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Children with Down Syndrome: A Developmental Perspective

Children with Down Syndrome: A Developmental Perspective

9780521386678
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Description
This volume offers a state-of-art review of what is known about young children with Down syndrome from a developmental perspective. The underlying theme of the book is that children with Down syndrome, despite their constitutional anomalies and their additional medical and biological problems, can be understood from a normative developmental framework. Interventions guided by developmental principles in the biological, educational and psychological realms are more likely to result in informed knowledge about how best to help children with Down syndrome and their families. Children with Down Syndrome will appeal to researchers, theoreticians, educators, and clinicians in a range of disciplines, as well as to parents, social policymakers, and other advocates for the best interests of children with Down syndrome.
Product Details
97261
9780521386678
9780521386678

Data sheet

Publication date
1990
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
488
Dimensions (mm)
155.00 x 234.00
Weight (g)
752
  • Preface; 1. Applying the developmental perspective to individuals with Down syndrome; 2. An organizational approach to the study of Down syndrome:: contributions to an integrative theory of development; 3. Temperament and Down syndrome; 4. Interactions between parents and their infants with Down syndrome; 5. Attention, memory, and perception in infants with Down syndrome:: a review and commentary; 6. Sensorimotor development of infants with Down syndrome; 7. The growth of self-monitoring among young children with Down syndrome; 8. Early conceptual development of children with Down syndrome; 9. Language abilities in children with Down syndrome:: evidence for a specific delay; 10. Beyond sensorimotor functioning:: early communicative and play development of children with Down Syndrome; 11. Peer relations of children with Down syndrome; 12. Families of children with Down syndrome:: ecological contexts and characteristics; 13. Early intervention from a developmental perspective; Name index; Subject index.
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