About this item
Highlights
- This comprehensive, accessible, market-leading infant development (prenatal-age 3) core text for infant and early childhood development weaves together research, theory, and current issues of diversity of culture for students seeking to engage in the lives of our youngest children with understanding and compassion.
- About the Author: Dana Gross is professor of psychology at St. Olaf College, where she teaches infant development and developmental psychology and leads short-term study-abroad programs.
- 414 Pages
- Education, Counseling
Description
About the Book
This comprehensive, accessible, market-leading infant development (prenatal-age 3) core text for infant and early childhood development weaves together research, theory, and current issues of diversity of culture for students seeking to engage in the lives of our youngest chil...Book Synopsis
This comprehensive, accessible, market-leading infant development (prenatal-age 3) core text for infant and early childhood development weaves together research, theory, and current issues of diversity of culture for students seeking to engage in the lives of our youngest children with understanding and compassion.
Review Quotes
Change across 0-3 years old is so rapid and the developmental domain approach to Dana Gross' textbook captures the complexity of that change. The domain approach also helps the reader understand how development in one area impacts another, offering a comprehensive understanding of infant development. I continue to use this textbook in my courses because the writing is clear, concise, and well organized. Dana Gross also does an excellent job incorporating details from major research studies in an easily digestible format for college students.
For years, I have used Dana Gross's text Infancy: Development from Birth to Age Three in my infant development course. This thorough yet accessible text uses contemporary science and opportunities for application to provide my students with the theoretical frameworks underlying infant development. Students are also exposed to important information about developmental domains, the role of culture, and policy implications for infant development. I look forward to continuing to use this engaging textbook with my undergraduate students for years to come.
I have used this text several times over the past few years, and the organization is great. I have had students tell me that they have kept this textbook so that they can use it for future courses.
I would strongly recommend this book to instructors currently teaching infant development courses. This text provides a solid, research-based foundation for infant and toddler development. I found the tone and level of this book to be accessible to a variety of learners--the concepts are clearly explained without 'dumbing it down.' Instructors can use flexibility in determining how much of the book's content to cover in their courses, depending on the needs of their students. This book can be used from community college through upper-division undergrad courses and would even be helpful for graduate students to brush up on concepts they may have learned years earlier.
This exceptional textbook combines essential principles of child development from conception through toddlerhood with sensitivity for culture, racism, and atypical development. Students can easily learn about important theories and milestones of infancy and toddlerhood.
This textbook is refreshing! It offers instructors a roadmap to effectively prepare, plan, and deliver lectures, activities, and discussions. The author's knowledge of infant development is evident throughout. Using user-friendly guided instruction through a collaborative approach, this textbook's structure benefits both instructor and student engagement.
About the Author
Dana Gross is professor of psychology at St. Olaf College, where she teaches infant development and developmental psychology and leads short-term study-abroad programs. She has been a faculty member at St. Olaf since 1988. In teaching, research, and scholarship, she emphasizes the interplay of nature and nurture, contextual variations development, practical applications of research findings, ethical community engagement, and policy considerations. She has developed short-term study abroad courses in India, China, and Norway, as well as student assignments to promote global learning in her on-campus courses.