Hide this

Resultados de Google Books

Pulsa en una miniatura para ir a Google Books.

Piaget's Construction of the Child's Reality por Susan Sugarman
Loading...

Piaget's Construction of the Child's Reality

por Susan Sugarman

SociosReseñasPopularidadValoración promedioConversaciones
4Ninguno1,062,586NingunoNinguno

Descripción de los usuarios de LibraryThing

?
Descripción del libro

Descripciones de libros

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0521379679, Paperback)

The Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget is generally considered to be the founder of modern developmental psychology. This book provides a conceptual critique of six of Piaget's central, earlier works, including his account of the child's conception of the world, the development of morality, and the origins of intelligence in infancy. Sugarman's detailed, step-by-step analysis of some of Piaget's major arguments shows exactly where, and why, they fail. Through the same analysis she suggests the alternative lines of inquiry that might result in a clearer and more basic understanding of the child's mind and of the origins of adult thought.

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0521341647, Hardcover)

The Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget is generally considered to be the founder of modern developmental psychology. This book provides a conceptual critique of six of Piaget's central, earlier works, including his account of the child's conception of the world, the development of morality, and the origins of intelligence in infancy. Sugarman's detailed, step-by-step analysis of some of Piaget's major arguments shows exactly where, and why, they fail. Through the same analysis she suggests the alternative lines of inquiry that might result in a clearer and more basic understanding of the child's mind and of the origins of adult thought.

(extraído de Amazon Tue, 09 Feb 2010 07:33:24 -0500)

Enlaces rápidos

Ebooks Audio Intercambiar

Portadas populares

 

Ayuda/Preguntas frecuentes | Acerca de | Privacidad/Condiciones | Blog | Contactar | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Conocimiento común | 49,717,861 libros!