ABSTRACT
These companion volumes bring together research and theoretical work that addresses the relations between social context and the development of children. They allow for the in-depth discussion of a number of vital metatheoretical, theoretical, and methodological issues that have emerged as a result of increased investigation in these areas. For example: Which methodological and statistical procedures are appropriate and applicable to studies of social context and processes of development? Should the nature of social context be reconceptualized as something more than different levels of some social independent variable? Are theories of development that do not consider social context incomplete? Will the increasingly finer definitions of social context lead to extreme situationism and contextualism? As developmental theory and investigation continues to address relationships between social and cognitive development, it becomes increasingly important that issues concerning social context be elaborated and discussed.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |4 pages
PART 1 CLARIFYING CONTEXT: THEORETICAL AND METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS
chapter |28 pages
CONTEXT, MODULARITY, AND THE CULTURAL CONSTITUTION OF DEVELOPMENT
chapter |20 pages
SCAFFOLDING AND SELF-SCAFFOLDING: CENTRAL ASPECTS OF DEVELOPMENT
chapter |38 pages
THE HERMENEUTIC INVESTIGATION OF PEER RELATIONS
part |4 pages
PART II INVESTIGATING CONTEXTS: EMPIRICAL ENDEAVORS
chapter |38 pages
THE SOCIOAFFECTIVE CONTEXT OF JOINT COGNITIVE ACTIVITY
chapter |22 pages
POSSIBLE SELVES AND ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT
part |2 pages
PART III RE-CONTEXTUALIZING CONTEXT: A DISCUSSION