Decades of work in psychology labs have vastly enhanced our knowledge
about how children perceive, think, and reason. But it has also
encouraged a distorted view of children, argues psychologist Susan
Engel in this provocative and passionate book--a view that has
affected every parent who has tried to debate with a six-year-old. By
focusing on the thinking processes prized by adults, too many expert
opinions have rendered children as little adults. What has been lost
is what is truly unique and mysterious--the childlike quality of a
child's mind. Engel draws on keen observations and descriptive
research to take us into the nearly forgotten, untidy,
phantasmagorical world of children's inner lives. She reminds us that
children fuse thought and emotion, play and reality; they swing wildly
between different ways of interpreting and acting in the world. But
just as a gawky child may grow into a beauty, illogical and sometimes
maddening childishness can foreshadow great adult ability. Engel
argues that the "scientist in a crib" view encourages parents and
teachers to expect more logical reasoning and emotional self-control
from children than they possess. She provides a concise and valuable
overview of what modern developmental psychologists have learned about
children's developing powers of perception and capacity for reasoning,
but also suggests new ways of studying children that better capture
the truth about their young minds.
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Creating Meaning in Everyday Life
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780674036499
Publisert
2021
Utgiver
Vendor
Harvard University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter