1st Edition

The Routledge International Handbook of Young Children’s Thinking and Understanding

Edited By Sue Robson, Suzanne Flannery Quinn Copyright 2015
    544 Pages 59 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    542 Pages 59 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

     This ground-breaking handbook provides a much-needed, contemporary and authoritative reference text on young children’s thinking. The different perspectives represented in the thirty-nine chapters contribute to a vibrant picture of young children, their ways of thinking and their efforts at understanding, constructing and navigating the world.

    The Routledge International Handbook of Young Children’s Thinking and Understanding brings together commissioned pieces by a range of hand-picked influential, international authors from a variety of disciplines who share a high public profile for their specific developments in the theories of children’s thinking, learning and understanding.

    The handbook is organised into four complementary parts:

    • How can we think about young children’s thinking?: Concepts and contexts

    • Knowing about the brain and knowing about the mind

    • Making sense of the world

    • Documenting and developing children’s thinking

    Supported throughout with relevant research and case studies, this handbook is an international insight into the many ways there are to understand children and childhood paired with the knowledge that young children have a strong, vital, and creative ability to think and to understand, and to create and contend with the world around them.

    Part 1 How can we think about young children’s thinking?: concepts and contexts  1. The Infant’s Creative Vitality, In Projects of Self-Discovery and Shared Meaning: How They Anticipate School, and Make It Fruitful Colwyn Trevarthen and Jonathan Delafield-Butt  2. 'I wonder why our dog has been so naughty?': Thinking differently from the perspective of play Elizabeth Wood  3. How Play Creates the Zone of Proximal Development Pentti Hakkarainen and Milda Brėdikytė  4. Developing Implicit Social Cognition in Early Childhood: Methods, Phenomena, Prospects Dario Cvencek and Andrew N. Meltzoff  5. The organisation of memory and thought: Where the boundaries of now meet the boundaries of me Suzanne Flannery Quinn  6. The development of children’s causal explanations Cristine H. Legare and Jennifer M. Clegg  7. Development of the Use of Agents as Explanations for Events Chelsea A. Cornelius and Jacqueline D. Woolley  8.The clinical interview: The child as partner in conversations versus the child as object of research Niklas Pramling and Roger Säljö  9. Young Children’s Narrative Abilities: Links to Syntax Comprehension and Reading Monique Senechal and Rosemary Lever  10. Cross-language syntactic priming in bilingual children Alina Konradt  Part 2 Knowing about the brain and knowing about the mind  11. The Development of Children’s Understanding of Social Interaction Jeremy Carpendale and Charlie Lewis  12. Executive Function and School Readiness: Identifying Multiple Pathways for School Success Rachel Razza and Kimberley Raymond  13. Children’s Private Speech Danielle L. Mead and Adam Winsler  14. The development of theory of mind and its role in social development in early childhood Vickii B. Jenvey and Emma Newton  15 Mind-mindedness: Forms, features and implications for infant-toddler pedagogy Sheila Degotardi  16. Metacognitive Experiences – Taking Account of Feelings in Early Years Education Shirley Larkin  17. Making Learning Visible: The role of language in the development of metacognition and self-regulation in young children David Whitebread, Deborah Pino-Pasternak and Penny Coltman  18. Language variation within the autism spectrum: causes and consequences Courtenay Frazier Norbury and Alison Sparks  19. Embodied Cognition in Children: Developing Mental Representations for Action Carl Gabbard  20. Sensitive Periods John T. Bruer  Part 3 Making sense of the world  21. Babies, bees, boats and beyond: Children’s working theories in the early years Sally Peters and Keryn Davis  22. Developing an understanding of elementary astronomy – is the truth in the eye of the beholder? Triin Liin  23. Shared understanding among pre-schoolers Annica Löfdahl and Maria Hjalmarsson  24. Pretend play and its integrative role in young children’s thinking Sue Rogers  25. Narrative Thinking: Implications for Black Children’s Social Cognition Stephanie M. Curenton and Nicole Gardner-Neblett  26. Recognising ‘The Sacred Spark of Wonder’ – Scribbling and Related Talk as Evidence of How Young Children’s Thinking May be Identified Elizabeth Coates and Andrew Coates  27. Musical thinking in the early years Beatriz Ilari  28. Developing Young Children’s Mathematical Thinking and Understanding Douglas H. Clements and Julie Sarama  29. Young Children Thinking and Learning With and About Digital Technologies Christine Stephen  30. Technological design and children’s perspectives Cecilia Wallerstedt, Ingrid Pramling Samuelsson and Niklas Pramling  Part 4 Documenting and developing children’s thinking  31. Protecting and Enhancing Children's Learning Power: A New Perspective on Early Childhood Development and Education Guy Claxton  32. Thinking within the wellbeing wheel Rosemary Roberts  33. How young children think and learn through exploring schemas Cath Arnold  34 The role of sustained shared thinking, play and metacognition in young children’s learning Iram Siraj and Rehana Asani  35. Possibility Thinking: from what is to what might be Anna Craft  36. Whose activity is it?: The role of child- and adult-initiated activity in young children’s creative thinking Sue Robson  37. Young Children Drawing: providing a supportive environment Kathy Ring  38. Already equal and able to speak: Practising philosophical enquiry with young children Joanna Haynes  39. What preschool is like: Children's interviews, photographs, and picture selections from two different contexts Darlene DeMarie, Jenna McLain, Laura Mockensturm and Colleen Stevenson

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Biography

    Sue Robson is Principal Lecturer and Subject Leader for Early Childhood Studies at Froebel College, University of Roehampton, UK.

    Suzanne Flannery Quinn is a Senior Lecturer in Early Childhood Studies at Froebel College, University of Roehampton, UK.