Societal Contexts of Child Development: Pathways of Influence and Implications for Practice and Policy

Author:   Elizabeth T. Gershoff (Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences, Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Texas, Austin) ,  Rashmita S. Mistry (Associate Professor of Education, Associate Professor of Education, University of California, Los Angeles) ,  Danielle A. Crosby (Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, University of North Carolina, Greensboro)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780199943913


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   17 October 2013
Format:   Hardback
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Societal Contexts of Child Development: Pathways of Influence and Implications for Practice and Policy


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Overview

Societal Contexts of Child Development provides comprehensive literature reviews for six broad contextual influences on children's development that have emerged as key areas of inquiry in contemporary society - gender, child care, culture and ethnicity, poverty, schools and neighborhoods, and media. In the spirit of applied developmental science, this book considers these six contextual domains in a series of two linked chapters written by experts in the interdisciplinary field of developmental science. The first chapter in each section is organized as a review of basic research relevant to a particular context, including a discussion of prominent theoretical and methodological issues. The second chapter in each section then addresses the same context from an applied research perspective, examining and documenting how research has been, can be, or should be used to enhance the everyday lives and developmental outcomes of children and their families through interventions and/or social policies. The book concludes with a chapter specifically dedicated to making connections between research and practice and an epilogue that situates the book's chapters within the field's study of contexts. Societal Contexts of Child Development will appeal to a broad audience of scholars, students, practitioners, and policymakers from the disciplines of psychology, sociology, economics, human development, and public policy.

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Author:   Elizabeth T. Gershoff (Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences, Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences, University of Texas, Austin) ,  Rashmita S. Mistry (Associate Professor of Education, Associate Professor of Education, University of California, Los Angeles) ,  Danielle A. Crosby (Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, University of North Carolina, Greensboro)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 23.60cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 16.00cm
Weight:   0.522kg
ISBN:  

9780199943913


ISBN 10:   0199943915
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   17 October 2013
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ; About the Editors ; Contributors ; Introduction: Contextualizing Child Development ; Elizabeth T. Gershoff, Rashmita S. Mistry, and Danielle A. Crosby ; Section I: Gender Roles as a Restrictive Context ; 1. Gender Development: From Universality to Individuality ; Lynn S. Liben, Rebecca S. Bigler, and Lacey J. Hilliard ; 2. Gender and Achievement Choices ; Jacquelynne S. Eccles ; Section II: Child Care: An Early Contextual Opportunity ; 3. Women's Work and Child Care: Perspectives and Prospects ; Marion O'Brien, Jennifer M. Weaver, Margaret Burchinal, Alison Clarke-Stewart, and Deborah Lowe Vandell ; 4. Issues of Quality and Access Emerging from the Changing Early Childhood Policy Context: Towards the Next Generation of Research ; Martha Zaslow, Danielle A. Crosby, and Nina Smith ; Section III: Cultural Contexts and Immigrant Families ; 5. An Ecological Approach to Understanding Immigrant Child and Adolescent Developmental Competencies ; Amy K. Marks, Camila Godoy, and Cynthia Garcia Coll ; 6. Beyond Families and Schools: Future Directions in Practice and Policy for Children in Immigrant Families ; Ana Maria Nieto and Hirokazu Yoshikawa ; Section IV: Child Poverty as a Limiting Context of Development ; 7. Poverty and Children's Development: Familial Processes as Mediating Influences ; Vonnie McLoyd, Rashmita S. Mistry, and Cecily R. Hardaway ; 8. The World Isn't Linear or Additive or Decontextualized: Pluralism and Mixed Methods in Understanding the Effects of Anti-Poverty Programs on Children and Parenting ; Thomas S. Weisner and Greg J. Duncan ; Section V: Schools and Neighborhoods: The Microcosms of Childhood ; 9. Neighborhood and School Contexts in the Lives of Children ; Elizabeth T. Gershoff and Aprile D. Benner ; 10. School- and Neighborhood-Based Interventions to Improve the Lives of Disadvantaged Children ; Robert Crosnoe and Tama Leventhal ; Section VI: Development in the Context of Omnipresent Media ; 11. Children and Electronic Media ; Sandra L. Calvert and Ellen A. Wartella ; 12. Language, Literacy and Media: What's the Word on Sesame Street? ; Rosemarie T. Truglio and Jennifer A. Kotler ; Section VII: Programs and Policies as Contextual Opportunities for Improving Children's Lives ; 13. Connecting Research and Practice ; Robert C. Granger, Vivian Tseng, and Brian L. Wilcox ; Epilogue: The Ecology of Human Development in the Twenty-First Century ; Aletha C. Huston ; Index

Reviews

Studying the ways children are influenced by context is the key to understanding and improving their academic, social, and emotional development. This excellent volume documents how children are shaped by their families, schools, and neighborhoods, and constrained by gender, poverty, and the media. Researchers, practitioners, and policy makers will be informed by this valuable reminder to take seriously the diverse effects of context. -- Arnold Sameroff, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of Michigan Through the contributions of a singularly impressive group of developmental scientists, Societal Contexts of Child Development reflects and extends the vision and historically significant scholarly creativity of Aletha C. Huston. As embodied by her career achievements, this book integrates deep, theoretically rich understanding of individual-context relational processes of human development, sophisticated appreciation of developmental methodology, nuanced and insightful analyses of the research literature, and issues of application to policies and programs. The book exemplifies the rigor and relevance of the best of human development scholarship and constitutes required reading for current and future generations of developmental scientists. -- Richard M. Lerner, PhD, Bergstrom Chair in Applied Developmental Science and Director, Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development, Tufts University This book takes seriously the charge that Urie Bronfenbrenner set before us several decades ago: that truly understanding contextual influences requires us to study them not as unidirectional effects on individual development, but rather in transaction with individuals, with an interdisciplinary framework, and as the interplay between basic science and applied research. Dedicated to Aletha Huston, a giant whose enormous theoretical and empirical contributions have played a critical role in enriching research at the intersection of child development and policy, this volume propels us into the next frontier in research in developmental science. -- Pamela Morris, PhD, Professor of Applied Psychology, New York University What a fitting tribute to one of the most well-respected and influential scholars at the intersection of developmental science and public policy! This volume is chock-full of information and insight about trending issues. The chapter on policy in early care and education, for example, combines expert and insider perspectives on the trade-offs between access and quality and is sure to play a role in the coming national discussion about universal pre-kindergarten. -- Kenneth A. Dodge, Director, Center for Child and Family Policy; William McDougall Professor of Public Policy; Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University How do the contexts of children's lives outside of their own families shape their development? What can and should be done to contexts to enhance children's development? Compelling answers to these urgent questions lie between the covers of this comprehensive and generative volume. An outstanding team of editors and a 'who's who' list of authors assemble the most comprehensive and insightful picture of the field to date. -- J. Lawrence Aber, PhD, Willner Family Professor of Psychology and Public Policy, New York University In the prevailing bioecological model in contemporary developmental science, Bronfenbrenner underscored the significance of the macrosystem. Since then, context has become a watchword in child development. Nonetheless, conceptual theoreticians and empirical researchers alike continue to disregard or understate the disparate distal systems of influence in which children are inextricably embedded. This volume, in the capable hands of three insightful, innovative, and impressive editors, substantially corrects this shortcoming. Insightful, because the editors have identified critical societal contexts of child development to examine: gender, childcare, culture, class, schools, neighborhoods, media, and policy. Innovative, because they have paired complementary basic empirical and applied practical chapters to bracket each context. Impressive, because they have garnered a superior cast of interdisciplinary scientists who meet their charge. Discerning is the thinker and researcher who picksup this volume; fortunate the one who profits by it. -- Marc H. Bornstein, PhD, Senior Investigator and Head of Child and Family Research at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and Editor, Parenting: Science and Practice The chapters have been well edited; they cover each topic in a nuanced way, suggest research gaps, and provide thoughtful conclusions along with extensive reference lists. The volume has a coherent narrative, almost like what one would expect in an authored book. I am widely recommending this excellent book. For example, early career scholars should read it before giving their first lectures in developmental psychology. STEM educators should consult some of the chapters before focusing solely on the cognitive approach to increasing female students' interest in these fields. Funders should read about programs that do not operate in a linear or decontextualized way. Finally, authors planning to submit articles to this journal should read the book to understand how to contextualize their own studies andmake appropriate claims for the application of their findings. --Judith Torney-Purta, Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology


<br> Studying the ways children are influenced by context is the key to understanding and improving their academic, social, and emotional development. This excellent volume documents how children are shaped by their families, schools, and neighborhoods, and constrained by gender, poverty, and the media. Researchers, practitioners, and policy makers will be informed by this valuable reminder to take seriously the diverse effects of context. -- Arnold Sameroff, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of Michigan <br><p><br> Through the contributions of a singularly impressive group of developmental scientists, Societal Contexts of Child Development reflects and extends the vision and historically significant scholarly creativity of Aletha C. Huston. As embodied by her career achievements, this book integrates deep, theoretically rich understanding of individual-context relational processes of human development, sophisticated appreciation of developmental methodology, nuanced and insightful analyses of the research literature, and issues of application to policies and programs. The book exemplifies the rigor and relevance of the best of human development scholarship and constitutes required reading for current and future generations of developmental scientists. -- Richard M. Lerner, PhD, Bergstrom Chair in Applied Developmental Science and Director, Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development, Tufts University <br><p><br> This book takes seriously the charge that Urie Bronfenbrenner set before us several decades ago: that truly understanding contextual influences requires us to study them not as unidirectional effects on individual development, but rather in transaction with individuals, with an interdisciplinary framework, and as the interplay between basic science and applied research. Dedicated to Aletha Huston, a giant whose enormous theoretical and empirical contributions have played a critical role in enriching research at the intersection of


Studying the ways children are influenced by context is the key to understanding and improving their academic, social, and emotional development. This excellent volume documents how children are shaped by their families, schools, and neighborhoods, and constrained by gender, poverty, and the media. Researchers, practitioners, and policy makers will be informed by this valuable reminder to take seriously the diverse effects of context. -- Arnold Sameroff, PhD, Professor Emeritus of Psychology, University of Michigan Through the contributions of a singularly impressive group of developmental scientists, Societal Contexts of Child Development reflects and extends the vision and historically significant scholarly creativity of Aletha C. Huston. As embodied by her career achievements, this book integrates deep, theoretically rich understanding of individual-context relational processes of human development, sophisticated appreciation of developmental methodology, nuanced and insightful analyses of the research literature, and issues of application to policies and programs. The book exemplifies the rigor and relevance of the best of human development scholarship and constitutes required reading for current and future generations of developmental scientists. -- Richard M. Lerner, PhD, Bergstrom Chair in Applied Developmental Science and Director, Institute for Applied Research in Youth Development, Tufts University This book takes seriously the charge that Urie Bronfenbrenner set before us several decades ago: that truly understanding contextual influences requires us to study them not as unidirectional effects on individual development, but rather in transaction with individuals, with an interdisciplinary framework, and as the interplay between basic science and applied research. Dedicated to Aletha Huston, a giant whose enormous theoretical and empirical contributions have played a critical role in enriching research at the intersection of child development and policy, this volume propels us into the next frontier in research in developmental science. -- Pamela Morris, PhD, Professor of Applied Psychology, New York University What a fitting tribute to one of the most well-respected and influential scholars at the intersection of developmental science and public policy! This volume is chock-full of information and insight about trending issues. The chapter on policy in early care and education, for example, combines expert and insider perspectives on the trade-offs between access and quality and is sure to play a role in the coming national discussion about universal pre-kindergarten. -- Kenneth A. Dodge, Director, Center for Child and Family Policy; William McDougall Professor of Public Policy; Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University How do the contexts of children's lives outside of their own families shape their development? What can and should be done to contexts to enhance children's development? Compelling answers to these urgent questions lie between the covers of this comprehensive and generative volume. An outstanding team of editors and a 'who's who' list of authors assemble the most comprehensive and insightful picture of the field to date. -- J. Lawrence Aber, PhD, Willner Family Professor of Psychology and Public Policy, New York University In the prevailing bioecological model in contemporary developmental science, Bronfenbrenner underscored the significance of the macrosystem. Since then, context has become a watchword in child development. Nonetheless, conceptual theoreticians and empirical researchers alike continue to disregard or understate the disparate distal systems of influence in which children are inextricably embedded. This volume, in the capable hands of three insightful, innovative, and impressive editors, substantially corrects this shortcoming. Insightful, because the editors have identified critical societal contexts of child development to examine: gender, childcare, culture, class, schools, neighborhoods, media, and policy. Innovative, because they have paired complementary basic empirical and applied practical chapters to bracket each context. Impressive, because they have garnered a superior cast of interdisciplinary scientists who meet their charge. Discerning is the thinker and researcher who picksup this volume; fortunate the one who profits by it. -- Marc H. Bornstein, PhD, Senior Investigator and Head of Child and Family Research at the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and Editor, Parenting: Science and Practice


Author Information

Elizabeth T. Gershoff is Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Sciences at the University of Texas, Austin. Dr. Gershoff studies the impacts of parenting, poverty, community violence, neighborhoods, and school contexts on child and youth development over time. Rashmita S. Mistry is Associate Professor of Education at the University of California, Los Angeles. Dr. Mistry's research examines the consequences of poverty and economic stress on family and child well-being, children's reasoning about social class and inequality, and the design and evaluation of elementary and middle school curricula focused on social and economic inequality. Danielle A. Crosby is Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro. Dr. Crosby studies the environments, programs, and policies that impact young children's development in the context of social and economic disadvantage.

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