Handbook of Parenting

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Academic Intrinsic Motivation
Antisocial Behavior
Category=JHBK
Category=JMF
Category=VFX
child behavior modification
Child Developmental Outcomes
Children's Academic Intrinsic Motivation
Children's Academic Motivation
Children's Moral Development
Children's Prosocial Behavior
Children's Social Competence
Children’s Academic Intrinsic Motivation
Children’s Academic Motivation
Children’s Moral Development
Children’s Prosocial Behavior
Children’s Social Competence
digital media parenting
Effortful Control
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eq_health-lifestyle
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_parenting
eq_society-politics
evidence-based parenting interventions
Family School Partnerships
Home Visitation Programs
Inductive Discipline
Love Withdrawal
Maternal Autonomy Support
moral reasoning research
National Academies
Nurse Family Partnership
Parent Child Play
parent-child communication
Parental Involvement Behaviors
Parental Power Assertion
Pediatric Health Care Providers
Positive Youth Development
Power Assertion
Prosocial Moral Reasoning
prosocial skill development
RDS
resilience in childhood
Self-determination Theory

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138228788
  • Weight: 816g
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Feb 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This highly anticipated third edition of the Handbook of Parenting brings together an array of field-leading experts who have worked in different ways toward understanding the many diverse aspects of parenting. Contributors to the Handbook look to the most recent research and thinking to shed light on topics every parent, professional, and policy maker wonders about. Parenting is a perennially "hot" topic. After all, everyone who has ever lived has been parented, and the vast majority of people become parents themselves. No wonder bookstores house shelves of "how-to" parenting books and magazine racks in pharmacies and airports overflow with periodicals that feature parenting advice. However, almost none of these is evidence-based. The Handbook of Parenting is. Period. Each chapter has been written to be read and absorbed in a single sitting, and includes historical considerations of the topic, a discussion of central issues and theory, a review of classical and modern research, and forecasts of future directions of theory and research. Together, the five volumes in the Handbook cover Children and Parenting, the Biology and Ecology of Parenting, Being and Becoming a Parent, Social Conditions and Applied Parenting, and the Practice of Parenting.

Volume 5, The Practice of Parenting, describes the nuts-and-bolts of parenting as well as the promotion of positive parenting practices. Parents meet the biological, physical, and health requirements of children. Parents interact with children socially. Parents stimulate children to engage and understand the environment and to enter the world of learning. Parents provision, organize, and arrange their children’s home and local environments and the media to which children are exposed. Parents also manage child development vis-à-vis childcare, school, the circles of medicine and law, as well as other social institutions through their active citizenship. The chapters in Part I, on Practical Parenting, review the ethics of parenting, parenting and the development of children's self-regulation, discipline, prosocial and moral development, and resilience as well as children’s language, play, cognitive, and academic achievement and children’s peer relationships. The chapters in Part II, on Parents and Social Institutions, explore parents and their children’s childcare, activities, media, schools, and healthcare and examine relations between parenthood and the law, public policy, and religion and spirituality.

Marc H. Bornstein is Senior Investigator, Head of Child and Family Research, and Head of the Imaging and Behavioral Determinants of Development Affinity Group at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.