saying that humans have some biological basis for progressing that way.
These next two concepts complement each other. The first is maturation or maturity, which is the developmental process of growth, both mentally and physically.
In other words, this is a developmental sequence occurring throughout life. Humans start at a certain stage, then slowly begin to develop. As children, we go from crawling, to walking, and finally to running and being able to do more complex physical abilities.
With this physical development, we have corresponding mental or psychological development, as the theories of Erikson and Piaget stated. These two types of development influence each other in certain ways.
EXAMPLE
When young children are developing motor skills, such as the ability to hold and manipulate objects with their hands, there's also a similar cognitive development occurring. In addition to gaining the ability to move those objects, children are growing and becoming more cognitively complex to understand that behavior.In other words, the way people think influences the way that they are able to manipulate things because people can think of new and different ways to use those objects. In turn, the ability to manipulate those things allows for more complex ideas and thought.
Going along with the idea of maturation, readiness is when a person has reached an advanced or sufficient enough level to allow for the acquisition of a certain skill. So, once people get to a certain stage of maturation, they're able to acquire a particular mental or physical ability.
EXAMPLE
One way this occurs in children is with toilet training. As you know, when children are born, or even reach one to two years of age, they're not sufficiently ready to toilet train. It takes some time and development of their cognitive and physical abilities to get to that point.The important thing to remember about readiness is that if you try to learn something too early--if you don't have the sufficient abilities to acquire that certain skill--then you're likely to fail.
This idea is really helpful in a lot of learning theories as well because we need to know when children are prepared enough to understand or learn something new, especially with abstract concepts that they might not be able to grasp at a younger age. We like to know at what developmental level children can acquire certain knowledge, abilities, or skills.
Source: Adapted from Sophia tutorial by Erick Taggart.