Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence: An Active Learning Approach

Couverture
SAGE Publications, 29 nov. 2018 - 744 pages

Chronologically organized, Child Development From Infancy to Adolescence, Second Edition presents topics within the field of child development through unique and highly engaging Active Learning opportunities. The Active Learning features integrated within the print text and digital program foster a dynamic and personal learning process for students. Within each chapter, authors Laura E. Levine and Joyce Munsch introduce students to a wide range of real-world applications of psychological research to child development. The in-text pedagogical features and the accompanying digital components help students discover the excitement of studying child development and equip them with skills they can use long after completing the course.


 

Table des matières

WHY AND HOW WE STUDY CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS
1
CHAPTER 1 ISSUES AND THEMES IN CHILD DEVELOPMENT
2
CHAPTER 2 THEORY AND RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENT
26
PART II FOUNDATIONS OF CHILD DEVELOPMENT
69
GENES AND ENVIRONMENT
70
CHAPTER 4 PRENATAL DEVELOPMENT THE NEWBORN AND THE TRANSITION TO PARENTHOOD
100
PART III INFANCY AND TODDLERHOOD
139
CHAPTER 5 PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY AND TODDLERHOOD
140
MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
357
CHAPTER 11 PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
358
CHAPTER 12 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
394
CHAPTER 13 SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
432
PART VI ADOLESCENCE
469
CHAPTER 14 PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT IN ADOLESCENCE
470
CHAPTER 15 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN ADOLESCENCE
508
CHAPTER 16 SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN ADOLESCENCE
546

CHAPTER 6 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY AND TODDLERHOOD
176
CHAPTER 7 SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY AND TODDLERHOOD
214
EARLY CHILDHOOD
247
CHAPTER 8 PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT IN EARLY CHILDHOOD
248
CHAPTER 9 COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN EARLY CHILDHOOD
282
CHAPTER 10 SOCIAL AND EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN EARLY CHILDHOOD
320
GLOSSARY
585
REFERENCES
1
NAME INDEX
1
SUBJECT INDEX
21
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À propos de l'auteur (2018)

Laura E. Levine received her PhD in developmental and clinical psychology from the University of Michigan. After working with children and families at the Children’s Psychiatric Hospital and in private practice in Ann Arbor for 10 years, she moved to Connecticut and was a stay-at-home mother of her two children for 6 years. She returned to academia in 1994 and taught child psychology and life span development for 20 years at Central Connecticut State University, where she is currently a professor emerita of the Department of Psychological Science. She has received three university teaching awards, and her research on the social development of young children and on the relation between media use and attention difficulties has appeared in journals such as Developmental Psychology, the Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, Infant Mental Health Journal, Infant and Child Development, Computers and Education, and CyberPsychology, Behavior, and Social Networking.Dr. Levine has been very active in promoting excellence in college teaching. She was involved in the creation of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Central Connecticut State University and served on the board of the Connecticut Consortium to Enhance Learning and Teaching. She created numerous programs for faculty both at her university and at regional and national conferences. Her work on the scholarship of teaching and learning can be found in New Directions for Teaching and Learning, College Teaching and the International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.

Joyce Munsch received her PhD in human development and family studies from Cornell University. She was a faculty member in human development and family studies at Texas Tech University for 14 years, where she also served as associate dean for research in the College of Human Sciences for 2 years. In 2002, Dr. Munsch went to the California State University at Northridge as the founding chair and professor in the Department of Child and Adolescent Development. She currently is an emeritus professor in the Department. Dr. Munsch’s research has focused on adolescent stress and coping and social network research. Her work has been published in the Journal of School Psychology, Adolescence, The Journal of Early Adolescence, the Journal of Research on Adolescence, and the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. Throughout her career, Dr. Munsch administered grants that supported community-based programs. She was the codirector of the Early Head Start program at Texas Tech University and co–principal investigator for three Texas Youth Commission (Department of Juvenile Justice) grants. At Cal State Northridge, she administered the Jumpstart program for over 10 years. Her commitment to community service learning was recognized in 2005 when she was awarded the CSUN Visionary Community Service Learning Award. In 2012, her service to the County of Los Angeles was recognized by a commendation from the County Board of Supervisors. At Texas Tech, she was the College of Human Sciences nominee for the Hemphill-Wells New Professor Excellence in Teaching Award, the Barnie E. Rushing Jr. Faculty Distinguished Research Award, the El Paso Energy Foundation Faculty Achievement Award, and the President’s Excellence in Teaching Award, and she received the Kathryn Burleson Faculty Service Award and the College of Human Sciences Outstanding Researcher Award.

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