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How Children Develop Social Understanding

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ISBN: 978-1-405-10550-7

March 2006

Wiley-Blackwell

336 pages

Description
This book provides a critical review of research into how children come to understand the social world, an area often known as children's "theories of mind".
  • Takes an integrated approach to the development of children's social understanding
  • Brings out the connections between mental state understanding and children's understanding of language, social skills, morality and emotions.
    Sets research within a historical and theoretical context
  • Contributes unique insights and perspectives, particularly in its discussions of Piaget and Vygotsky, and in its Wittgensteinian focus on the role of language.
About the Author
Jeremy Carpendale is Associate Professor of Psychology at Simon Fraser University, Canada.

Charlie Lewis is Professor of Family and Developmental Psychology at Lancaster University, UK.

Features

  • A critical review of research into how children come to understand the social world.
  • Addresses a broad range of issues in children’s "theories of mind".
  • Takes an integrated approach to the development of children’s social understanding.
  • Brings out the connections between mental state understanding and children’s understanding of language, social skills, morality and emotions.
  • Sets research within a historical and theoretical context.
  • Contributes unique insights and perspectives, particularly in its discussions of Piaget and Vygotsky, and in its Wittgensteinian focus on the role of language.