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Fundamentals of child study : a discussion of instincts and other factors in human development, with practical applications / Edwin A. Kirkpatrick.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Kirkpatrick, Edwin A. (Edwin Asbury), 1862-1937, author.
Series:
Home economics archive--research, tradition and history.
Home economics archive--research, tradition and history
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Child development.
Pediatrics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xxi, 384 pages).
Other Title:
Fundamentals of child study
Place of Publication:
New York, New York : Macmillan Company, 1903.
Summary:
This book is an attempt to present, in an organized form, an outline of the new science of child study for investigators, students, teachers, and parents. It is the fruit of fourteen years' experience in studying and teaching child study, and of seven years' experience as a father. Most of the work has been presented successfully, in nearly its present form, to normal students. The great task of the author has been to decide what to leave out of the book. Many paragraphs might easily have been expanded into chapters. It was the original intention to summarize all the principal child-study investigations that have been made. Lack of space and the fact that much of the literature of child study is in the nature of preliminary studies likely to be superseded by later investigations, caused this plan to be abandoned; hence only a few specific facts and figures are quoted, while prominence is given to the foundations of child study in other sciences, and to the more general, permanent, and practical truths thus far revealed by students of children. The treatment of each topic is, in a way, complete in itself, though related to every other and intended to be worked out more completely by reading, observation, experiment, and discussion, so far as time will permit. To aid readers and students in assimilating and supplementing the text, exercises and references are given at the close of each chapter. In class work the recitation periods may well be taken up largely in discussions of these exercises and in reports of reading, though if preferred they may be ignored and the text alone studied and recited. It is hoped that the plan of the book will adapt itself to the use of intelligent parents and to classes in normal schools and universities, with varying preparation and amount of time to devote to the subject. Many parents will prefer to begin with chapter five and to omit chapter fourteen and perhaps some of the chapters that follow.
Contents:
Nature, scope, and problems of child study
Physical growth and development
Native motor activities and general order of development
Classification of instincts
The early development of the human infant
Development of individualistic instincts
The development of the parental and the social instincts
Development of adaptive instincts : imitation
Development of adaptive instincts : play
Development of adaptive instincts : curiosity
Development of instincts : regulative
Development of instincts : various resultant instincts and feelings
Development of instincts : the expressive instinct
Development of intellect
Heredity
Individuality
Abnormalities
Child study applied in schools.
Notes:
Description based on print version record.

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