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915 Pages·2015·8.971 MB·English
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HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE HANDBOOK OF CHILD PSYCHOLOGY AND DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE SeventhEdition Volume 1 Theory and Method VolumeEditors WILLIS F. OVERTON PETER C. M. MOLENAAR Editor-in-Chief RICHARD M. LERNER Coverdesign:Wiley Thisbookisprintedonacid-freepaper. Copyright©2015byJohnWiley&Sons,Inc.Allrightsreserved. PublishedbyJohnWiley&Sons,Inc.,Hoboken,NewJersey. PublishedsimultaneouslyinCanada. 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LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData: Handbookofchildpsychology Handbookofchildpsychologyanddevelopmentalscience/RichardM.Lerner,editor-in-chief.—Seventhedition. 1onlineresource. RevisionofHandbookofchildpsychology. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. DescriptionbasedonprintversionrecordandCIPdataprovidedbypublisher;resourcenotviewed. ISBN978-1-118-13677-5(Vol.1,cloth) ISBN978-1-118-13685-0(set,cloth)  ISBN978-1-118-95297-9(pdf) ISBN978-1-118-95296-2(epub) 1.Childpsychology. I.Lerner,RichardM.,editorofcompilation. II.Title. BF721 155.4—dc23 2014033068 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents ForewordtotheHandbookofChildPsychologyandDevelopmentalScience,SeventhEdition vii Preface xv Volume1Preface xxiii Contributors xxv 1 CONCEPTS,THEORY,ANDMETHODINDEVELOPMENTALSCIENCE: AVIEWOFTHEISSUES 1 WillisF.OvertonandPeterC.M.Molenaar 2 PROCESSES,RELATIONS,ANDRELATIONAL-DEVELOPMENTAL-SYSTEMS 9 WillisF.Overton 3 DYNAMICSYSTEMSINDEVELOPMENTALSCIENCE 63 DavidC.Witherington 4 DYNAMICDEVELOPMENTOFTHINKING,FEELING,ANDACTING 113 MichaelF.MascoloandKurtW.Fischer 5 BIOLOGY,DEVELOPMENT,ANDHUMANSYSTEMS 162 RobertLickliterandHunterHoneycutt 6 ETHOLOGYANDHUMANDEVELOPMENT 208 PatrickBateson 7 NEUROSCIENCE,EMBODIMENT,ANDDEVELOPMENT 244 PeterJ.Marshall 8 THEDEVELOPMENTOFAGENCY 284 BryanW.Sokol,StuartI.Hammond,JanetKuebli,andLeahSweetman v vi Contents 9 DIALECTICALMODELSOFSOCIALIZATION 323 LeonKuczynskiandJanDeMol 10 HUMANDEVELOPMENTANDCULTURE 369 JayanthiMistryandRanjanaDutta 11 EMOTIONALDEVELOPMENTANDCONSCIOUSNESS 407 MichaelLewis 12 DEVELOPMENTOFPERSONALANDCULTURALIDENTITIES 452 MichaelJ.ChandlerandWilliamL.Dunlop 13 MORALDEVELOPMENT 484 ElliotTuriel 14 DEVELOPMENTANDSELF-REGULATION 523 MeganM.McClelland,G.JohnGeldhof,ClaireE.Cameron,andShannonB.Wanless 15 DEVELOPMENTALPSYCHOPATHOLOGY 566 E.MarkCummingsandKristinValentino 16 POSITIVEYOUTHDEVELOPMENTAND RELATIONAL-DEVELOPMENTAL-SYSTEMS 607 RichardM.Lerner,JacquelineV.Lerner,EdmondP.Bowers,andG.JohnGeldhof 17 SYSTEMSMETHODSFORDEVELOPMENTALRESEARCH 652 PeterC.M.MolenaarandJohnR.Nesselroade 18 NEUROSCIENTIFICMETHODSWITHCHILDREN 683 MichelledeHaan 19 MIXEDMETHODSINDEVELOPMENTALSCIENCE 713 PatrickH.TolanandNancyL.Deutsch 20 GROWTHCURVEMODELINGANDLONGITUDINALFACTORANALYSIS 758 NilamRamandKevinJ.Grimm 21 PERSON-ORIENTEDMETHODOLOGICALAPPROACHES 789 AlexandervonEye,LarsR.Bergman,andChueh-AnHsieh AuthorIndex 843 SubjectIndex 869 Foreword to the Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science, Seventh Edition WILLIAMDAMON THEHANDBOOK’SDEVELOPINGTRADITION indicator and as a generator, a pool of received findings, andasourceforgeneratingnewinsight. Development is one of life’s optimistic ideas. It implies Itisimpossibletoimaginewhatthefieldwouldlooklike not just change but improvement, progress, forward if Carl Murchison had not assembled a ground-breaking movement, and some sense of positive direction. What collection of essays on the then-almost-unknown topic of constitutes improvement in any human capacity is an childstudyinhisfirstHandbookofChildPsychology.That open, important, and fascinating question requiring astute was1931,atthedawnofascholarlyhistorythat,likeevery theoretical analysis and sound empirical study. So, too, developmentalnarrative,hasproceededwithacombination are questions of what accounts for improvement; what of continuity and change. What does this history tell us enhancesit;andwhatpreventsitwhenitfailstooccur.One about where the field of developmental science has been, ofthelandmarkachievementsofthiseditionoftheHand- whatithaslearned,andwhereitisgoing?Whatdoesittell book of Child Psychology and Developmental Science is usaboutwhat’schangedandwhathasremainedthesamein that a full selection of top scholars in the field of human thequestionsthathavebeenasked,inthemethodsused,and development have offered us state-of-the-science answers in the theoretical ideas that have been advanced to under- totheseessentialquestions. standhumandevelopment? Compoundingtheinterestofthisedition,theconceptof development applies to scholarly fields as well as to indi- TheFirstTwoEditions viduals,andtheHandbook’sdistinguishedhistory,fromits Carl Murchison was a star scholar/impresario who edited inception more than 80 years ago to the present edition, the Psychological Register, founded important psycho- richly reveals the development of a field. Within the field logical journals, and wrote books on social psychology, ofhumandevelopment,theHandbook hashadalongand politics,andthecriminalmind.Hecompiledanassortment notable tradition as the field’s leading beacon, organizer, of handbooks, psychology texts, and autobiographies of and encyclopedia of what’s known. This latest Handbook renowned psychologists, and even ventured a book on edition,overflowingwithinsightsandinformationthatgo psychic phenomena (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Harry wellbeyondthescientificknowledgeavailableinprevious Houdiniwereamongthecontributors).Murchison’sinitial editions, is proof of the substantial progress made by the Handbook of Child Psychology was published by a small fieldofhumandevelopmentduringitsstill-short(byschol- universitypress(ClarkUniversity)in1931,whenthefield arlystandards)history. itselfwasstillinitsinfancy.Murchisonwrote: Indeed, the history of developmental science has been inextricablyintertwinedwiththehistoryoftheHandbook. Experimentalpsychologyhashadamucholderscientificand Like many influential encyclopedias, the Handbook influ- academic status [than child psychology], but at the present encesthefielditreportson.Scholars—especiallyyounger timeitisprobablethatmuchlessmoneyisbeingspentforpure ones—look to it to guide their own work. It serves as an researchinthefieldofexperimentalpsychologythanisbeing vii viii ForewordtotheHandbookofChildPsychologyandDevelopmentalScience,SeventhEdition spentinthefieldofchildpsychology.Inspiteofthisobvious wrote on “Environmental Forces in Child Behavior and fact,manyexperimentalpsychologistscontinuetolookupon Development”—both would gain worldwide renown in thefieldofchildpsychologyasaproperfieldofresearchfor comingyears. women and for men whose experimental masculinity is not The Americans that Murchison chose were equally of the maximum. This attitude of patronage is based almost notable. Arnold Gesell wrote a nativistic account of his entirelyuponablissfulignoranceofwhatisgoingoninthe twin studies—an enterprise that remains familiar to us tremendouslyvirilefieldofchildbehavior.(Murchison,1931, today—andStanford’sLewisTermanwroteacomprehen- p.ix) siveaccountofeverythingknownaboutthe“giftedchild.” Murchison’s masculine allusion is from another era; it Harold Jones described the developmental effects of birth might supply good material for a social history of gender order,MaryCoverJoneswroteaboutchildren’semotions, stereotyping. That aside, Murchison was prescient in the Florence Goodenough wrote about children’s drawings, task that he undertook and the way that he went about and Dorothea McCarthy wrote about language devel- it. At the time this passage was written, developmental opment. Vernon Jones’s chapter on “children’s morals” psychology was known only in Europe and in a few focused on the growth of character, a notion that was forward-looking U.S. labs and universities. Nevertheless, to become mostly lost to the field during the cognitive- Murchison predicted the field’s impending ascent: “The developmental revolution, but that has reemerged in the timeisnotfardistant,ifitisnotalreadyhere,whennearly past decade as a primary concern in the study of moral allcompetentpsychologistswillrecognizethatone-halfof development. the whole field of psychology is involved in the problem Murchison’s vision of child psychology included an of how the infant becomes an adult psychologically” examinationofculturaldifferencesaswell.HisHandbook (Murchison,1931,p.x). presented to the scholarly world a young anthropologist For this first 1931 Handbook, Murchison looked to namedMargaretMead,justbackfromhertoursofSamoa Europe and to a handful of American research centers andNewGuinea. Inthisearlyessay,Meadwrotethather for child study—most prominently, Iowa, Minnesota, motivation in traveling to the South Seas was to discredit University of California at Berkeley, Columbia, Stanford, the claims that Piaget, Lévy-Bruhl, and other “structural- Yale, and Clark—many of which were at the time called ists” had made regarding what they called animism in field stations. Murchison’s Europeans included a young young children’s thinking. (Interestingly, about a third “genetic epistemologist” named Jean Piaget, who, in an of Piaget’s chapter in the same volume was dedicated to essay on “Children’s Philosophies,” cited data from his showinghowGenevanchildrentookyearstooutgrowtheir interviewswith60Genevanchildrenbetweentheagesof4 animism.) Mead reported data that she called “amazing”: and12years.Piaget’schapterwouldprovideU.S.readers “In not one of the 32,000 drawings (by young ‘primi- with an introduction to his soon-to-be seminal research tive’ children) was there a single case of personalization program on children’s conceptions of the world. Another of animals, material phenomena, or inanimate objects” European,CharlotteBühler,wroteachapteronyoungchil- (Mead, 1931, p. 400). Mead parlayed these data into a dren’s social behavior. In her chapter, which still is fresh tough-mindedcritiqueofWesternpsychology’sethnocen- today,Bühlerdescribedintricateplayandcommunication trism,makingthepointthatanimismandotherbeliefsare patterns among toddlers—patterns that developmental morelikelytobeculturallyinducedthanintrinsictoearly scientistswouldnotrediscoveruntilthelate1970s.Bühler cognitivedevelopment.Thisishardlyanunfamiliartheme also anticipated critiques of Piaget that were to be again in contemporary psychology. Mead offered a research launchedduringthesociolinguisticsheydayofthe1970s: guide for developmental fieldworkers instrange cultures, completewithmethodologicalandpracticaladvice,suchas Piaget,inhisstudiesonchildren’stalkandreasoning,empha- thefollowing:(1)translatequestionsintonativelinguistic sizesthattheirtalkismuchmoreegocentricthansocial...that categories; (2) do not do controlled experiments; (3) do childrenfromthreetosevenyearsaccompanyalltheirmanip- not try to do research that requires knowing the ages of ulationswithtalkwhichactuallyisnotsomuchintercourseas subjects, which are usually unknowable; and (4) live next monologue...[but]thespecialrelationshipofthechildtoeach doortothechildrenwhomyouarestudying. ofthedifferentmembersofthehouseholdisdistinctlyreflected Despite the imposing roster of authors that Murchison intherespectiveconversations.(Bühler,1931,p.138) hadassembledforthisoriginalHandbookofChildPsychol- Other Europeans include Anna Freud, who wrote on ogy,hisachievementdidnotsatisfyhimforlong.Barely2 “The Psychoanalysis of the Child,” and Kurt Lewin, who yearslater,Murchisonputoutasecondedition,ofwhichhe

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