Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Infants, Children, and Adolescents [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 976 pages, kõrgus x laius: 276x212 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071895060
  • ISBN-13: 9781071895061
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 976 pages, kõrgus x laius: 276x212 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Nov-2022
  • Kirjastus: SAGE Publications Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1071895060
  • ISBN-13: 9781071895061
Teised raamatud teemal:
A best-selling, chronologically organized child development text, Laura Berk’s Infants, Children, and Adolescents is relied on in classrooms worldwide for its clear, engaging writing style, exceptional multicultural and cross-cultural focus, first-rate coverage of developmental neuroscience, rich examples, and long-standing commitment to presenting the most up-to-date scholarship. Renowned professor, researcher, and author Laura Berk takes an integrated approach to presenting development in the physical, cognitive, emotional, and social domains, emphasizing the complex interchanges between heredity and environment, and offering research-based, practical applications that students can relate to their personal and professional lives. The 9th Edition’s extensive revision strengthens the connections among developmental domains and brings forth the most recent scholarship, representing the changing field of child development.

All print formats are available for pre-order now with publication set for late July. E-book formats will be available for purchase in mid-July with prices starting at $72.00 for a 180-day rental.
A Personal Note to Students xii
Preface for Instructors xiii
Part I Theory And Research In Child Development
Chapter 1 History, Theory, and Research Strategies
2(48)
The Field of Child Development
4(3)
Domains of Development
5(1)
Periods of Development
6(1)
Basic Issues
7(4)
Continuous or Discontinuous Development?
7(1)
One Course of Development or Many?
8(1)
Relative Influence of Nature and Nurture?
9(1)
A Balanced Point of View
9(2)
Biology And Environment: Resilient Children
10(1)
Historical Foundations
11(3)
Medieval Times
11(1)
The Reformation
12(1)
Philosophies of the Enlightenment
12(1)
Scientific Beginnings
13(1)
Mid-Twentieth-Century Theories
14(7)
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
15(1)
Behaviorism and Social Learning Theory
16(2)
Piaget's Cognitive-Developmental Theory
18(3)
Recent Theoretical Perspectives
21(9)
Information Processing
21(1)
Developmental Neuroscience
22(1)
Ethology and Evolutionary Developmental Psychology
23(1)
Vygotsky's Sociocultural Theory
24(1)
Ecological Systems Theory
25(2)
Development as a Dynamic System
27(3)
Social Issues: Health: Family Chaos Undermines Children's Well-Being
28(2)
Comparing Child Development Theories
30(1)
Studying the Child
30(14)
Common Research Methods
31(6)
Cultural Influence: Immigrant Youths: Adapting to a New Land
36(1)
General Research Designs
37(2)
Designs for Studying Development
39(3)
Improving Developmental Designs
42(2)
Ethics in Research on Children
44(3)
Summary
47(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
49(1)
Part II Foundations Of Development
Chapter 2 Genetic and Environmental Foundations
50(36)
Genetic Foundations
51(8)
The Genetic Code
51(2)
The Sex Cells
53(1)
Sex Determination
53(1)
Multiple Offspring
53(1)
Patterns of Gene-Gene Interaction
54(4)
Chromosomal Abnormalities
58(1)
Reproductive Choices
59(6)
Social Issues: Health: The Pros and Cons of Reproductive Technologies
60(1)
Genetic Counseling
60(2)
Prenatal Diagnosis
62(2)
Adoption
64(1)
Environmental Contexts for Development
65(13)
The Family
65(2)
Socioeconomic Status and Family Functioning
67(1)
Social Issues: Education: Worldwide Education of Girls: Transforming Current and Future Generations
68(1)
Affluence
68(2)
Poverty
70(2)
Beyond the Family: Neighborhoods and Schools
72(2)
The Cultural Context
74(4)
Cultural Influence: Familism Promotes Competence in Hispanic Children and Youths
75(3)
Understanding the Relationship Between Heredity and Environment
78(6)
The Question, "How Much?"
78(1)
The Question, "How?"
79(8)
Biology And Environment: The Tutsi Genocide and Epigenetic Transmission of Maternal Stress to Children
83(1)
Summary
84(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
85(1)
Chapter 3 Prenatal Development
86(30)
Motivations for Parenthood
87(3)
Why Have Children?
87(2)
How Large a Family?
89(1)
Is There a Best Time During Adulthood to Have a Child?
89(1)
Prenatal Development
90(7)
Conception
90(1)
Germinal Period
91(2)
Period of the Embryo
93(1)
Period of the Fetus
94(3)
Prenatal Environmental Influences
97(1)
Teratogens
97(14)
Biology And Environment: Self-Regulation Therapy for Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASO)
103(4)
Other Maternal Factors
107(10)
Social Issues: Health: The Nurse-Family Partnership: Reducing Maternal Stress and Enhancing Child Development Through Social Support
110(1)
The Importance of Prenatal Health Care
111(3)
Cultural Influence: Culturally Sensitive Prenatal Health Care: Perspectives of Expectant Mothers
112(2)
Summary
114(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
115(1)
Chapter 4 Birth and the Newborn Baby
116(36)
The Stages of Childbirth
117(4)
Stage 1: Dilation and Effacement of the Cervix
119(1)
Stage 2: Delivery of the Baby
119(1)
Stage 3: Birth of the Placenta
119(1)
The Baby's Adaptation to Labor and Delivery
119(1)
The Newborn Baby's Appearance
120(1)
Assessing the Newborn's Physical Condition: The Apgar Scale
120(1)
Approaches to Childbirth
121(2)
Natural, or Prepared, Childbirth
122(1)
Home Delivery
123(1)
Medical Interventions
123(3)
Fetal Monitoring
123(1)
Labor and Delivery Medication
124(1)
Instrument Delivery
124(1)
Cesarean Delivery
125(1)
Birth Complications
126(7)
Oxygen Deprivation
126(1)
Preterm and Low-Birth-Weight Infants
127(4)
Birth Complications, Parenting, and Resilience
131(2)
Cultural Influence: A Cross-National Perspective on Health Care and Other Policies for Parents and Newborn Babies
132(1)
The Newborn Baby's Capacities
133(11)
Reflexes
133(3)
States
136(4)
Social Issues: Health: The Mysterious Tragedy of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
138(2)
Sensory Capacities
140(3)
Neonatal Behavioral Assessment
143(1)
The Transition to Parenthood
144(5)
Early Parent-Infant Contact
145(1)
Changes in the Family System
145(3)
Biology And Environment: Parental Depression and Child Development
146(2)
Single-Mother Families
148(1)
Parent Interventions
148(1)
Summary
149(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
151(1)
Part III Infancy And Toddlerhood: The First Two Years
Chapter 5 Physical Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
152(44)
Body Growth
153(2)
Changes in Body Size and Muscle-Fat Makeup
153(2)
Changes in Body Proportions
155(1)
Individual and Group Differences
155(1)
Brain Development
155(11)
Development of Neurons
155(2)
Measures of Brain Functioning
157(1)
Development of the Cerebral Cortex
158(2)
Sensitive Periods in Brain Development
160(4)
Biology And Environment: Brain Plasticity: Insights from Research on Children with Brain Injury
161(3)
Changing States of Arousal
164(2)
Cultural Influence: Cultural Variation in Infant Sleeping Arrangements
165(1)
Influences on Early Physical Growth
166(6)
Heredity
167(1)
Nutrition
167(3)
Social Issues: Health: Lead Exposure and Children's Development
167(3)
Malnutrition
170(1)
Emotional Well-Being
171(1)
Learning Capacities
172(5)
Classical Conditioning
172(1)
Operant Conditioning
173(1)
Habituation
174(1)
Statistical Learning
175(1)
Imitation
176(1)
Motor Development
177(7)
The Sequence of Motor Development
178(1)
Motor Skills as Dynamic Systems
179(3)
Fine-Motor Development: Reaching and Grasping
182(2)
Perceptual Development
184(10)
Hearing
184(2)
Biology And Environment: "Tuning in" to Familiar Speech, Faces, and Music: A Sensitive Period for Culture-Specific Learning
185(1)
Vision
186(4)
Object Perception
190(1)
Intermodal Perception
191(1)
Understanding Perceptual Development
192(2)
Summary
194(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
195(1)
Chapter 6 Cognitive Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
196(44)
Piaget's Cognitive-Developmental Theory
197(13)
Piaget's Ideas About Cognitive Change
198(1)
The Sensorimotor Stage
198(3)
Follow-Up Research on Infant Cognitive Development
201(6)
Social Issues: Education: Baby Learning from Screen Media: The Video Deficit Effect
206(1)
Evaluation of the Sensorimotor Stage
207(3)
Information Processing
210(8)
Assumptions of the Information-Processing Perspective
210(2)
Attention
212(1)
Memory
213(2)
Categorization
215(2)
Biology And Environment: Infantile Amnesia
216(1)
Evaluation of Information-Processing Findings
217(1)
The Social Context of Early Cognitive Development
218(1)
Individual Differences in Early Mental Development
219(8)
Cultural Influence: Social Origins of Make-Believe Play
220(1)
Infant and Toddler Intelligence Tests
221(1)
Early Environment and Mental Development
222(2)
Early Intervention for At-Risk Infants and Toddlers
224(3)
Language Development
227(11)
Theories of Language Development
227(4)
Biology And Environment: Thiamine Deficiency in the First Year and Later Language Impairment
229(2)
Getting Ready to Talk
231(2)
First Words
233(1)
The Two-Word Utterance Phase
234(1)
Individual and Cultural Differences
234(2)
Supporting Early Language Development
236(2)
Summary
238(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
239(1)
Chapter 7 Emotional and Social Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
240(40)
Emotional Development
241(8)
Basic Emotions
242(3)
Understanding and Responding to the Emotions of Others
245(1)
Emergence of Self-Conscious Emotions
246(1)
Beginnings of Emotional Self-Regulation
247(2)
Temperament and Development
249(7)
The Structure of Temperament
249(1)
Measuring Temperament
250(1)
Stability of Temperament
251(2)
Biology And Environment: Development of Shyness and Sociability
252(1)
Genetic and Environmental Influences
253(2)
Temperament and Child Rearing: The Goodness-of-Fit Model
255(1)
Development of Attachment
256(15)
Bowlby's Ethological Theory
257(1)
Measuring the Security of Attachment
258(2)
Stability of Attachment
260(1)
Cultural Variations
260(1)
Factors That Affect Attachment Security
261(4)
Multiple Attachments
265(4)
Social Issues: Health: Does Child Care in Infancy Threaten Attachment Security and Later Adjustment?
266(2)
Cultural Influence: The Role of Fathers' Involvement in Children's Development
268(1)
From Attachment to Peer Sociability
269(1)
Attachment and Later Development
270(1)
Self-Development
271(5)
Self-Awareness
271(3)
Categorizing the Self
274(1)
Self-Control
274(2)
Summary
276(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
277(3)
Milestones: Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
278(2)
Part IV Early Childhood: Two To Six Years
Chapter 8 Physical Development in Early Childhood
280(26)
A Changing Body and Brain
281(4)
Skeletal Growth
283(1)
Brain Development
283(2)
Influences on Physical Growth and Health
285(11)
Biology And Environment: Childhood Poverty and Brain Development
286(1)
Heredity and Hormones
286(1)
Sleep Habits and Problems
287(2)
Nutrition
289(2)
Infectious Disease
291(1)
Childhood Injuries
292(4)
Social Issues: Health: Otitis Media and Development
293(3)
Motor Development
296(8)
Gross-Motor Development
296(1)
Fine-Motor Development
297(5)
Cultural Influence: Why Are Children from Asian Cultures Advanced in Drawing Skills?
300(2)
Individual Differences in Motor Skills
302(1)
Enhancing Early Childhood Motor Development
302(2)
Summary
304(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
305(1)
Chapter 9 Cognitive Development in Early Childhood
306(48)
Piaget's Theory: The Preoperational Stage
307(11)
Advances in Mental Representation
307(1)
Make-Believe Play
308(1)
Symbol-Real-World Relations
309(2)
Limitations of Preoperational Thought
311(1)
Follow-Up Research on Preoperational Thought
312(4)
Social Issues: Education: Children's Gestures Facilitate Cognitive Change
315(1)
Evaluation of the Preoperational Stage
316(1)
Piaget and Education
317(1)
Vygotsky's Sociocultural Theory
318(5)
Private Speech
318(1)
Social Origins of Early Childhood Cognition
319(2)
Vygotsky and Early Childhood Education
321(1)
Evaluation of Vygotsky's Theory
321(2)
Cultural Influence: Children in Village and Tribal Cultures Observe and Participate in Adult Work
322(1)
Information Processing
323(13)
Executive Function
323(3)
Memory
326(2)
Problem Solving
328(1)
The Young Child's Theory of Mind
329(2)
Early Literacy and Mathematical Development
331(5)
Biology And Environment: Autism and Theory of Mind
332(4)
Individual Differences in Mental Development
336(15)
Early Childhood Intelligence Tests
336(1)
Home Environment and Mental Development
337(1)
Preschool, Kindergarten, and Child Care
337(5)
Social Issues: Education: Teaching Through Guided Play
339(3)
Educational Screen Media
342(2)
Language Development
344(1)
Vocabulary
345(2)
Grammar
347(2)
Conversation
349(1)
Supporting Language Learning in Early Childhood
350(1)
Summary
351(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
353(1)
Chapter 10 Emotional and Social Development in Early Childhood
354(50)
Self-Understanding
355(3)
Foundations of Self-Concept
356(1)
Emergence of Self-Esteem
357(1)
Cultural Influence: Cultural Variations in Personal Storytelling: Implications for Early Self-Concept
357(1)
Emotional Development
358(5)
Understanding Emotion
358(1)
Emotional Self-Regulation
359(1)
Self-Conscious Emotions
360(2)
Empathy and Sympathy
362(1)
Peer Relations
363(6)
Advances in Peer Sociability
363(2)
First Friendships
365(1)
Peer Relations and School Readiness
366(1)
Social Problem Solving
367(1)
Parental Influences on Early Peer Relations
368(1)
Foundations of Morality and Aggression
369(13)
The Psychoanalytic Perspective
370(1)
Social Learning Theory
371(5)
Cultural Influence: Ethnic Differences in the Consequences of Physical Punishment
374(2)
The Cognitive-Developmental Perspective
376(1)
Development of Aggression
377(5)
Gender Typing
382(10)
Gender-Stereotyped Beliefs and Behaviors
382(1)
Biological Influences on Gender Typing
383(1)
Environmental Influences on Gender Typing
384(3)
Gender Identity
387(4)
Biology And Environment: Transgender Children
390(1)
Reducing Gender Stereotyping in Young Children
391(1)
Child Rearing and Emotional and Social Development
392(7)
Styles of Child Rearing
392(2)
What Makes Authoritative Child Rearing Effective?
394(1)
Cultural Variations
394(1)
Child Maltreatment
395(4)
Summary
399(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
401(3)
Milestones: Development in Early Childhood
402(2)
Part V Middle Childhood: Six To Eleven Years
Chapter 11 Physical Development in Middle Childhood
404(26)
Body Growth
405(4)
Worldwide Variations in Body Size
406(1)
Secular Trends in Physical Growth
407(1)
Skeletal Growth
407(1)
Brain Development
408(1)
Health Issues
409(9)
Nutrition
409(1)
Overweight and Obesity
410(4)
Social Issues: Health: Family Stressors and Childhood Obesity
413(1)
Vision and Hearing
414(1)
Bedwetting
415(1)
Illnesses
416(1)
Unintentional Injuries
417(1)
Health Education
418(2)
Motor Development and Play
420(8)
Gross-Motor Development
420(1)
Fine-Motor Development
421(1)
Individual Differences in Motor Skills
422(1)
Games with Rules
423(1)
Adult-Organized Youth Sports
424(1)
Shadows of Our Evolutionary Past
425(1)
Physical Education
426(4)
Social Issues: Education: School Recess-A Time to Play, a Time to Learn
417(11)
Summary
428(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
429(1)
Chapter 12 Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood
430(46)
Piaget's Theory: The Concrete Operational Stage
430(6)
Attainments of the Concrete Operational Stage
430(4)
Limitations of Concrete Operational Thought
434(1)
Follow-Up Research on Concrete Operational Thought
434(1)
Evaluation of the Concrete Operational Stage
435(1)
Information Processing
436(12)
Executive Function
436(4)
Biology And Environment: Children with Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
437(3)
Memory Strategies
440(1)
Knowledge and Memory
441(1)
Culture, Schooling, and Memory Strategies
441(1)
The School-Age Child's Theory of Mind
442(1)
Cognitive Self-Regulation
443(1)
Applications of Information Processing to Academic Learning
444(4)
Individual Differences in Mental Development
448(9)
Defining and Measuring Intelligence
448(1)
Other Efforts to Define Intelligence
449(3)
Explaining Individual and Group Differences in IQ
452(4)
Cultural Influence: The Flynn Effect: Massive Generational Gains in IQ
454(2)
Reducing Cultural Bias in Testing
456(1)
Language Development
457(5)
Vocabulary and Grammar
457(1)
Pragmatics
458(1)
Learning Two Languages
459(3)
Children's Learning in School
462(11)
Educational Philosophies
462(3)
Teacher-Student Interaction
465(1)
Grouping Practices
465(2)
Social Issues: Education: Magnet Schools: Equal Access to High-Quality Education
466(1)
Educational Screen Media
467(1)
Teaching Children with Special Needs
468(3)
How Well-Educated Are U.S. Children?
471(2)
Summary
473(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
475(1)
Chapter 13 Emotional and Social Development in Middle Childhood
476(48)
Self-Understanding
477(8)
Self-Concept
477(1)
Cognitive, Social, and Cultural Influences on Self-Concept
478(1)
Self-Esteem
479(1)
Influences on Self-Esteem
479(6)
Emotional Development
485(2)
Self-Conscious Emotions
485(1)
Emotional Understanding
486(1)
Emotional Self-Regulation
487(1)
Moral Development
487(5)
Moral and Social-Conventional Understanding
488(1)
Understanding Individual Rights
489(1)
Culture and Moral Understanding
489(1)
Understanding Diversity and Inequality
489(3)
Peer Relations
492(6)
Peer Groups
492(1)
Friendships
493(1)
Peer Acceptance
494(4)
Biology And Environment: Bullies and Their Victims
497(1)
Gender Typing
498(3)
Gender-Stereotyped Beliefs
498(2)
Gender Identity and Behavior
500(1)
Family Influences
501(11)
Parent-Child Relationships
502(1)
Siblings
502(1)
Only Children
503(1)
Lesbian and Gay Families
503(1)
Never-Married Parent Families
504(1)
Divorce
505(4)
Blended Families
509(1)
Maternal Employment and Dual-Earner Families
510(2)
Some Common Problems of Development
512(7)
Fears and Anxieties
512(1)
Child Sexual Abuse
513(2)
Cultural Influence: Impact of Ethnic and Political Violence on Children
514(1)
Fostering Resilience in Middle Childhood
515(10)
Social Issues: Health: Children's Eyewitness Testimony
516(3)
Summary
519(2)
Important Terms and Concepts
521(3)
Milestones: Development in Middle Childhood
522(2)
Part V Adolescence: The Transition To Adulthood
Chapter 14 Physical Development in Adolescence
524(36)
Conceptions of Adolescence
525(2)
The Biological Perspective
525(1)
The Social Perspective
526(1)
A Balanced Point of View
526(1)
Puberty: The Physical Transition to Adulthood
527(9)
Hormonal Changes
528(1)
Body Growth
529(1)
Motor Development and Physical Activity
530(1)
Sexual Maturation
531(1)
Individual Differences in Pubertal Growth
532(1)
The Secular Trend
533(1)
Brain Development
534(1)
Changing States of Arousal
535(1)
The Psychological Impact of Pubertal Events
536(5)
Reactions to Pubertal Changes
536(1)
Pubertal Change, Emotion, and Social Behavior
537(1)
Pubertal Timing
538(3)
Cultural Influence: Girls' Early Pubertal Timing and Problem Behaviors: The Role of Culture
540(1)
Health Issues
541(17)
Nutritional Needs
541(1)
Eating Disorders
542(2)
Injuries
544(1)
Sexuality
545(4)
Social Issues: Education: Parents and Teenagers (Don't) Talk About Sex
546(3)
Sexually Transmitted Infections
549(3)
Social Issues: Health: Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Youths: Coming Out to Oneself and Others
550(2)
Adolescent Pregnancy and Parenthood
552(3)
Substance Use and Abuse
555(3)
Summary
558(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
559(1)
Chapter 15 Cognitive Development in Adolescence
560(32)
Piaget's Theory: The Formal Operational Stage
562(3)
Hypothetico-Deductive Reasoning
562(1)
Propositional Thought
562(1)
Follow-Up Research on Formal Operational Thought
563(2)
An Information-Processing View of Adolescent Cognitive Development
565(2)
Scientific Reasoning: Coordinating Theory with Evidence
565(1)
How Scientific Reasoning Develops
566(1)
Consequences of Adolescent Cognitive Changes
567(5)
Self-Consciousness and Self-Focusing
567(2)
Idealism and Criticism
569(1)
Decision Making
569(3)
Social Issues: Health: Adult or Adolescent? Age, Decision Making, and the Law
571(1)
Sex Differences in Mental Abilities
572(4)
Verbal Abilities
572(1)
Mathematical Abilities
573(3)
Biology And Environment: Sex Differences in Spatial Abilities
574(2)
Language Development
576(1)
Vocabulary and Grammar
576(1)
Pragmatics
576(1)
Learning in School
577(8)
School Transitions
577(1)
Academic Achievement
578(4)
Social Issues: Education: Media Multitasking Disrupts Attention and Learning
581(1)
Dropping Out
582(3)
Vocational Development
585(5)
Selecting a Vocation
585(1)
Factors Influencing Vocational Choice
586(2)
Vocational Preparation of Non-College-Bound Adolescents
588(2)
Summary
590(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
591(1)
Chapter 16 Emotional and Social Development in Adolescence
592(44)
Self-Understanding
593(3)
Changes in Self-Concept
593(1)
Changes in Self-Esteem
594(1)
Factors That Affect Self-Esteem
595(1)
Identity
596(5)
Paths to Identity
597(1)
Identity Status and Psychological Well-Being
598(1)
Factors That Affect Identity Development
599(2)
Cultural Influence: Identity Development Among Ethnic Minority Adolescents
600(1)
Moral Development
601(11)
Kohlberg's Theory of Moral Development
602(3)
Are There Sex Differences in Moral Reasoning?
605(1)
Coordinating Moral, Social-Conventional, and Personal Concerns
605(1)
Influences on Moral Reasoning
606(2)
Moral Reasoning and Behavior
608(1)
Religious Involvement and Moral Development
609(2)
Social Issues: Education: Development of Civic Engagement
610(1)
Further Challenges to Kohlberg's Theory
611(1)
The Family
612(3)
Parent-Adolescent Relationships
612(2)
Family Circumstances
614(1)
Siblings
614(1)
Peer Relations
615(8)
Friendships
615(5)
Cliques and Crowds
620(1)
Dating
621(2)
Problems of Development
623(8)
Depression
623(2)
Suicide
625(3)
Delinquency
628(14)
Biology And Environment: Two Routes to Adolescent Delinquency
629(2)
At the Threshold
631(1)
Summary
632(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
633(3)
Milestones: Development in Adolescence
634(2)
Chapter 17 Emerging Adulthood
636
Unprecedented Exploration
638(2)
Cultural Change, Cultural Variation, and Emerging Adulthood
640(2)
Cultural Influence: Is Emerging Adulthood Really a Distinct Stage of Development?
641(1)
Development in Emerging Adulthood
642(9)
Cognitive Changes
642(2)
Emotional and Social Changes
644(7)
Risk and Resilience in Emerging Adulthood
651(3)
Summary
654(1)
Important Terms and Concepts
654
Glossary G-1
References R-1
Name Index NI-1
Subject Index SI-1
Laura E. Berk is a distinguished professor of psychology at Illinois State University, where she has taught child, adolescent, and lifespan development for more than three decades. She received her bachelors degree in psychology from the University of California, Berkeley, and her masters and doctoral degrees in child development and educational psychology from the University of Chicago. She has been a visiting scholar at Cornell University, UCLA, Stanford University, and the University of South Australia.   

Berk has published widely on the effects of school environments on childrens development, the development of private speech, and the role of make-believe play in development. Her empirical studies have attracted the attention of the general public, leading to contributions to Psychology Today and Scientific American. She has been featured on National Public Radios Morning Edition and in Parents Magazine, Wondertime, and Readers Digest.  

Berk has served as a research editor of Young Children, a consulting editor for Early Childhood Research Quarterly, and an associate editor of the Journal of Cognitive Education and Psychology. She has been a frequent contributor to edited volumes, having written the article on social development in The Child: An Encyclopedic Companion and the article on Vygotsky in The Encyclopedia of Cognitive Science. She is coauthor of the chapter on make-believe play and self-regulation in the SAGE Handbook of Play in Early Childhood and the chapter on psychologists writing textbooks in Career Paths in Psychology: Where Your Degree Can Take You, published by the American Psychological Association.  

Berks books include Private Speech: From Social Interaction to Self-Regulation; Scaffolding Childrens Learning: Vygotsky and Early Childhood Education; A Mandate for Playful Learning in Preschool: Presenting the Evidence; and Awakening Childrens Minds: How Parents and Teachers Can Make a Difference. She is author of the best-selling higher education texts Infants, Children, and Adolescents, Infants and Children, Development Through the Lifespan, and Exploring Lifespan Development, now published by SAGE.  

Berk is active in work for childrens causes. She serves on the governing boards of the Illinois Network of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies and of Artolution, an organization devoted to engaging children and youth in community-based public art projects around the world as a means of promoting trauma relief and resilience. She is founder of Illinois Art Station, an initiative that provides educative and self-expressive experiences in the visual arts to children, adolescents, and their families in her community, with a special focus on reaching underserved and at-risk young people. Berk has been designated a YWCA Woman of Distinction for her service in education. She is a fellow of the American Psychological Association, Division 7: Developmental Psychology.