Cover image for Young Child Observation : A Development in the Theory and Method of Infant Observation.
Young Child Observation : A Development in the Theory and Method of Infant Observation.
Title:
Young Child Observation : A Development in the Theory and Method of Infant Observation.
Author:
Adamo, Simonetta M.G.
ISBN:
9781782411444
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (385 pages)
Series:
The Tavistock Clinic Series
Contents:
COVER -- CONTENTS -- SERIES EDITOR'S PREFACE -- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS -- ABOUT THE EDITORS AND CONTRIBUTORS -- Introduction -- PART I Developmental issues -- CHAPTER ONE The transition from home to nursery school -- CHAPTER TWO The story of child development: a psychoanalytic account -- CHAPTER THREE Oedipal anxieties, the birth of a second baby, and the role of the observer -- CHAPTER FOUR The Young Child Observation seminar: new steps in developing the observer role -- PART II Observing in the home -- CHAPTER FIVE An observation of a young Asian child with feeding difficulties, conceived via assisted reproductive technology -- CHAPTER SIX Laurie and his cars: a 3-year-old begins to separate -- CHAPTER SEVEN The day Captain Antonio's balloon burst -- CHAPTER EIGHT The observed child, the observing child: the complexity of a child's response to the stillbirth of a sibling -- PART III Observing in a nursery -- CHAPTER NINE The work of playing: a male observer gets to know a little boy whose father is absent -- CHAPTER TEN Seeing beneath the surface: an observer's encounter with a child's struggle to find herself at nursery -- CHAPTER ELEVEN Thoughts on transitions between cultures: Jonathon moves from home to school and from class to class -- CHAPTER TWELVE "The house is a boat": a group of children face separation -- PART IV Applications -- CHAPTER THIRTEEN Sewing on a shadow: acquiring dimensionality in a participant observation -- CHAPTER FOURTEEN A participant observation with a boy suffering from a chronic illness -- CHAPTER FIFTEEN 'Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends': familiar faces in an uncertain world -- PART V Research -- CHAPTER SIXTEEN Now we are two, going on three: triadic thinking and its link with development in the context of Young Child Observations.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN Young Child Observation used as a research tool: investigating toddlers' development in day care nurseries -- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN Young children's relationships with staff and peers in nursery: observations of two girls aged 29 months and 25 months -- Epilogue -- REFERENCES -- INDEX.
Abstract:
Observing young children at play is an everyday and often fascinating and pleasurable experience for many of us. It also has a great pedigree in the development of psychoanalysis from Freud's observation of his grandson's game with the cotton-reel onwards.This book describes the practice of observing young children in home and nursery settings in a systematic and non-intrusive way in order to expand our understanding of their emotional, cognitive, and social development. It uses a psychoanalytic lens to enrich the meaning of what is seen. How do minds and personalities take shape? How can we train people to see what is most relevant in helping children to develop?The chapters range from classic papers by famous practitioners of an older generation to observations completed in recent years in the UK, Europe, and the US. Observation of this sort has also spread to Latin America, India, Australia, Africa, and the Far East. The differences and continuities with Infant Observation are the starting point. What happens when a child starts nursery? How active a playmate should an observer be? How do we balance the close attention given to the observed child with the wider group of children in a nursery? How do we make sense of the marked cultural differences we see between families, nurseries, and indeed national cultures? How can we use observation as a baseline for early intervention and how can we research what we are doing?The book is written for the many students and professionals concerned with the care and education of under fives, and for parents, grandparents, and all who are interested in the mind of the young child. The meeting of inner and outer worlds, which characterizes life in these crucial years, is vividly depicted. Readers will delight in the children's capacity for imaginative thought and also find themselves pondering what makes a

nursery a good-enough place for staff and children.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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