Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science
Volume 4: Ecological Settings and Processes

7. Auflage Mai 2015
944 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
Kurzbeschreibung
The Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science is the field-defining work to which all others are compared. Volume 4: Ecological Settings and Processes in Developmental Systems is centrally concerned with the people, conditions, and events outside individuals that affect children and their development. The volume emphasizes that the child's environment is complex, multi-dimensional, and structurally organized into interlinked contexts.
* Understand the role of parents, other family members, peers, and other adults (teachers, coaches, mentors) in a child's development
* Discover the key neighborhood/community and institutional settings of human development
* Examine the role of activities, work, and media in child and adolescent development
* Learn about the role of medicine, law, government, war and disaster, culture, and history in contributing to the processes of human development
This Handbook is the definitive reference for educators, policy-makers, researchers, students, and practitioners in human development, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and neuroscience.
The essential reference for human development theory, updated and reconceptualized
The Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science, a four-volume reference, is the field-defining work to which all others are compared. First published in 1946, and now in its Seventh Edition, the Handbook has long been considered the definitive guide to the field of developmental science.
Volume 4: Ecological Settings and Processes in Developmental Systems is centrally concerned with the people, conditions, and events outside individuals that affect children and their development. To understand children's development it is both necessary and desirable to embrace all of these social and physical contexts. Guided by the relational developmental systems metatheory, the chapters in the volume are ordered them in a manner that begins with the near proximal contexts in which children find themselves and moving through to distal contexts that influence children in equally compelling, if less immediately manifest, ways. The volume emphasizes that the child's environment is complex, multi-dimensional, and structurally organized into interlinked contexts; children actively contribute to their development; the child and the environment are inextricably linked, and contributions of both child and environment are essential to explain or understand development.
* Understand the role of parents, other family members, peers, and other adults (teachers, coaches, mentors) in a child's development
* Discover the key neighborhood/community and institutional settings of human development
* Examine the role of activities, work, and media in child and adolescent development
* Learn about the role of medicine, law, government, war and disaster, culture, and history in contributing to the processes of human development
The scholarship within this volume and, as well, across the four volumes of this edition, illustrate that developmental science is in the midst of a very exciting period. There is a paradigm shift that involves increasingly greater understanding of how to describe, explain, and optimize the course of human life for diverse individuals living within diverse contexts. This Handbook is the definitive reference for educators, policy-makers, researchers, students, and practitioners in human development, psychology, sociology, anthropology, and neuroscience.
Marc H. Bornstein and Tama Leventhal
2. Human Development in Time and Place
Glen H. Elder, Jr., Michael J. Shanahan, and Julia A. Jennings
3. Children's Parents
Marc H. Bornstein
4. Children in Diverse Families
Lawrence Ganong, Marilyn Coleman, and Luke Russell
5. Children in Peer Groups
Kenneth H. Rubin, William M. Bukowski, and Julie C. Bowker
6. Early Child Care and Education
Margaret Burchinal, Katherine Magnuson, Douglas Powell, and Sandra Soliday Hong
7. Children at School
Robert Crosnoe and Aprile D. Benner
8. Children's Organized Activities
Deborah Lowe Vandell, Reed W. Larson, Joseph L. Mahoney, and Tyler W. Watts
9. Children at Work
Jeremy Staff, Arnaldo Mont'Alvao, and Jeylan T. Mortimer
10. Children and Digital Media
Sandra L. Calvert
11. Children in Diverse Social Contexts
Velma McBride Murry, Nancy E. Hill, Dawn Witherspoon, Cady Berkel, and Deborah Bartz
12. Children's Housing and Physical Environments
Robert H. Bradley
13. Children in Neighborhoods
Tama Leventhal, Véronique Dupéré, and Elizabeth A. Shuey
14. Children and Socioeconomic Status
Greg J. Duncan, and Katherine Magnuson, and Elizabeth Votruba-Drzal
15. Children in Medical Settings
Barry Zuckerman and Robert D. Keder
16. Children and the Law
Elizabeth Cauffman, Elizabeth Shulman, Jordan Bechtold, and Laurence Steinberg
17. Children and Government
Kenneth A. Dodge and Ron Haskins
18. Children in War and Disaster
Ann S. Masten, Angela J. Narayan, Wendy K. Silverman, and Joy D. Osofsky
19. Children and Cultural Context
Jacqueline J. Goodnow and Jeanette A. Lawrence
20. Children in History
Peter N. Stearns
21. Assessing Bioecological Influences
Theodore D. Wachs
--Diane FitzMaurice, Library Information Supervisor,Department of Psychology, University of Cambridge