TY - BOOK
T1 - Making sense (Routledge revivals)
T2 - The child’s construction of the world
AU - Bruner, Jerome S.
AU - Haste, Helen
PY - 2010/10/4
Y1 - 2010/10/4
N2 - The growing child comes to understand the world, makes sense of experience and becomes a competent social individual. First published in 1987, Making Sense reflected the way in which developmental psychologists had begun to look at these processes in increasingly naturalistic, social situations. Rather than seeing the child as working in isolation, the authors of this collection take the view that ‘making sense’ involves social interaction and problem-solving. They particularly emphasize the role of language; its study both reveals the child’s grasp of the frames of meaning in a particular culture, and demonstrates the subtleties of concept development and role-taking.
AB - The growing child comes to understand the world, makes sense of experience and becomes a competent social individual. First published in 1987, Making Sense reflected the way in which developmental psychologists had begun to look at these processes in increasingly naturalistic, social situations. Rather than seeing the child as working in isolation, the authors of this collection take the view that ‘making sense’ involves social interaction and problem-solving. They particularly emphasize the role of language; its study both reveals the child’s grasp of the frames of meaning in a particular culture, and demonstrates the subtleties of concept development and role-taking.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84905991967&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4324/9780203830581
DO - 10.4324/9780203830581
M3 - Book
AN - SCOPUS:84905991967
SN - 9780415615037
T3 - Routledge Revivals
BT - Making sense (Routledge revivals)
PB - Taylor and Francis/ Balkema
CY - Abingdon, U. K.
ER -