Development Psychology Is An Important Branch Of Psychology. The Developmental History Of Individual Dates, Not From Birth, But From The Instant The Egg Cell Is Fertilized. Though Birth Is A Major Event In The History Of An Individual, It Has Been Preceded By A Period Of Extremely Rapid Development During Which The Basic Structural And Functional Characteristics Of The Human Individual Already Have Appeared. The Newborn Infant Is Highly Organised Biological Unit Fully Capable Of Making A Number Of Elaborate Reactions. This Book Is Designed To Meet The Requirement Of Students And Teachers For Background And Fundamental Information On Developmental Psychology.Major Topics Dealt In This Book Are: The Teaching Of Psychology; Hereditary And Prenatal Influences; Early Physical Growth And Development; Physical Development During Adolescence; Intellectual Development; Adolescence Perception Towards The Future; A Framework For Evaluation; Summary And Integration; The Context Of Second Language Evaluation; Etc.
Development is as much a process of acquiring culture as it is of biological growth. This book reviews the history of developmental psychology with respect to both its nature and the effects of transmission of culture.
Development is as much a process of acquiring culture as it is of biological growth.; This book reviews the history of developmental psychology with respect to both its nature and the effects of transmission of culture.
The Psychology and Education of the Young: A Guide to the Principles of Development, Learning and Assessment
Principles of Development
Using Basic Personality Research to Inform the Personality Disorders will present the work of prominent thinkers at the intersections of social, personality, developmental, and clinical psychology to consider theoretical and empirical ...
This book provides a long overdue conceptual framework for integrating evidence-based principles of school psychology leadership across NASP (National Association of School Psychologists) domains of practice.
hint that this is so is provided in a review of John Stuart Mill's The Subjection of Women (1869), which James wrote at the age of twentyseven. As Charlene Haddock Seigfried (1996) has argued, James's refusal to accept Mill's argument ...
The implication of Gibson's theory for infancy is that perceptual systems have evolved to put the infant in direct contact with the real world from the outset. The theoretical implication is that babies may be able to perceive the world ...
For today's busy student, we've created a new line of highly portable books at affordable prices. Each title in the Books a la Carte Plus program features the exact same...
Psychology 2e