Child psychology in twelve questions : Paul L. Harris
Publisher: Oxford : Oxford University Press 2022Description: x, 253 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9780192866509
- 155.4
- BF72 .H37 2022
Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | NMC Library | Stacks | BF721 .H37 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 33039001509776 |
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BF721 .B336 2003 The developing child / | BF721 .C5143 1990 Child development and personality / | BF721 .G58 Piaget's theory of intellectual development; an introduction | BF721 .H37 2022 Child psychology in twelve questions : | BF721 .H413 2002 A good start in life : understanding your child's brain and behavior / | BF721 .M196 1978 Three theories of child development / | BF721 .P473 The origins of intelligence in children; |
1 Where does love come from? -- 2 How do children learn words? -- 3 Does language change how children think? -- 4 Do children live in a fantasy world? -- 5 Are children natural psychologists? -- 6 Can we trust children's memory? -- 7 Do children understand emotion? -- 8 How do children tell right from wrong? -- 9 Do children trust what they are told? -- 10 Do children believe in magic? -- 11 Is developmental psychology ethnocentric? -- 12 What have we learned?
Child psychology as a scientific enterprise is about a hundred years old-juvenile in comparison to other branches of science. Yet the reader who wants to learn what has been discovered faces an obstacle. There are plenty of textbooks offering an encyclopedic review. They are packed with recent research, aimed at the latest cohort of students, but such a welter of findings and mini controversies can obscure enduring questions as well as established answers. Firmer guidance is on offer in books aiming to help parents and teachers, but the more meditative and less practical questions about the nature of the child's mind are rarely asked. This book takes up some of the enduring questions in developmental psychology. For example, how do children form an attachment to their caregivers? In their imagination, are they confused or clear-sighted about the difference between fantasy and reality? When and how do they make moral judgments? In each chapter, readers are given a sense of why these questions are important, the answers proposed, and the uncertainties that persist. Readers are shown important landmarks, both well known and neglected, and invited to linger.
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