Univ. of California, Riverside. A bridge between sociocultural and cognitive research on child development. Examines how children internalize lessons learned in a social context, focusing on how family, peers, and community factors influence what and how the child learns. Hardcover, softcover also available.
Mary Gauvain, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of California at Riverside. She received her master's degree in Sociology of Education from Stanford University and her doctoral degree in Developmental Psychology from the University of Utah. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Association and has served on the Executive Committee of the APA Division of Developmental Psychology. She is also a member of the Society for Research in Child Development. Her research on children's cognitive development in social and cultural contexts is widely published and has been funded by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development and The Spencer Foundation, among others.
PART I. The Social Foundations of Cognitive Development
Introduction
3
(16)
The Social Foundation of the Mind
5
(3)
Remembering Childhood
8
(9)
Concluding Thoughts
17
(2)
Processes of Change: The ``How'' of Cognitive Development
19
(24)
What Are the Mechanisms of Cognitive Development?
20
(4)
What External Factors Have Been Implicated as Mechanisms of Cognitive Change?
24
(6)
Social Processes as Mechanisms of Intellectual Growth
30
(4)
Social Processes of Cognitive Development
34
(6)
Concluding Thoughts
40
(3)
The Sociocultural Context of Cognitive Development
43
(24)
Cognitive Development in Cultural Context
44
(3)
Identifying the Origins of Higher Mental Functions in Social Activity
47
(8)
Cognitive Socialization: Who's Involved?
55
(7)
Concluding Thoughts
62
(5)
PART II. The Development of Specific Higher Mental Functions in Social Context
Acquiring Knowledge: Intersubjectivity, Joint Attention and Social Referencing
67
(35)
Attention and Its Development
71
(6)
Social Experience and Early Attentional Processes
77
(24)
Concluding Thoughts
101
(1)
Remembering: The Social Construction of the Past
102
(35)
What Is Memory and Why Is It Important?
104
(2)
Early Evidence of Remembering
106
(3)
The Social Context of Memory Development
109
(5)
Social Influences on the Development of Event and Strategic Memory
114
(21)
Concluding Thoughts
135
(2)
Solving and Learning to Solve Problems in Social Context
137
(35)
What Is Problem Solving?
139
(1)
Social Interaction and the Development of Problem Solving
140
(23)
The Social Context of, Problem-Solving Interaction
163
(6)
Concluding Thoughts
169
(3)
Constructing the Future: Planning in Social Context
172
(35)
Planning and Its Development over Childhood
174
(3)
Social Interaction and the Development of Planning
177
(21)
Social Processes That Regulate Children's Opportunities to Learn about Planning from Experience with Others
198
(7)
Concluding Thoughts
205
(2)
Conclusions and Future Directions
207
(10)
References
217
(22)
Index
239
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