Biomental child development perspectives on psychology and parenting
<span><span><span style=""font-style:italic;"">Biomental Child Development</span><span>: </span><span style=""font-style:italic;"">Perspectives on Psychology and Parenting</span><span> provides the reader w...
Autor principal: | |
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Lanham, MD :
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
c2013.
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Edición: | 1st ed |
Materias: | |
Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009798178506719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents; List of Tables; Foreword; Introduction; Overview; 1. What Are Emotions?; 2. The Family as a Transactional System; 3. Developmental Child Psychology; 4. The Epistemophilic Impulse; 5. Parenting; 6. Evolutionary Psychology; 7. Biomental Child Development: A Concise Primer; 8. Object Relations: The Subject's Idiosyncratic Construal of Others; 9. Implicit and Explicit Learning and Memory Systems; 10. The Child as an Emotionally Developing Person; 11. Child Development and Parenting: Amazing Biomental Rhythms; 12. Final Note; 1 A Philosophy of Parenting
- 1. Three Fundamental Factors in Parenting1.1 Parenting; 1.2 Nurturance and Discipline; 1.2.1 Nurturance; 1.2.2 Discipline; 1.2.2.1 What Discipline Is Not; 1.2.2.2 What Discipline Is; 1.3 The Third Parenting Superfactor: "Living Example"; 2. The Two Interpersonal Realms that Structure Parenting; 2.1 Example, Imitation, and Identification; 2.2 Transactional Sensitivity; 2.3 Empathy: Design of Meaningfully Salient Connectedness; 3. Parenting Creates Meaningfulness; 3.1 Meaningfully Salient Parenting; 3.2 The "Everydayness" of Being with Your Children
- 3.3 Meaningful Parenting as Containment: Starting-Stopping3.4 Children Need Parents as Guides to Navigate Transitions; 3.5 The Enduring Biomental Significance of Early Infant Motion Detection, Reaching, Grasping, and Letting Go; 3.6 Play as a Developmental Sequence; 4. The Developmental Perspective; 4.1 Infant and Child Development; 4.2 A Note on the Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity (ADHD) Presentation; 4.3 How Parents Can Promote Healthy Development; 4.3.1 Empathetic Listening: How to Hear; 4.3.2 Speaking to Children; 4.3.3 Heads Up: Communicating the Expectable-Inform and Prepare
- 4.3.4 Respect4.3.5 Developmental Awareness; 4.3.6 Labeling Feelings; 4.3.7 Teaching Pause; 4.3.8 Making the Ordinary Special; 4.3.9 Helping: How to Respond; 4.3.10 Helping Children Learn How to Ask for Help; 4.3.11 Frugality and Temperance; 4.3.12 Praise, Positive Statements, and Encouragement; 4.3.13 Sincerity; 4.3.14 Keeping Promises; 4.3.15 "On the Spot" Responsiveness: Prompt and Timely Guidance; 4.3.16 Fun and Enjoyable Work; 4.3.17 The Dark Side of Human Nature; 5. Potential Environmental Toxicities; 5.1 A Note on Environmental Exposure to Screen Media
- 6. Intelligence and Cognitive Development6.1 Family Environment, Cognition, and Intellectual Development; 7. Emotional and Moral Growth; 7.1 Character; 8. The Journey Is the Destination; 9. Key Points; 9.1 Parenting; 9.2 Nurturance; 9.3 Discipline; 9.4 Living Example; 9.5 Transactional Sensitivity; 9.6 Developmental Perspective; 9.7 Parents as Guides to Transitions; 9.8 Keeping Promises; 9.9 Helping Relationships; 9.10 Positive Statements and Encouragement; 9.11 The Dark Side of Human Nature; 9.12 Character; 2 The Psychology of the Child; 1. The Child as a Whole Person
- 2. The Meaning of Ego, Self, Sense of Identity, "I," and Mind