Children and Their Development / Edition 7

Children and Their Development / Edition 7

by Robert V. Kail
ISBN-10:
0133595684
ISBN-13:
9780133595680
Pub. Date:
11/10/2014
Publisher:
Pearson
ISBN-10:
0133595684
ISBN-13:
9780133595680
Pub. Date:
11/10/2014
Publisher:
Pearson
Children and Their Development / Edition 7

Children and Their Development / Edition 7

by Robert V. Kail
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Overview

Demonstrates how research translates into practice.

Reflecting the way scientists conduct research on children’s development, Children and Their Development is organized topically, showing readers the way researchers actually study the discipline. The book’s unique and effective pedagogy focuses on practice through its accessible writing, modular format, and application-based features. It explores the theory, research, and application of modern child development from conception through adolescence. Author Robert V. Kail is a well-known and respected research in the field of child development.

Children and Their Development can be sold as a standalone, or packaged with Pearson’s latest technologies: MyPsychLab.

MyPsychLab is an integral part of the Kail program. Engaging activities and assessment provide a teaching and learning system that help students become scientific thinkers. With MyPsychLab, students can watch videos on psychological research and participate in virtual classic experiments.

Teaching and Learning Experience

This program will provide a better teaching and learning experience- for you and your students. It:

  • Personalized Learning with MyPsychLab: MyPsychLab delivers proven results in helping students succeed, provides engaging experiences that personalize learning, and comes from a trusted partner with educational expertise and a deep commitment to helping students and instructors achieve their goals.
  • Engaging Pedagogically-Driven Design: An effective pedagogy promotes students’ learning. For examples, Learning Objectives in each chapter correspond to chapter summary materials.
  • Explore Research and Theory: Fundamental developmental issues are used as a foundation for students’ learning of research and theory in child development. Student learn how developmental science draws on many complementary research methods, each of which contributes uniquely to scientific progress.
  • Understand Culture and Development: Students are shown how the findings from child-development research can improve children’s lives.
  • Support Instructors: Video embedded PowerPoints, MyTest, clicker questions, and an instructor’s manual provide instructors with extensive materials to supplement the text.

Note: this is the standalone book, if you want the book/access card order the ISBN below:

0134081501 / 9780134081502 Children and Their Development Plus NEW MyPsychLab with Pearson eText -- Access Card Package

Package consists of:

0133595684 / 9780133595680 Children and Their Development

0205206514 / 9780205206513 NEW MyPsychLab with Pearson eText -- Valuepack Access Card


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780133595680
Publisher: Pearson
Publication date: 11/10/2014
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 592
Product dimensions: 8.60(w) x 11.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Robert V. Kail is Distinguished Professor of Psychological Sciences at Purdue University. His undergraduate degree is from Ohio Wesleyan University, and his Ph.D. is from the University of Michigan. Kail is editor of Child Development Perspectives and the editor emeritus of Psychological Science. He received the McCandless Young Scientist Award from the American Psychological Association, was named the Distinguished Sesquicentennial Alumnus in Psychology by Ohio Wesleyan University, and is a fellow of the Association for Psychological Science. He has also written Scientific Writing for Psychology: Lessons in Clarity and Style. His research focuses on cognitive development during childhood and adolescence. Away from the office, he enjoys photography and working out. His Web site is: http://www2.psych.purdue.edu/~rk/home.html

Read an Excerpt

PREFACE:

PREFACE

When I first taught child development in 1975, I used a brand new textbook written by Mavis Hetherington and Ross Parke. Their book was among the first of the "modern" topically organized child development texts and provided students with an excellent overview of research in child development. In the twenty-five years since, researchers have made incredible progress in understanding children's development (and I'm proud to have been among those contributing). Unfortunately, authors have been overly enthusiastic about the emerging knowledge and textbooks have grown ever larger as more and more complex findings are added. As texts grew, my students complained to me that, with so much information in the book, they had difficulty separating the wheat from the chaff (an appropriate metaphor since I was teaching in the Midwestern United States).

Greater length and complexity was only part of the problem. Most textbook authors avoided effective pedagogy like the plague. They (along with many instructors) seemed to believe that students should be able to learn on their own, without relying on learning aids in the text. As a consequence, although child development texts still presented a valuable overview of the field, they were often ineffective tools for student learning.

In 1993, it seemed to me that a new book was needed—one that would meet instructors' needs for a solid, research-oriented overview of the field but would also emphasize effective pedagogy designed to enhance students' learning. Children and Their Development, first published in 1998, is my effort to meet these goals. This book is traditional in its focuson research. The organization, too, is familiar: I begin with theories and methods, move to biological bases of child development, then describe cognitive development and, later, social-emotional development. Where this book begins to differ from the competition is length: it has about 100 fewer pages than most competing texts. To make the truly important child development work stand out for students, I have deliberately omitted some topics and described others relatively briefly.

But the focus on a student-friendly book is really evident in the way I've structured the chapters to help students learn about child development. I describe my approach in detail in Module 1.1, so I'll simply sketch it here. Each chapter consists of three or four modules that provide a clear and well-defined organization to the chapter. Each module begins with a set of learning objectives and a vignette that introduces the topic to be covered. Within each module, all figures, tables, and photos are fully integrated, eliminating the need for students to search for a graphic. Similarly, boxlike feature material that is set off in other textbooks is fully integrated with the main text and identified by a distinctive icon. Each module ends with several questions designed to help students check their understanding of the major ideas in the module.

The end of each chapter includes several additional study aids. "In Perspective" recaps each module, then links the ideas in the chapter to a major developmental theme. "See for Yourself" suggests activities that allow students to observe topics in child development firsthand. "Resources" includes books and Web sites where students can learn more about child development. "Key Terms" is a list of all of the important terms that appeared in the chapter. The "Summary" is organized by module and the primary headings within each module; it reviews the entire chapter.

Each module includes at least one feature where selected issues are highlighted. The four different kinds of features are "Focus on Research," "Making Children's Lives Better," "Cultural Influences;" and "Real Children:" The features are described in Module 1.1, but "Focus on Research" warrants extra attention here. Most textbooks describe research methods early on, then ignore them for the rest of the book. Children and Their Development takes a different and unique approach. In Module 1.3, I portray child development research as a dynamic process in which scientists make a series of decisions as they plan their work. In the process, they create a study that has both strengths and weaknesses. Each of the remaining chapters of the book contains a "Focus on Research" feature that illustrates this process by showing—in a question-and-answer format—the different decisions that investigators made in designing a particular study. I trace each of the steps and explain the decisions that were made. Then the results are shown—usually with an annotated figure so that students can learn how to interpret graphs—and the investigators' conclusions are described. Thus, the research methods that are introduced in Chapter 1 reappear in every chapter, in a setting that makes research come alive as a set of decisions that often involve compromises. (In my classes, I encourage students to think how the "Focus on Research" studies could be improved with different methods. At the same time, I ask them why the investigators might have resorted to the methods they did.)

The "Focus on Research" and other pedagogical elements are effective; students using the first edition commented that the book is easy to read and presents complex topics in an understandable way. Reading Children and Their Development, students come to appreciate both what we know about children's development and the research process that produced this knowledge.

Changes to the Second Edition

In writing the second edition, I have included hundreds of new citations to research published in the past few years. I have also made significant additions to every chapter. Of particular note is the following new material:

  • Chapter 1 includes information on how to study and explains the rationale for the book's organization.
  • Chapter 2 has material on methods from molecular genetics and two new major sections: one on pathways from genes to behavior and another on nonshared environmental influences.
  • Chapter 3 contains a new section on postpartum depression and information about the national "Back to Sleep" campaign to combat SIDS.
  • Chapter 4 now has information on sexual orientation, bulimia, and brain plasticity.
  • Chapter 5 includes new material on object perception and the development of attention.
  • Chapter 6 is reorganized to include two new modules, one that evaluates Piaget's theory and another that describes new approaches that complement Piaget's work. The latter module has a new section on "the child as a theorist."
  • Chapter 7 now describes inhibitory processes, autobiographical memory, infantile amnesia, and writing.
  • Chapter 8 contains new material on social intelligence and dynamic approaches to intelligence testing.
  • Chapter 9 now begins with a new section defining different aspects of language and has an expanded section on fast mapping of meaning to words.
  • Chapter 10 describes research on emotion regulation and work on adults' representations of their attachments with their own parents.
  • Chapter 11 has a new "Focus on Research" feature on identity in children of transracial adoptions and a new section on the consequences of low self-esteem.
  • Chapter 12 includes material that relates temperament to self-control, information on Kohlberg's Just Communities, and a new section dealing with victims of aggression.
  • Chapter 13 describes social class and race differences in gender stereotypes and also includes information on gender differences in physical and relational aggression.
  • Chapter 14 begins with a new section devoted to a systems approach to the study of the family and contains an expanded section on parental behaviors (with new material on direct instruction and coaching).
  • Chapter 15 has much expanded coverage of peer relations, material on cross-sex friendships and factors that contribute to long-lasting friendships, a new section about TV as a medium (in addition to material about TV content), a largely new section on schools (organized around factors that make schools effective), and brand new material about adolescents' part-time employment.

Support Materials

Children and Their Development is accompanied by a superb set of materials. They include the following:

For Instructors

Instructor's Resource Manual, prepared by Dale Grubb of Baldwin Wallace College. This IRM contains a wealth of material for new and experienced instructors alike. Each chapter includes chapter organizers, learning objectives, a detailed lecture outline with suggestions, classroom demonstrations and learning activities, critical thinking questions and exercises, assignment ideas, journal exercises, suggested films and videos, and classroom handouts.

Test Item File, prepared by Terri T. Combs of Indiana University-Purdue University. This test bank contains over 3,000 multiple choice, true/false, short-answer and essay questions that test factual, applied, and conceptual knowledge.

Prentice Hall Test Manager. One of the best-selling test-generating software programs on the market, Test Manager is available in Windows and Macintosh formats and contains a Gradebook, Online Network Testing, and many tools to help you edit and create tests. The program comes with full Technical Support and telephone "Request a Test" service.

Prentice Hall's Color Transparencies for Developmental Psychology. Designed in large-type format for lecture settings, these full color overhead transparencies add visual appeal to your lectures by augmenting the visuals in the text with a variety of new illustrations.

PowerPoint Slides and Online Graphics Archive. Available in the Faculty Module of the Companion Website at www.prenhall.com/kail, each chapter's art has been digitized and is available for download into any presentation software. PowerPoint lectures for each chapter are also available for download.

Prentice Hall Video Libraries. Prentice Hall has assembled a superior collection of video materials which range from short lecture launchers to full-length detailed features for use in the Developmental Psychology course. The videos below are available to qualified adopters.

  • Films for the Humanities and Sciences. A wealth of videos from the extensive library of Films for the Humanities and Sciences, on a variety of topics in developmental psychology, are available to qualified adopters. Contact your local Prentice Hall representative for a list of videos.
  • ABC News Videos for Developmental Psychology. These videos consist of segments from ABC Nightly News with Peter Jennings, Nightline, 20/20, Prime Time Live, and The Health Show.

Media Support for Children and Their Development, Second Edition. Both instructors and students will find many useful resources in the media program to accompany this text.

www.prenhall.com/kail Companion Website. Prepared by Larry Jenkins of Tidewater Community College, this free online Study Guide allows students to review each chapter's material, take practice tests, research topics for course projects, and more. Professors should visit the Faculty Module of the site to download electronic versions of the Instructor's Resource Manual, Powerpoint Slides for each chapter, and an Online Graphics Archive.

On-Line Course Management. For professors interested in using the Internet and on-line course management in their courses, Prentice Hall offers fully customizable on-line courses in WebCT, B1ackBoard, and eCollege to accompany this textbook. Contact your local Prentice Hall representative or visit www.prenhall.com/demo for more information.

For Students

Study Guide, written by Dea DeWolf This attractive, highly visual Study Guide reinforces the key pedagogical features of the textbook. The author incorporates both illustrations and design elements from the text. Each of the fifteen chapters follows the same modular organization as the text. Each of the modules in every chapter includes learning objectives, matching exercises to review key theories, definitions, terms and concepts, practice true/false questions, cumulative fill-in-the blank chapter summaries, multiple choice questions, and essay questions.

Psychology on the Internet. This "hands-on" Internet tutorial features Web sites related to psychology and general information about using the Internet for research. This supplement is available free when packaged with the text and helps students capitalize on all the resources that the World Wide Web has to offer.

Acknowledgments

Textbook authors do not produce books on their own. I want to thank the many reviewers who generously gave their time and effort to help sharpen my thinking about child development and shape the development of this text. I am especially grateful to the following people who reviewed various aspects of the manuscript: Jack Meacham, University of Buffalo; Lesa Rae Vartanian, Purdue University; Adam Winsler, George Mason University; Tony Simon, Furman University; K. Robert Bridges, Pennsylvania State University; Frank Manis, University of Southern California; Marianne Taylor, University of Puget Sound; Karen Rudolph, University of Illinois; Cynthia Stifter, Pennsylvania State University; James Black, University of Illinois; Laura Hess, Purdue University; Lisa Oakes, University of Iowa; Jacquelyn Mice, Auburn University; Amy Weiss, University of Iowa; Brad Pillow, Northern Illinois University; Janet Dipietro, Johns Hopkins University; Lee Ann Thompson, Case Western Reserve University; Gary Ladd, University of Illinois. Thank you, as well, to those who reviewed the first edition of the manuscript: Susan McClure, Westmoreland County Community College; Rebecca Bigler, University of Texas-Austin; Kathleen Fox, Salisbury State University; Rick Medlin, Stetson University; Joan Cook, County College of Morris; Elizabeth Lemerise, Western Kentucky University; Jim Dannemiller, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Mark B. Alcorn, University of Northern Colorado; Vernon C. Hall, Syracuse University; and May X. Wang, Metropolitan State College of Denver. Without their thoughtful comments, this book would be less complete, less accurate, and less interesting.

I also owe a debt of thanks to many people who helped take this project from a first draft to a bound book. Jennifer Gilliland has supported this book enthusiastically and served as a savvy guide to its revision. As she did for the first edition, Harriett Prentiss labored long to make my writing clear and inviting. Laura Curry helped to compile the many new references that were added to this edition. Anne Demarinis, under the direction of Carole Anson, designed a book that is both beautiful and functional. Julie Sullivan skillfully orchestrated the many activities that were involved in actually producing the book. Kathy Ringrose found the marvelous photographs that appear throughout the book. To all these people, many, many thanks.

—Robert V. Kail

Table of Contents

In This Section:

I) Brief Table of Contents

II)Detailed Table of Contents


I) Brief Table of Contents

Chapter 1. The Science of Child Development

Chapter 2. Genetic Bases of Child Development

Chapter 3. Prenatal Development, Birth, and the Newborn

Chapter 4. Growth and Health

Chapter 5. Perceptual and Motor Development

Chapter 6. Theories of Cognitive Development

Chapter 7. Cognitive Processes and Academic Skills

Chapter 8. Intelligence and Individual Differences in Cognition

Chapter 9. Language and Communication

Chapter 10. Emotional Development

Chapter 11. Understanding Self and Others

Chapter 12. Moral Understanding and Behavior

Chapter 13. Gender and Development

Chapter 14. Family Relationships

Chapter 15. Influences Beyond the Family


II) Detailed Table of Contents

Chapter 1. The Science of Child Development

1.1 Setting The Stage

1.2 Foundational Theories Of Child Development

1.3 Themes In Child-Development Research

1.4 Doing Child-Development Research

Chapter 2. Genetic Bases of Child Development

2.1 Mechanisms Of Heredity

2.2 Heredity, Environment, And Development

Chapter 3. Prenatal Development, Birth, and the Newborn

3.1 From Conception To Birth

3.2 Influences On Prenatal Development

3.3 Happy Birthday!

3.4 The Newborn

Chapter 4. Growth and Health

4.1 Physical Growth

4.2 Challenges To Healthy Growth

4.3 The Developing Nervous System

Chapter 5. Perceptual and Motor Development

5.1 Basic Sensory And Perceptual Processes

5.2 Complex Perceptual And Attentional Processes

5.3 Motor Development

Chapter 6. Theories of Cognitive Development

6.1 Setting The Stage: Piaget’s Theory

6.2 Modern Theories Of Cognitive Development

6.3 Understanding In Core Domains

Chapter 7. Cognitive Processes and Academic Skills

7.1 Memory

7.2 Problem Solving

7.3 Academic Skills

Chapter 8. Intelligence and Individual Differences in Cognition

8.1 What Is Intelligence?

8.2 Measuring Intelligence

8.3 Special Children, Special Needs

Chapter 9. Language and Communication

9.1 The Road To Speech

9.2 Learning The Meanings Of Words

9.3 Speaking In Sentences

9.4 Using Language To Communicate

Chapter 10. Emotional Development

10.1 Emerging Emotions

10.2 Temperament

10.3 Attachment

Chapter 11. Understanding Self and Others

11.1 Who Am I? Self-Concept

11.2 Self-Esteem

11.3 Understanding Others

Chapter 12. Moral Understanding and Behavior

12.1 Self-Control

12.2 Reasoning About Moral Issues

12.3 Helping Others

12.4 Aggression

Chapter 13. Gender and Development

13.1 Gender Stereotypes

13.2 Differences Related To Gender

13.3 Gender Identity

13.4 Gender Roles In Transition

Chapter 14. Family Relationships

14.1 Parenting

14.2 The Changing Family

14.3 Brothers And Sisters

14.4 Maltreatment: Parent–Child Relationships Gone Awry

Chapter 15. Influences Beyond the Family

15.1 Peers

15.2 Electronic Media

15.3 Institutional Influences

Preface

PREFACE:

PREFACE

When I first taught child development in 1975, I used a brand new textbook written by Mavis Hetherington and Ross Parke. Their book was among the first of the "modern" topically organized child development texts and provided students with an excellent overview of research in child development. In the twenty-five years since, researchers have made incredible progress in understanding children's development (and I'm proud to have been among those contributing). Unfortunately, authors have been overly enthusiastic about the emerging knowledge and textbooks have grown ever larger as more and more complex findings are added. As texts grew, my students complained to me that, with so much information in the book, they had difficulty separating the wheat from the chaff (an appropriate metaphor since I was teaching in the Midwestern United States).

Greater length and complexity was only part of the problem. Most textbook authors avoided effective pedagogy like the plague. They (along with many instructors) seemed to believe that students should be able to learn on their own, without relying on learning aids in the text. As a consequence, although child development texts still presented a valuable overview of the field, they were often ineffective tools for student learning.

In 1993, it seemed to me that a new book was needed—one that would meet instructors' needs for a solid, research-oriented overview of the field but would also emphasize effective pedagogy designed to enhance students' learning. Children and Their Development, first published in 1998, is my effort to meet these goals. This book is traditional in itsfocuson research. The organization, too, is familiar: I begin with theories and methods, move to biological bases of child development, then describe cognitive development and, later, social-emotional development. Where this book begins to differ from the competition is length: it has about 100 fewer pages than most competing texts. To make the truly important child development work stand out for students, I have deliberately omitted some topics and described others relatively briefly.

But the focus on a student-friendly book is really evident in the way I've structured the chapters to help students learn about child development. I describe my approach in detail in Module 1.1, so I'll simply sketch it here. Each chapter consists of three or four modules that provide a clear and well-defined organization to the chapter. Each module begins with a set of learning objectives and a vignette that introduces the topic to be covered. Within each module, all figures, tables, and photos are fully integrated, eliminating the need for students to search for a graphic. Similarly, boxlike feature material that is set off in other textbooks is fully integrated with the main text and identified by a distinctive icon. Each module ends with several questions designed to help students check their understanding of the major ideas in the module.

The end of each chapter includes several additional study aids. "In Perspective" recaps each module, then links the ideas in the chapter to a major developmental theme. "See for Yourself" suggests activities that allow students to observe topics in child development firsthand. "Resources" includes books and Web sites where students can learn more about child development. "Key Terms" is a list of all of the important terms that appeared in the chapter. The "Summary" is organized by module and the primary headings within each module; it reviews the entire chapter.

Each module includes at least one feature where selected issues are highlighted. The four different kinds of features are "Focus on Research," "Making Children's Lives Better," "Cultural Influences;" and "Real Children:" The features are described in Module 1.1, but "Focus on Research" warrants extra attention here. Most textbooks describe research methods early on, then ignore them for the rest of the book. Children and Their Development takes a different and unique approach. In Module 1.3, I portray child development research as a dynamic process in which scientists make a series of decisions as they plan their work. In the process, they create a study that has both strengths and weaknesses. Each of the remaining chapters of the book contains a "Focus on Research" feature that illustrates this process by showing—in a question-and-answer format—the different decisions that investigators made in designing a particular study. I trace each of the steps and explain the decisions that were made. Then the results are shown—usually with an annotated figure so that students can learn how to interpret graphs—and the investigators' conclusions are described. Thus, the research methods that are introduced in Chapter 1 reappear in every chapter, in a setting that makes research come alive as a set of decisions that often involve compromises. (In my classes, I encourage students to think how the "Focus on Research" studies could be improved with different methods. At the same time, I ask them why the investigators might have resorted to the methods they did.)

The "Focus on Research" and other pedagogical elements are effective; students using the first edition commented that the book is easy to read and presents complex topics in an understandable way. Reading Children and Their Development, students come to appreciate both what we know about children's development and the research process that produced this knowledge.

Changes to the Second Edition

In writing the second edition, I have included hundreds of new citations to research published in the past few years. I have also made significant additions to every chapter. Of particular note is the following new material:

  • Chapter 1 includes information on how to study and explains the rationale for the book's organization.
  • Chapter 2 has material on methods from molecular genetics and two new major sections: one on pathways from genes to behavior and another on nonshared environmental influences.
  • Chapter 3 contains a new section on postpartum depression and information about the national "Back to Sleep" campaign to combat SIDS.
  • Chapter 4 now has information on sexual orientation, bulimia, and brain plasticity.
  • Chapter 5 includes new material on object perception and the development of attention.
  • Chapter 6 is reorganized to include two new modules, one that evaluates Piaget's theory and another that describes new approaches that complement Piaget's work. The latter module has a new section on "the child as a theorist."
  • Chapter 7 now describes inhibitory processes, autobiographical memory, infantile amnesia, and writing.
  • Chapter 8 contains new material on social intelligence and dynamic approaches to intelligence testing.
  • Chapter 9 now begins with a new section defining different aspects of language and has an expanded section on fast mapping of meaning to words.
  • Chapter 10 describes research on emotion regulation and work on adults' representations of their attachments with their own parents.
  • Chapter 11 has a new "Focus on Research" feature on identity in children of transracial adoptions and a new section on the consequences of low self-esteem.
  • Chapter 12 includes material that relates temperament to self-control, information on Kohlberg's Just Communities, and a new section dealing with victims of aggression.
  • Chapter 13 describes social class and race differences in gender stereotypes and also includes information on gender differences in physical and relational aggression.
  • Chapter 14 begins with a new section devoted to a systems approach to the study of the family and contains an expanded section on parental behaviors (with new material on direct instruction and coaching).
  • Chapter 15 has much expanded coverage of peer relations, material on cross-sex friendships and factors that contribute to long-lasting friendships, a new section about TV as a medium (in addition to material about TV content), a largely new section on schools (organized around factors that make schools effective), and brand new material about adolescents' part-time employment.

Support Materials

Children and Their Development is accompanied by a superb set of materials. They include the following:

For Instructors

Instructor's Resource Manual, prepared by Dale Grubb of Baldwin Wallace College. This IRM contains a wealth of material for new and experienced instructors alike. Each chapter includes chapter organizers, learning objectives, a detailed lecture outline with suggestions, classroom demonstrations and learning activities, critical thinking questions and exercises, assignment ideas, journal exercises, suggested films and videos, and classroom handouts.

Test Item File, prepared by Terri T. Combs of Indiana University-Purdue University. This test bank contains over 3,000 multiple choice, true/false, short-answer and essay questions that test factual, applied, and conceptual knowledge.

Prentice Hall Test Manager. One of the best-selling test-generating software programs on the market, Test Manager is available in Windows and Macintosh formats and contains a Gradebook, Online Network Testing, and many tools to help you edit and create tests. The program comes with full Technical Support and telephone "Request a Test" service.

Prentice Hall's Color Transparencies for Developmental Psychology. Designed in large-type format for lecture settings, these full color overhead transparencies add visual appeal to your lectures by augmenting the visuals in the text with a variety of new illustrations.

PowerPoint Slides and Online Graphics Archive. Available in the Faculty Module of the Companion Website at www.prenhall.com/kail, each chapter's art has been digitized and is available for download into any presentation software. PowerPoint lectures for each chapter are also available for download.

Prentice Hall Video Libraries. Prentice Hall has assembled a superior collection of video materials which range from short lecture launchers to full-length detailed features for use in the Developmental Psychology course. The videos below are available to qualified adopters.

  • Films for the Humanities and Sciences. A wealth of videos from the extensive library of Films for the Humanities and Sciences, on a variety of topics in developmental psychology, are available to qualified adopters. Contact your local Prentice Hall representative for a list of videos.
  • ABC News Videos for Developmental Psychology. These videos consist of segments from ABC Nightly News with Peter Jennings, Nightline, 20/20, Prime Time Live, and The Health Show.

Media Support for Children and Their Development, Second Edition. Both instructors and students will find many useful resources in the media program to accompany this text.

www.prenhall.com/kail Companion Website. Prepared by Larry Jenkins of Tidewater Community College, this free online Study Guide allows students to review each chapter's material, take practice tests, research topics for course projects, and more. Professors should visit the Faculty Module of the site to download electronic versions of the Instructor's Resource Manual, Powerpoint Slides for each chapter, and an Online Graphics Archive.

On-Line Course Management. For professors interested in using the Internet and on-line course management in their courses, Prentice Hall offers fully customizable on-line courses in WebCT, B1ackBoard, and eCollege to accompany this textbook. Contact your local Prentice Hall representative or visit www.prenhall.com/demo for more information.

For Students

Study Guide, written by Dea DeWolf This attractive, highly visual Study Guide reinforces the key pedagogical features of the textbook. The author incorporates both illustrations and design elements from the text. Each of the fifteen chapters follows the same modular organization as the text. Each of the modules in every chapter includes learning objectives, matching exercises to review key theories, definitions, terms and concepts, practice true/false questions, cumulative fill-in-the blank chapter summaries, multiple choice questions, and essay questions.

Psychology on the Internet. This "hands-on" Internet tutorial features Web sites related to psychology and general information about using the Internet for research. This supplement is available free when packaged with the text and helps students capitalize on all the resources that the World Wide Web has to offer.

Acknowledgments

Textbook authors do not produce books on their own. I want to thank the many reviewers who generously gave their time and effort to help sharpen my thinking about child development and shape the development of this text. I am especially grateful to the following people who reviewed various aspects of the manuscript: Jack Meacham, University of Buffalo; Lesa Rae Vartanian, Purdue University; Adam Winsler, George Mason University; Tony Simon, Furman University; K. Robert Bridges, Pennsylvania State University; Frank Manis, University of Southern California; Marianne Taylor, University of Puget Sound; Karen Rudolph, University of Illinois; Cynthia Stifter, Pennsylvania State University; James Black, University of Illinois; Laura Hess, Purdue University; Lisa Oakes, University of Iowa; Jacquelyn Mice, Auburn University; Amy Weiss, University of Iowa; Brad Pillow, Northern Illinois University; Janet Dipietro, Johns Hopkins University; Lee Ann Thompson, Case Western Reserve University; Gary Ladd, University of Illinois. Thank you, as well, to those who reviewed the first edition of the manuscript: Susan McClure, Westmoreland County Community College; Rebecca Bigler, University of Texas-Austin; Kathleen Fox, Salisbury State University; Rick Medlin, Stetson University; Joan Cook, County College of Morris; Elizabeth Lemerise, Western Kentucky University; Jim Dannemiller, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Mark B. Alcorn, University of Northern Colorado; Vernon C. Hall, Syracuse University; and May X. Wang, Metropolitan State College of Denver. Without their thoughtful comments, this book would be less complete, less accurate, and less interesting.

I also owe a debt of thanks to many people who helped take this project from a first draft to a bound book. Jennifer Gilliland has supported this book enthusiastically and served as a savvy guide to its revision. As she did for the first edition, Harriett Prentiss labored long to make my writing clear and inviting. Laura Curry helped to compile the many new references that were added to this edition. Anne Demarinis, under the direction of Carole Anson, designed a book that is both beautiful and functional. Julie Sullivan skillfully orchestrated the many activities that were involved in actually producing the book. Kathy Ringrose found the marvelous photographs that appear throughout the book. To all these people, many, many thanks.

—Robert V. Kail

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