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Saracho, Olivia N. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2023
Developmental theorists use their research to generate philosophies on children's development. They organize and interpret data based on a scheme to develop their theory. A theory refers to a systematic statement of principles related to observed phenomena and their relationship to each other. A theory of child development looks at the children's…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Care, Child Development, Theories
Jones, Elizabeth – Young Children, 2011
In this autobiographical journey through life-span developmental theory, the author reflects on her life as a player, embedding it in the context of Erik Erikson and Joan Erikson's stages of human development. The author builds on these basic ideas--theory, storytelling, play, and development--and defines them as simply as possible.
Descriptors: Play, Integrity, Child Development, Autobiographies
Ollhoff, Jim – 1996
This paper explores several theories of human development, with particular attention to the development of social interaction. Part 1 compares and contrasts major developmental theories, including those of Freud, Erikson, Piaget, Kohlberg, Kegan, Fowler, and Selman. From birth to 1 year, infants are laying the foundation that will guide their…
Descriptors: Child Development, Friendship, Individual Development, Interaction
Peer reviewedBarnett, Douglas; Ratner, Hilary Horn – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Describes psychological approaches to study of cognition and emotion, identifies issues that may provide direction to understanding the organization and integration of cognition and emotion in development. Maintains that an integrative model for the study of "cogmotion" is needed, suggesting that cogmotion research will contribute to the exchange…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Emotional Development
Peer reviewedSternberg, Robert J. – Developmental Review, 2003
Searches for an understanding of developmental scholar William Kessen, and of what he was trying to teach in his later years. Discusses possible sources of Kessen's dissatisfaction with the field of child development, and whether any of these issues can be resolved in ways that Kessen might not have fully anticipated. Summarizes the main lessons…
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Psychology, Children, Developmental Psychology
Peer reviewedShavinina, Larisa V. – Gifted Child Quarterly, 1999
Examination of the child prodigy phenomenon suggests it is a result of extremely accelerated mental development during sensitive periods that leads to the rapid growth of a child's cognitive resources and their construction into specific exceptional achievements. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedMuller, Ulrich; Runions, Kevin – Developmental Review, 2003
Offers psychologist Baldwin's theory as an approach to the development of social understanding emphasizing gradual differentiation of self and other and rooting this process in embodied activity within a social context. Argues that Baldwin's account provides a stronger starting point for conceptualizing the infant's discovery of other, self, and…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cooperation, Developmental Psychology
Peer reviewedJosephs, Ingrid E.; Fuhrer, Urs – Developmental Review, 1998
Examines Simmel's principle of cultivation whereby the cultivated mind is constructed through ongoing transactions of people with their cultural environment, cultural forms currently overlooked. Cultural forms result from externalizations of former person-culture transactions. Argues that development is structured through person-culture…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Cultural Context
Peer reviewedNewcombe, Nora S. – Human Development, 1998
Reviews "Rethinking Innateness: A Connectionist Perspective on Development" by Elman and others (1996). Maintains that the authors argue forcefully that the nature-nurture conflict is a false dichotomy and that they present convincing existence on the possibility of qualitative change. Argues that the authors do not succeed in proposing…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Individual Development
Peer reviewedLewis, Marc D. – Child Development, 2000
Argues that dynamic systems approaches may provide an explanatory framework based on general scientific principles for developmental psychology, using principles of self-organization to explain how novel forms emerge without predetermination and become increasingly complex with development. Contends that self-organization provides a single…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Psychology, Developmental Stages, Individual Development
Peer reviewedDalzell, Heidi J. – Roeper Review, 1998
Explores giftedness from infancy to adolescence within a psychodynamic developmental framework. Gifted development is discussed in terms of drive, ego functions, object relations, and self-experience. Also discussed are the history of giftedness, gifted infants and preschoolers, gifted school-age children, and giftedness in male and female…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages
Peer reviewedButterworth, George – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1998
Proposes an amended timetable for the origins of joint visual attention and offers theoretical alternatives for the development of point. Includes discussions of the origins of intentionality, the emergence of joint attention, the transition to pointing comprehension, the signal cues of different joint-attention cues, pointing comprehension, the…
Descriptors: Attention, Child Development, Cues, Individual Development
Peer reviewedLillard, Angeline – Human Development, 1998
Notes that Nelson, Plesa, and Henseler's (1998) article addresses the issues of where social cognitive knowledge comes from, what form it takes, and whether "theory of mind" is an appropriate description of the social cognitive enterprise. Argues that researchers ought to get beyond the "theory" issue, and focus on the sources…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Structures
Peer reviewedRochat, Philippe; Striano, Tricia – Human Development, 1998
Maintains that Muller and Overton (1998) challenge the current Zeitgeist regarding infant cognitive development. Suggests that researchers reconsider infants as developing actors in a meaningful environment, not as born philosophers. Notes the need to explore processes underlying key transitions in infancy and the relation between action and…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Individual Development
Peer reviewedWellman, Henry M.; Cross, David – Child Development, 2001
Maintains that authors' meta-analytic findings make early competence accounts of theory of mind increasingly unlikely. Asserts that findings argue against executive function expression accounts, including that advocated by Scholl and Leslie (PS532407). Explains that meta-analytic findings directly contradict Scholl and Leslie's predictions…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Competence

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