Development and Meaning of Psychological Distance

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advanced cognitive development research
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children's
Children's Representational Competence
Children’s Representational Competence
competence
context
Contextual Subtheory
developmental communication skills
Distancing Model
Distancing Strategies
Divorced Families
Dynamic Assessment
ecological systems theory
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Experiential Subtheory
Individual Mental Functioning
information processing models
Intramental Plane
IQ Gain
Mental Paper Folding
Miniature Toy
person
Picture Superiority Effect
Positive Parental Beliefs
process
Process Person Context Model
proximal
Psychological Distance
reciprocal
representational
representational competence
social cognition processes
Solving Algebra Word Problems
strategy
teaching
Uninhibited Children
Vice Versa
Violated
zone of proximal development
ZPD Concept

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805807479
  • Weight: 690g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 1993
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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One of the paradoxes in developmental theory is the child's simultaneous intrapsychic and interpsychic development. While the child is growing in mental capacity and struggling to define self, behaviors are also being learned whose function is to integrate self into a social network, which often means that egocentric behaviors are in conflict with sociocentric ones. This theory draws upon processes that promote both individual and social growth into a unified theory of development.

A construct pertinent to almost all dimensions of psychological research, psychological distance is conceptualized as either the distance between what the learner understands and what still has to be understood (intrapsychic), or ways in which others adjust information for the learner in order to be fully comprehended (interpsychic). Psychological distance appears to serve both organizing and explanatory functions across seemingly diverse sets of theoretical and research questions, such as differentiation of self in personality development; conceptual representation in cognitive development; dialogue in the development of communication skills; information processing in cognitive science; regulatory mechanisms in the growth of control processes; and concept formation in cross-over areas of cognition, learning and thinking skills.

This volume is based on papers presented as part of the Invitational Conference honoring Irving E. Sigel, Distinguished Research Scientist, at Educational Testing Service. In each of the chapters different models are utilized to account for the construct of psychological distance, and as such, to suggest extensions of Sigel's seminal work in this area. Together, these contributions form the basis of a discussion of psychological distance as a developmental construct -- a construct which permits serious consideration of individual differences as a function of both the process and the product of cognition and ecology.

Cocking, Rodney R.; Renninger, K. Ann; Renninger, Ann