How Children DevelopIn its first edition, this highly anticipated textbook for the topically-organized child development course provided a fresh, non-encyclopedic approach, offering the latest, straight-from-the-research understanding of child development without overwhelming the student with inessential detail. The new edition brings those hallmark features forward, again providing a thoroughly contemporary, streamlined introduction to the study of child development that emphasizes fundamental principles, enduring themes, and important recent studies. Student-friendly pedagogy, a new chapter on gender, and an enhanced media and supplements package further enrich this accessible, engaging, and informative text. |
Contents
An Introduction to Child Development | 2 |
Ways Is It Discontinuous? | 13 |
Prenatal Development and the Newborn Period | 40 |
Pent Marie Developmental Processes | 47 |
Fetal Experience | 55 |
The Newborn Infant | 70 |
Biology and Behavior | 82 |
Brain Development | 102 |
Individual Differences in Emotion and Its Regulation | 391 |
Culture and Childrens Emotional Development | 402 |
Chapter Summary | 410 |
Attachment to Others and Development of Self | 412 |
The Family | 452 |
13 | 458 |
Homelessness | 467 |
Peer Relationships | 492 |
Chapter Summary | 124 |
Theories of Cognitive Development | 126 |
Piagets Theory | 130 |
5 | 132 |
Educational Applications of InformationProcessing Theories | 153 |
View of Childrens Nature | 161 |
Seeing Thinking and Doing in Infancy | 168 |
Review | 184 |
Learning | 194 |
Chapter Summary | 208 |
Development of Language and Symbol | 210 |
7 | 218 |
Chapter Summary | 252 |
Conceptual Development | 254 |
Time | 280 |
Chapter Summary | 290 |
Intelligence and Academic Achievement | 292 |
9 | 298 |
IQ Scores as Predictors of Important Outcomes | 302 |
Alternative Perspectives on Intelligence | 314 |
Theories of Social Development | 332 |
Theories of Social Cognition | 350 |
10 | 351 |
Emotional Development | 372 |
11 | 381 |
14 | 499 |
Peers in Groups | 508 |
Chapter Summary | 528 |
15 | 534 |
Review | 544 |
Chapter Summary | 568 |
Review | 576 |
Gender Comparisons | 589 |
Conclusions | 604 |
Conclusions | 608 |
Children Play Active Roles in Their Own Development | 610 |
Mechanisms of Developmental Change | 616 |
The Sociocultural Context Shapes Development | 621 |
ChildDevelopment Research Can Improve Childrens Lives | 628 |
Glossary | 1 |
25 | |
40 | |
492 | 49 |
References | 51 |
372 | 68 |
387 | 75 |
1 | |
2 | |
Other editions - View all
How Children Develop Robert S. Siegler,Judy Deloache,Nancy Eisenberg,Patricia A. Miller No preview available - 2007 |
Common terms and phrases
A-Not-B error ability activities ADHD adolescents adults African-American aggression amniotic fluid antisocial behavior attachment baby basic become believe Bil Keane biological birth boys brain caregiver Chapter chil Child Development childhood classical conditioning cognitive development context cultures Developmental Psychology dren early effects Eisenberg emotions environment ethnic example experience experimenter factors feel females fetus Figure friends function gender genes genetic girls human identity important increase individual differences infants influence intelligence interactions involves Journal language learning less look males ment months of age moral mothers nature and nurture negative neurons newborns objects parents pattern peers perception person physical Piaget play positive prenatal prenatal development preschool problems programs prosocial prosocial behavior reasoning relationships role scores self-esteem sexual siblings skills social sociocultural sounds stage strategies synapses temperament tend teratogens theory tion toddlers understanding visual words young children