Children of Six Cultures

Children of Six Cultures
Author: Beatrice Blyth Whiting
Publisher: Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1975
Genre: Psychology
ISBN:

The study involved children in Taira, located on the northeast coast of Okinawa; Tarong, located in the northwest corner of the island of Luzon in the Philippines; Khalapur, a village in northern India; the Nyanongo people of western Kenya; Mixtecan-speaking Indians residing in Juxtlahuaca in the Mexican state of Oaxaca; and Orchard Town, a New England town founded by Baptists.

Children of Six Cultures

Children of Six Cultures
Author: Beatrice Blyth Whiting
Publisher:
Total Pages: 260
Release: 1975
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780674116481

The study involved children in Taira, located on the northeast coast of Okinawa; Tarong, located in the northwest corner of the island of Luzon in the Philippines; Khalapur, a village in northern India; the Nyanongo people of western Kenya; Mixtecan-speaking Indians residing in Juxtlahuaca in the Mexican state of Oaxaca; and Orchard Town, a New England town founded by Baptists.

Children of Different Worlds

Children of Different Worlds
Author: Beatrice Blyth Whiting
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 356
Release: 1988
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 9780674116177

The culmination of twenty years of research, this book is a cross-cultural exploration of the ways in which age, gender, and culture affect the development of social behavior in children. The authors and their associates observed children between the ages of two and ten going about their daily lives in communities in Africa, India, the Philippines, Okinawa, Mexico, and the United States. This rich fund of data has enabled them to identify the types of social behavior that are universal and those which differ from one cultural environment to another. Whiting and Edwards shed new light on the nature-nurture question: in analyzing the behavior of young children, they focus on the relative contributions of universal physiological maturation and universal social imperatives. They point out cross-cultural similarities, but also note the differences in experience between children who grow up in simple and in complex societies. They show that knowledge of the company children keep, and of the proportion of time they spend with various categories of people, makes it possible to predict important aspects of their interpersonal behavior. An extension and elaboration of the classic Children of Six Cultures (Harvard, 1975), Children of Different Worlds will appeal to the same audience--developmental psychologists, social psychologists, anthropologists, and educators--and is sure to be equally influential.

Child Cultures, Schooling, and Literacy

Child Cultures, Schooling, and Literacy
Author: Anne Haas Dyson
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 175
Release: 2016-02-19
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1317567226

Through analysis of case studies of young children (ages 3 to 8 years), situated in different geographic, cultural, linguistic, political, and socioeconomic sites on six continents, this book examines the interplay of childhoods, schooling, and, literacies. Written language is situated within particular childhoods as they unfold in school. A key focus is on children’s agency in the construction of their own childhoods. The book generates diverse perspectives on what written language may mean for childhoods. Looking at variations in the complex relationships between official (curricular) visions and unofficial (child-initiated) visions of relevant composing practices and appropriate cultural resources, it offers, first, insight into how those relationships may change over time and space as children move through early schooling, and, second, understanding of the dynamics of schools and the experience of childhoods through which the local meaning of school literacy is formulated. Each case—each child in a particular sociocultural site—does not represent an essentialized nation or a people but, rather, a rich, processual depiction of childhood being constructed in particular local contexts and the role, if any, for composing.

No Contest

No Contest
Author: Alfie Kohn
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 340
Release: 1992
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780395631256

Argues that competition is inherently destructive and that competitive behavior is culturally induced, counter-productive, and causes anxiety, selfishness, self-doubt, and poor communication.