Editors:Lucia A. French , Katherine Nelson
Paperback ISBN:978-1-4613-8583-7
eBook ISBN:978-1-4613-8581-3
An appreciation of temporal and logical relationships is one of the essential and defining features of human cognition. A central question in developmental psy chology, and in the philosophical speculations out of which psychology evolved, has been how children come to understand temporal and logical relationships. For many recent investigators, this question has been translated into empiri cal studies of children’s acquisition of relational terms-words such as before, after, because, so, if, but, and or that permit the linguistic expression of logi cal relationships. In the mid 1970s, Katherine Nelson began to study young children’s knowledge about routine activities in which they participated. The goal of this research was to understand how children represented their personal experiences and how these representations contributed to further cognitive development. A primary method used in the early phases of this research involved simply asking children to describe familiar events. They were asked, for example, “What happens when you have lunch at school?” or “What happens at a birthday party?” Hundreds of transcripts of children’s responses to such questions were available when Lucia French became an NICHD Postdoctoral Fellow in Developmental Psychology at City University of New York in 1979.
Children
Knowledge
cognition
developmental psychology
psychology
Center for the Study of Psychological Development, Graduate School of Education and Human Development, University of Rochester, Rochester, USA
Lucia A. French
Program in Developmental Psychology, University Center and Graduate School City University of New York, New York, USA
Katherine Nelson
Book Title
Young Children’s Knowledge of Relational Terms
Book Subtitle
Some Ifs, Ors, and Buts
Authors
Lucia A. French, Katherine Nelson
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4613-8581-3
Softcover ISBN
978-1-4613-8583-7
Published: 01 November 2011
eBook ISBN
978-1-4613-8581-3
Published: 06 December 2012
Series ISSN
0172-620X
Edition Number
1
Number of Pages
130
Topics
Psychology, general
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