ABSTRACT

The fifth birthday represents an important landmark in a child's development. He is now ready to start full-time primary school, and we no longer speak of a baby or a little child; instead, we refer to the boy or the girl. Over the next five years, as his horizons become wider and his experiences outside the home increase exponentially, he seems to become more reserved; more difficult to approach and share things with. Sometimes, ordinary questions are ignored or responded to with some apparently unrelated answer. Occasionally, the child will move away even while someone is speaking to him. This is a child trying to make sense of his new experiences, adapting to new people and places, while preserving his link to his earlier environment. Adults can feel frustrated by this behaviour and impatient, but when moved to protest, tend to use words of exasperation rather than plain anger.

chapter One|7 pages

The child’s view of himself

chapter Two|10 pages

The view of the world around him

chapter Three|5 pages

Gender identity

chapter Four|6 pages

Siblings

chapter Five|4 pages

The child at school

chapter Six|2 pages

Problems with teachers

chapter Seven|4 pages

Problems with peers

chapter Eight|5 pages

School phobia

chapter Nine|7 pages

Sphincter training problems

chapter Ten|6 pages

The child in the community

chapter Eleven|5 pages

The wider family

chapter Twelve|6 pages

Sleeping problems

chapter Thirteen|6 pages

Divorce

chapter Fourteen|6 pages

Adoption

chapter Fifteen|5 pages

Absences

chapter Sixteen|8 pages

Illness and death