Research Issues in Child Development

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Alison F. Garton
Andrew R. Nesdale
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Children's Memory Performance
Children’s Memory Performance
Class Inclusion Task
cognitive processes
Delay Choice
developmental psychology
Disabled Sibling
empirical child research
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GCI
Grapheme Phoneme Correspondence Rules
Impulse Control
interactionist child development studies
Ironic Utterances
language acquisition
Low Birth Weight Individuals
Low Birth Weight Infants
Minimal Brain Dysfunction
MZ Twin
perceptual motor skills
phonemic
Phonemic Segmentation
Phonemic Segmentation Ability
Phonemic Segmentation Tests
Phonological Awareness
Phonological Recoding
segmentation
Shopping Game
social behaviour in children
Syntactic Awareness
Syntactic Delay
Very Low Birth Weight Infants
Violates
VLBW Child
William E. Tunmer

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138501133
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Nov 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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First published in 1986, this authoritative book contains a selection of original, research based, reports of studies conducted in Australia and New Zealand in the field of Child Development. The topics have been arranged into four major sections – cognitive issues in development, language and reading development, perpetual motor development and social aspects of development. Both pure and applied research issues are presented, and the chapters cover child development from infancy to adolescence.

The book’s special strength lies in the diversity of topics tackled and the range of developmental research represented. Theoretical viewpoints are raised and empirical questions answered in the studies reported. The editors have systematically drawn together important contributions which reflected contemporary topics in child development at the time. Although no one common theoretical or empirical theme unites either each section or the whole book (which reflects the general scope and diversity of child development in the 1980s), the contributors in general see the child as developing through active interaction with his or her environment. This interactionist position is clearly preferred by most researchers, who realised that simplistic genetic or environmental models are inadequate to explain the complex development of the child.

The editors were all active researchers in the area of child development at the time and each co-authored a chapter in the book. All published regularly in national and international journals and books, and were aware of current developments in their main areas of expertise.

All those interested in issues in child development will find this book important reading, as it provides the reader with an excellent and diverse selection of studies, bearing on a wide range of empirical research.

Chris Pratt, Alison F. Garton, William E Tunmer, Andrew R. Nesdale