Growth vs Development
CTET almost always opens this topic by asking you to tell growth and development apart, so fix the contrast first. Growth refers to quantitative, physical change — increase in height, weight, body size, the number of teeth or words — things you can measure with a scale or a ruler. It is one aspect of development and it stops once the child reaches maturity. Development is the broader idea: progressive, qualitative change in a person's structure, skills, behaviour and abilities over the whole lifespan, from conception to death ('womb to tomb'). A child does not just get bigger; she becomes able to think, speak, reason and relate in new ways. The key links to remember: all growth is part of development, but development is far more than growth; growth is measurable and time-limited while development is qualitative and lifelong. CTET loves the one-liner that growth is quantitative and stoppable, development is qualitative and continuous.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Core distinctions & principles
| Growth | Quantitative change in size/weight/height — measurable, stops at maturity |
|---|---|
| Development | Qualitative change in skills/abilities — lifelong, womb to tomb |
| Cephalocaudal | Head-to-toe: development proceeds from head downward |
| Proximodistal | Centre-to-extremities: from the body axis outward to hands/fingers |
Shaping forces & domains
| Heredity (nature) | Inborn traits passed via genes — sets the potential |
|---|---|
| Environment (nurture) | Surroundings, experience, nutrition, culture — shapes the outcome |
| Socialization | Process of learning a society's norms, values and roles |
| Domains of development | Physical, Cognitive, Social, Emotional, Moral, Language |