The Childs Discovery of the Mind (The Developing Child)

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$13.95 - $53.00
UPC:
9780674116429
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
1994-01-10
Author:
Janet Wilde Astington
Language:
english

Product Overview

Three-year old Emily greets her grandfather at the front door: Were having a surprise party for your birthday! And its a secret! We may smile at incidents like these, but they illustrate the beginning of an important transition in childrens livestheir development of a theory of mind. Emily certainly has some sense of her grandfathers feelings, but she clearly doesnt understand much about what he knows, and surpriseslike secrets, tricks, and ties all depend on understanding and manipulating what others think and know.
Jean Piaget investigated childrens discovery of the mind in the 1920s and concluded that they had little understanding before the age of six. But over the last twenty years, researchers have begun to challenge his methods and revise his conclusions. In The Childs Discovery of the Mind, Janet Astington surveys this lively area of research in developmental psychology. Sometime between the ages of two and five, children begin to have insights into their own mental life and those of others. They begin to understand mental representationthat there is a difference between thoughts in the mind and things in the world, between thinking about eating a cookie and eating a cookie. This breakthrough reflects their emerging capacity to infer other peoples thoughts, wants, feelings, and perceptions from words and actions. They come to understand why people act the way they do and can predict how they will act in the future, so that by the age of five, they are knowing participants in social interaction. Astington highlights how crucial childrens discovery of the mind is in their social and intellectual development by including a chapter on autistic children, who fail to make this breakthrough.
Mind is a cultural construct that children discover as they acquire the language and social practices of their culture, enabling them to make sense of the world. Astington provides a valuable overview of current research and of the consequences of this discovery for intellectual and social development.

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