Child Psychology: A Contemporary ViewpointA topically organized, scientific, research-based introduction to child development, Child Psychology presents a variety of theoretical viewpoints to provide students with a well balanced view of a child's developmental process. The most current studies and research available provide students with an understanding of the principal topics of child psychology as well as an up-to-date review of recent trends in socially relevant problem areas. In Child Psychology, authors Ross D. Parke and Virginia Otis Locke have incorporated extensive updates, new coverage in many hot areas and new pedagogy throughout. |
Contents
What Is Child Development? | 1 |
Behavioral Perspectives Organismic Perspective Psychodynamic | 16 |
The Correlational Strategy The Experimental Strategy Case | 34 |
Copyright | |
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ability activity adolescence adults allele anorexia nervosa approach attachment babies behavior biological birth brain changes CHAPTER characteristics chil Child Development child psychology chromosome classical conditioning cognitive development Developmental Psychology disorders early effects emotional environment environmental example experience experimental factors fear Figure function genes genetic girls growth human imitation important increase individual infants intellectual intelligence tests interaction involved Journal language acquisition language development later learning longitudinal maternal mature memory menarche ment mental mental retardation months mothers motor neonatal newborn normal objects occur ovum parents patterns peers percent performance period phenylketonuria Piaget play pregnancy prenatal prenatal development preschool Press problems reactions relationship Research in Child response role schizophrenia sentences situation skills smiling social Society for Research speech stage stimulation strategies syndrome task teratogens theory tion twins understanding visual weight Wiley words X chromosome York young children zygote