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Le contexte social du développement cognitif par Gauvain, Mary

by Gauvain, Mary | PB | VeryGood
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May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend ... En savoir plusà propos de l'état
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Lieu où se trouve l'objet : Aurora, Illinois, États-Unis
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Caractéristiques de l'objet

État
Très bon état
Livre qui ne semble pas neuf, ayant déjà été lu, mais qui est toujours en excellent état. La couverture ne présente aucun dommage apparent. Pour les couvertures rigides, la jaquette (si applicable) est incluse. Aucune page n'est manquante, endommagée, pliée ni déchirée. Aucun texte n'est souligné ni surligné. Aucune note ne figure dans les marges. La couverture intérieure peut présenter des marques d'identification mineures. Marques d'usure et déchirures mineures. Consulter l'annonce du vendeur pour avoir plus de détails et voir la description des défauts. Afficher toutes les définitions des étatsla page s'ouvre dans une nouvelle fenêtre ou un nouvel onglet
Commentaires du vendeur
“May have limited writing in cover pages. Pages are unmarked. ~ ThriftBooks: Read More, Spend ...
Binding
Paperback
Weight
0 lbs
Product Group
Book
IsTextBook
Yes
ISBN
9781572306103
Publication Year
2000
Type
Textbook
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Name
Social Context of Cognitive Development
Item Height
0.6in
Author
Mary Gauvain
Item Length
8.9in
Publisher
Guilford Publications
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
13.9 Oz
Number of Pages
249 Pages

À propos de ce produit

Product Information

Traditional approaches to cognitive development can tell us a great deal about the internal processes involved in learning. Sociocultural perspectives, on the other hand, provide valuable insights into the influences on learning of relationship and cultural variables. This volume provides a much-needed bridge between these disparate bodies of research, examining the specific processes through which children internalize the lessons learned in social contexts. The book reviews current findings on four specific domains of cognitive development--attention, memory, problem solving, and planning. The course of intellectual growth in each domain is described, and social factors that support or constrain it are identified. The focus throughout is on how family, peer, and community factors influence not only what a child learns, but also how learning occurs. Supporting her arguments with solid empirical data, the author convincingly shows how attention to sociocultural factors can productively complement more traditional avenues of investigation.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Guilford Publications
ISBN-10
1572306106
ISBN-13
9781572306103
eBay Product ID (ePID)
1792458

Product Key Features

Author
Mary Gauvain
Publication Name
Social Context of Cognitive Development
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Publication Year
2000
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
249 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
8.9in
Item Height
0.6in
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
13.9 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Bf723.C5g38 2001
Reviews
"In this wonderful contribution to the study of children's intellectual development, Gauvain takes issue with the traditional view of cognition that describes what children do or think at a given age and neglects the physical, social, and emotional aspects that influence how children learn....Mary Gauvain's book will interest scholars, professionals, and students in a number of areas including child development, cognitive development, early childhood education, special education, and early intervention. There are several reasons why this book is a must-read. First, the book brings back to our attention the importance of understanding the processes of learning....A second reason why this book must be read revolves around its bold goals. The book reports Gauvain's tremendous undertaking in answering the following questions: How do we learn to think? Why do we end up thinking the way we do'....Third, the claim that social experience in coordination with biological processes guides developmental changes implies that educational practices, curriculum, instructional materials, and intervention programs are as important as genes in promoting development. Thus, it seems imperative to scholars, students, and professionals who work in children's education to understand that knowledge is not beyond children's perceiving and acting in the here and now....Fourth, Gauvain also alerts us to the fact that ontogenetic development is a unique solution to contextual challenges (tensions) articulated by an intelligent and flexible system within the realms of individuals' historical and sociocultural experiences....because the book is written in a provocative scholarly style, it elicits a profound engagement with the text that leads to more exploratory thoughts. I admire such extraordinary analysis of development in the social context. I hope that my review encourages others to read and appreciate this book."--American Journal of Psychology "In accord with her theoretical perspective, Gauvain takes the reader step by step through the theoretical arguments and empirical evidence, providing a highly readable and engaging scaffold through the relevant literature....a wonderful, theoretically deep and empirically broad review of what we know about the ways in which the activities and interactions in which children engage facilitate cognitive growth. Most impressive, this book is written in a way that will be engaging to those who are first approaching these ideas as well as to those who have been working with these ideas for years. In bringing together the sociocultural approach to cognitive development, Gauvain provides a road map for where we have been and where we need to go. Gauvain provides ample evidence that we must pay close attention to the social environment if we hope to understand how cognitive development occurs. Most exciting, by bringing this work together, Gauvain has pointed us to the questions that future research must answer."--Contemporary Psychology "For those of us trained in a more individualistic approach to cognitive development, there is much to learn from Mary Gauvain's book....This book has a gentle way of provoking thoughts and raising ideas that you'll want to question further. This is a book for laying the ground. A jumping-off point. Use it for teaching. Lend it to your students. But make sure that you get it back."--Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry "In examining the question, 'How do we learn and why do we end up thinking the way we do?' Gauvain brings to the fore the vital role played by social context in children's cognition and learning, and offers illustrations from the lives of well-known individuals in her opening chapter....Her focus on four cognitive domains--attention, memory, problem-solving, and planning--is particularly useful. In examining these domains, which are usually discussed in information-processing language, through social-contextual lense, "In this wonderful contribution to the study of children's intellectual development, Gauvain takes issue with the traditional view of cognition that describes what children do or think at a given age and neglects the physical, social, and emotional aspects that influence how children learn....Mary Gauvain's book will interest scholars, professionals, and students in a number of areas including child development, cognitive development, early childhood education, special education, and early intervention. There are several reasons why this book is a must-read. First, the book brings back to our attention the importance of understanding the processes of learning....A second reason why this book must be read revolves around its bold goals. The book reports Gauvain's tremendous undertaking in answering the following questions: How do we learn to think? Why do we end up thinking the way we do'....Third, the claim that social experience in coordination with biological processes guides developmental changes implies that educational practices, curriculum, instructional materials, and intervention programs are as important as genes in promoting development. Thus, it seems imperative to scholars, students, and professionals who work in children's education to understand that knowledge is not beyond children's perceiving and acting in the here and now....Fourth, Gauvain also alerts us to the fact that ontogenetic development is a unique solution to contextual challenges (tensions) articulated by an intelligent and flexible system within the realms of individuals' historical and sociocultural experiences....because the book is written in a provocative scholarly style, it elicits a profound engagement with the text that leads to more exploratory thoughts. I admire such extraordinary analysis of development in the social context. I hope that my review encourages others to read and appreciate this book."--American Journal of Psychology "In accord with her theoretical perspective, Gauvain takes the reader step by step through the theoretical arguments and empirical evidence, providing a highly readable and engaging scaffold through the relevant literature....a wonderful, theoretically deep and empirically broad review of what we know about the ways in which the activities and interactions in which children engage facilitate cognitive growth. Most impressive, this book is written in a way that will be engaging to those who are first approaching these ideas as well as to those who have been working with these ideas for years. In bringing together the sociocultural approach to cognitive development, Gauvain provides a road map for where we have been and where we need to go. Gauvain provides ample evidence that we must pay close attention to the social environment if we hope to understand how cognitive development occurs. Most exciting, by bringing this work together, Gauvain has pointed us to the questions that future research must answer."--Contemporary Psychology "For those of us trained in a more individualistic approach to cognitive development, there is much to learn from Mary Gauvain's book....This book has a gentle way of provoking thoughts and raising ideas that you'll want to question further. This is a book for laying the ground. A jumping-off point. Use it for teaching. Lend it to your students. But make sure that you get it back."--Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry "In examining the question, 'How do we learn and why do we end up thinking the way we do?' Gauvain brings to the fore the vital role played by social context in children's cognition and learning, and offers illustrations from the lives of well-known individuals in her opening chapter....Her focus on four cognitive domains--attention, memory, problem-solving, and planning--is particularly useful. In examining these domains, which are usually discussed in information-processing language, through social-, "Mary Gauvain has an interesting and important theory about what causes developmental changes in children, and she sets it out in her new book convincingly and with great verve. Her theory is that the underlying factor that produces cognitive developmental change is social interaction, and she documents this claim with an impressively wide range of evidence." --Peter Bryant, PhD, FRS, Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford "This is an outstanding summary of the social influences on children's thinking. Gauvain weaves cross-cultural and cognitive developmental research into a single tapestry that shows how children learn, remember, and solve problems in their everyday activities. She reviews major theories of cognitive development and uses activity theory as a framework to synthesize sociocognitive research. The book will be appreciated by students because it is coherent, readable, and up to date." --Scott Paris, PhD, Department of Psychology, University of Michigan "This book provides a valuable integration of literatures that point to the importance of social context as a mechanism of cognitive change. In examining the role of social influences in the development of attention, memory, problem solving, and planning, Gauvain manages to integrate social interactional accounts with other efforts to identify mechanisms of development, such as Piagetian and information-processing approaches. She reviews relevant research as well as incorporating memoirs of notable people to illustrate varying contexts of cognitive development. This book will be a valuable supplementary text for undergraduate and graduate courses in psychology, child development, and education." --Barbara Rogoff, PhD, Foundation Professor of Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz, "In this wonderful contribution to the study of children's intellectual development, Gauvain takes issue with the traditional view of cognition that describes what children do or think at a given age and neglects the physical, social, and emotional aspects that influence how children learn....Mary Gauvain's book will interest scholars, professionals, and students in a number of areas including child development, cognitive development, early childhood education, special education, and early intervention. There are several reasons why this book is a must-read. First, the book brings back to our attention the importance of understanding the processes of learning....A second reason why this book must be read revolves around its bold goals. The book reports Gauvain's tremendous undertaking in answering the following questions: How do we learn to think? Why do we end up thinking the way we do'....Third, the claim that social experience in coordination with biological processes guides developmental changes implies that educational practices, curriculum, instructional materials, and intervention programs are as important as genes in promoting development. Thus, it seems imperative to scholars, students, and professionals who work in children's education to understand that knowledge is not beyond children's perceiving and acting in the here and now....Fourth, Gauvain also alerts us to the fact that ontogenetic development is a unique solution to contextual challenges (tensions) articulated by an intelligent and flexible system within the realms of individuals' historical and sociocultural experiences....because the book is written in a provocative scholarly style, it elicits a profound engagement with the text that leads to more exploratory thoughts. I admire such extraordinary analysis of development in the social context. I hope that my review encourages others to read and appreciate this book."--American Journal of Psychology "In accord with her theoretical perspective, Gauvain takes the reader step by step through the theoretical arguments and empirical evidence, providing a highly readable and engaging scaffold through the relevant literature....a wonderful, theoretically deep and empirically broad review of what we know about the ways in which the activities and interactions in which children engage facilitate cognitive growth. Most impressive, this book is written in a way that will be engaging to those who are first approaching these ideas as well as to those who have been working with these ideas for years. In bringing together the sociocultural approach to cognitive development, Gauvain provides a road map for where we have been and where we need to go. Gauvain provides ample evidence that we must pay close attention to the social environment if we hope to understand how cognitive development occurs. Most exciting, by bringing this work together, Gauvain has pointed us to the questions that future research must answer."--Contemporary Psychology "For those of us trained in a more individualistic approach to cognitive development, there is much to learn from Mary Gauvain's book....This book has a gentle way of provoking thoughts and raising ideas that you'll want to question further. This is a book for laying the ground. A jumping-off point. Use it for teaching. Lend it to your students. But make sure that you get it back."--Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry "In examining the question, 'How do we learn and why do we end up thinking the way we do?' Gauvain brings to the fore the vital role played by social context in children's cognition and learning, and offers illustrations from the lives of well-known individuals in her opening chapter....Her focus on four cognitive domains--attention, memory, problem-solving, and planning--is particularly useful. In examining these domains, which are usually discussed in information-processing language, through social-contextual lenses, Ga
Table of Content
I. The Social Foundations of Cognitive Development 1. Introduction 2. Processes of Change: The "How" of Cognitive Development 3. The Sociocultural Context of Cognitive Development II. The Development of Specific Higher Mental Functions in Social Context 4. Acquiring Knowledge: Intersubjectivity, Joint Attention, and Social Referencing 5. Remembering: The Social Construction of the Past 6. Solving and Learning to Solve Problems in Social Context 7. Constructing the Future: Planning in Social Context 8. Conclusions and Future Directions
Copyright Date
2001
Target Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Topic
Educational Psychology, Developmental / Child, Psychiatry / Child & Adolescent, Ethnopsychology
Lccn
00-062259
Dewey Decimal
155.4/13
Dewey Edition
21
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Education, Psychology, Medical

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