Contemporary Perspectives on Social Learning in Early Childhood Education

Olivia N. Saracho|Bernard Spodek
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9781593117429
20 April 2007
$61.00
Hardback
9781593117436
20 April 2007
$110.00
eBook (PDF)
9781607527329
20 April 2007
$61.00
eBook (ePub)
9781918115376
20 April 2007
$61.00

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  • Description
  • Contents

Social epistemology is a broad set of approaches to the study of knowledge and to gain information about the social dimensions. This intellectual movement of wide cross-disciplinary sources reconstructs the problems of epistemology when knowledge is considered to be intrinsically social. In the first chapter, "Social Epistemology and Social Learning," Olivia Saracho and Bernard Spodek discuss the social and historical contexts in which different forms of knowledge are formulated based on the perspective of social epistemology. They also discuss the emergence of social epistemology, which guides researchers to investigate social phenomena in laboratory and field settings. Social factors "external" to the appropriate business of science have a major impact in the social studies researchers’ historical case studies. Thus, social studies researchers may be considered social epistemologists, because (a) they focus on knowledge of social influences and (b) they infer epistemologically significant conclusions from their sociological or anthropological research. In addition, analyses indicate that studies of scientific paradigms are basically a struggle for political power rather than reflecting reliable epistemic merit. Social studies researchers focus on knowledge of social influences on knowledge, which is analogous to the knowledge of the social epistemologists. They also use their sociological or anthropological research to infer epistemologically significant conclusions.

Social Learning in the Early Childhood Years; Olivia N. Saracho and Bernard Spodek

  • Chapter 1. Social Epistemology and Social Learning; Olivia N. Saracho and Bernard Spodek
  • Chapter 2. Social Dynamics of Early Childhood Classrooms: Considerations and Implications for Teachers; Kathleen Cranley Gallagher, Kimberly Dadisman, Thomas W. Farmer, Laura Huss, and Bryan C. Hutchins
  • Chapter 3. The Development of Social Identity and Intergroup Attitudes in Young Children; Kurt Kowalski
  • Chapter 4. Executive Function, Behavioral Self-Regulation, and Social-Emotional Competence: Links to School Readiness; Megan M. McClelland, Claire E. Cameron, Shannon B. Wanless, & Amy Murray
  • Chapter 5. Capital at Home and at School as Determinants of Child Social Adjustment; Toby L. Parcel
  • Chapter 6. Parenting and Schooling Influences on Early Self-Regulation Development; Abigail M. Jewkes and Frederick J. Morrison
  • Chapter 7. Parent-Provider Relationships in Early Care Settings; Angela M. Tomlin
  • Chapter 8. Promoting School Readiness in Foster Children; Katherine C. Pears, Philip A. Fisher, Cynthia V. Heywood, and Kimberly D. Bronz
  • Chapter 9. Teaching History and Social Studies to Young Children; Gary Fertig
  • Chapter 10. Play as Group Improvisation: A Social Semiotic, Multimodal Perspective on Play and Literacy; Stacy L. DeZutter
  • Chapter 11. Social Aspects in Language and Literacy Learning: Progress, Problems, and Interventions; Adriana G. Bus, Maria T. de Jong, and Marinus H. van IJzendoorn
  • Chapter 12. If You're Not Like Me Can We Play? Peer Groups in Preschool; Carollee Howes and Linda Lee
  • Chapter 13. Social Life of Young Children: Co-construction of Shared Meanings and Togetherness, Humour and Conflicts in Child Care Centers; Elly Singer and Dorian de Haan
  • Chapter 14. Social Learning as the Basis for Early Childhood Education; Olivia N. Saracho and Bernard Spodek