Clinician's Guide to Normal Cognitive Development in Childhood

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American Psychiatric Association
Antisocial Behaviors
belief
BLS
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childhood neuropsychology
Children's Cognitive Development
Children's False Belief Understanding
Children's Internal States
Children's Memory
Children's Moral Reasoning
Children's Suggestibility
childrens
clinical cognitive development strategies
Clinical Interviews
developmental assessment tools
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errors
false
False Belief Task
False Belief Understanding
Fireman
Internal State Awareness
Internal State Language
memory
Memory Development
memory formation in children
monitoring
moral development stages
Moral Reasoning Development
Normal Cognitive Development
practitioner training resource
preschool
Relational Aggression
School Age
social cognition processes
source
Source Monitoring
Speech Language Pathologist
Sponge
tasks
understanding
Violated
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415991834
  • Weight: 660g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 09 Nov 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Clinicians and practitioners-in-training can often lose sight of the normal developmental landscape that underlies behavior, especially in the field of cognitive development. It exists in an insular bubble within the broader field of psychology, and within each sub-domain there is a wide continuum between the anchors of atypical and optimal development. Clinicians need to learn, and to be reminded of, the unique peculiarities of developing cognitive skills in order to appreciate normal developmental phenomena.

In A Clinician's Guide to Normal Cognitive Development in Childhood, every chapter provides students and established professionals with an accessible set of descriptions of normal childhood cognition, accompanied by suggestions for how to think about normal development in a clinical context. Each sub-topic within cognitive development is explicated through a succinct presentation of empirical data in that area, followed by a discussion of the ethical implications. With an extensive review of data and clinical practice techniques, professionals and students alike will benefit enormously from this resource.

Elisabeth Hollister Sandberg, PhD, is a member of the Psychology Department faculty at Suffolk University in Boston, Massachusetts.

Becky L. Spritz, PhD, is a member of the Psychology Department faculty at Roger Williams University in Bristol, Rhode Island.