ABSTRACT

  • How do we get from helpless baby to knowing teenager?
  • What impact do television, computers and iPads, the internet, video games and evolving technology have on the way children's minds develop?
  • Is cognition a question of learning and environment or of heredity?

How we learn to think, perceive, remember, talk, reason and learn is a central topic in psychology - and one that sees constant new research. In this very readable book, David Cohen discusses the latest studies and covers all the controversies that have dogged the subject for nearly 150 years. He examines the work of the 'greats' like Piaget, Freud and Vygotsky and shows how the issues that have intrigued psychologists relate to any child growing up today.

This book is for everyone who lives with, works with or studies children. David Cohen examines the fundamental issues of how children learn to read and write, of how their intellectual abilities are measured and the development of their morality. He examines child crime and looks at how modern media affect the way the child's mind develops.

This fully updated new edition of How the Child's Mind Develops, which incorporates new extracts from a mother’s weekly diary, is an integrated and thought-provoking account of the central issues in child development. Parents, professionals and students will find it an invaluable introduction.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

The Developing Brain

chapter 2|22 pages

The logical child

Piaget’s theory of cognitive development

chapter 3|12 pages

Egocentric or social animals?

The work of Lev Vygotsky

chapter 4|12 pages

The development of a sense of justice

chapter 5|4 pages

Shared sweetness

The mother child diary

chapter 6|25 pages

Other people and other minds

chapter 7|18 pages

The development of memory

chapter 9|21 pages

Nature or nurture?

chapter 10|17 pages

Cognitive development in the classroom

Reading, writing and arithmetic

chapter 11|11 pages

Toys are so analogue

Computers, mobiles, iPads and the child as consumer