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This book traces the development of coping from birth to emerging
adulthood by building a conceptual and empirical bridge between
coping and the development of regulation and resilience. It offers
a comprehensive overview of the challenges facing the developmental
study of coping, including the history of the concept, critiques of
current coping theories and research, and reviews of age
differences and changes in coping during childhood and adolescence.
It integrates multiple strands of cutting-edge theory and research,
including work on the development of stress neurophysiology,
attachment, emotion regulation, and executive functions. In
addition, chapters track how coping develops, starting from birth
and following its progress across multiple qualitative shifts
during childhood and adolescence. The book identifies factors that
shape the development of coping, focusing on the effects of
underlying neurobiological changes, social relationships, and
stressful experiences. Qualitative shifts are emphasized and
explanatory factors highlight multiple entry points for the
diagnosis of problems and implementation of remedial and preventive
interventions. Topics featured in this text include: Developmental
conceptualizations of coping, such as action regulation under
stress. Neurophysiological developments that underlie age-related
shifts in coping. How coping is shaped by early adversity,
temperament, and attachment. How parenting and family factors
affect the development of coping. The role of coping in the
development of psychopathology and resilience. The Development of
Coping is a must-have resource for researchers, professors, and
graduate students as well as clinicians and related professionals
in developmental, clinical child, and school psychology, public
health, counseling, personality and social psychology, and
neurophysiological psychology as well as prevention and
intervention science.
At every point in the life span, individual differences in a sense
of control are strong predictors of motivation, coping, success,
and failure in a wide range of life domains. What are the origins
of these individual differences, how do they develop, and what are
the mechanisms by which they exert such influence on psychological
functioning? This book draws on theories and research covering key
control constructs, including self-efficacy, learned helplessness,
locus of control, and attribution theory. Ellen A. Skinner
discusses such issues as the origins of control in social
interactions; environmental features that promote or undermine
control; developmental change in the mechanisms by which
experiences of control have their effects on action; and the
implications for intervening into the competence system, including
interventions for people in uncontrollable circumstances. Written
at a level appropriate for upper-division undergraduates, the book
can serve as a supplement to the social and personality development
course as well as a core text for motivation, educational
psychology, or clinical courses at the graduate level. This book
won't be the first one on the topic, but it will be the first one
that professionals and graduate students turn to whenever they want
a definitive opinion on complex questions of control or an idea for
cutting-edge research on the topic of motivation, coping, and
control.
Despite broad interest in how children and youth cope with stress
and how others can support their coping, this is the first Handbook
to consolidate the many theories and large bodies of research that
contribute to the study of the development of coping. The
Handbook's goal is field building - it brings together theory and
research from across the spectrum of psychological, developmental,
and related sciences to inform our understanding of coping and its
development across the lifespan. Hence, it is of interest not only
to psychologists, but also to neuroscientists, sociologists, and
public health experts. Moreover, work on stress and coping touches
many areas of applied social science, including prevention and
intervention science, education, clinical practice, and youth
development, making this Handbook a vital interdisciplinary
resource for parents, teachers, clinical practitioners, social
workers, and anyone interested in improving the lives of children.
This book traces the development of coping from birth to emerging
adulthood by building a conceptual and empirical bridge between
coping and the development of regulation and resilience. It offers
a comprehensive overview of the challenges facing the developmental
study of coping, including the history of the concept, critiques of
current coping theories and research, and reviews of age
differences and changes in coping during childhood and adolescence.
It integrates multiple strands of cutting-edge theory and research,
including work on the development of stress neurophysiology,
attachment, emotion regulation, and executive functions. In
addition, chapters track how coping develops, starting from birth
and following its progress across multiple qualitative shifts
during childhood and adolescence. The book identifies factors that
shape the development of coping, focusing on the effects of
underlying neurobiological changes, social relationships, and
stressful experiences. Qualitative shifts are emphasized and
explanatory factors highlight multiple entry points for the
diagnosis of problems and implementation of remedial and preventive
interventions. Topics featured in this text include: Developmental
conceptualizations of coping, such as action regulation under
stress. Neurophysiological developments that underlie age-related
shifts in coping. How coping is shaped by early adversity,
temperament, and attachment. How parenting and family factors
affect the development of coping. The role of coping in the
development of psychopathology and resilience. The Development of
Coping is a must-have resource for researchers, professors, and
graduate students as well as clinicians and related professionals
in developmental, clinical child, and school psychology, public
health, counseling, personality and social psychology, and
neurophysiological psychology as well as prevention and
intervention science.
Everything you always wanted to know about theories, meta-theories,
methods, and interventions but didn't realize you needed to ask.
This innovative textbook takes advanced undergraduate and graduate
students "behind the curtain" of standard developmental science, so
they can begin to appreciate the generative value and
methodological challenges of a lifespan developmental systems
perspective. It envisions applied developmental science as focused
on ways to use knowledge about human development to help solve
societal problems in real-life contexts, and considers applied
developmental research to be purpose driven, field based, community
engaged, and oriented toward efforts to optimize development. Based
on the authors' more than 25 years of teaching, this text is
designed to help researchers and their students intentionally
create a cooperative learning community, full of arguments, doubts,
and insights, that can facilitate their own internal paradigm
shifts, one student at a time. With the aid of extensive online
supplementary materials, students of developmental psychology as
well as students in other psychological subdisciplines (such as
industrial-organizational, social, and community psychology) and
applied professions that rely on developmental training (such as
education, social work, counseling, nursing, health care, and
business) will find this to be an invaluable guidebook and toolbox
for conceptualizing and studying applied problems from a lifespan
developmental systems perspective.
Everything you always wanted to know about theories, meta-theories,
methods, and interventions but didn't realize you needed to ask.
This innovative textbook takes advanced undergraduate and graduate
students "behind the curtain" of standard developmental science, so
they can begin to appreciate the generative value and
methodological challenges of a lifespan developmental systems
perspective. It envisions applied developmental science as focused
on ways to use knowledge about human development to help solve
societal problems in real-life contexts, and considers applied
developmental research to be purpose driven, field based, community
engaged, and oriented toward efforts to optimize development. Based
on the authors' more than 25 years of teaching, this text is
designed to help researchers and their students intentionally
create a cooperative learning community, full of arguments, doubts,
and insights, that can facilitate their own internal paradigm
shifts, one student at a time. With the aid of extensive online
supplementary materials, students of developmental psychology as
well as students in other psychological subdisciplines (such as
industrial-organizational, social, and community psychology) and
applied professions that rely on developmental training (such as
education, social work, counseling, nursing, health care, and
business) will find this to be an invaluable guidebook and toolbox
for conceptualizing and studying applied problems from a lifespan
developmental systems perspective.
At every point in the life span, individual differences in a sense
of control are strong predictors of motivation, coping, success,
and failure in a wide range of life domains. What are the origins
of these individual differences, how do they develop, and what are
the mechanisms by which they exert such influence on psychological
functioning? This book draws on theories and research covering key
control constructs, including self-efficacy, learned helplessness,
locus of control, and attribution theory. Ellen A. Skinner
discusses such issues as the origins of control in social
interactions; environmental features that promote or undermine
control; developmental change in the mechanisms by which
experiences of control have their effects on action; and the
implications for intervening into the competence system, including
interventions for people in uncontrollable circumstances. Written
at a level appropriate for upper-division undergraduates, the book
can serve as a supplement to the social and personality development
course as well as a core text for motivation, educational
psychology, or clinical courses at the graduate level. This book
won't be the first one on the topic, but it will be the first one
that professionals and graduate students turn to whenever they want
a definitive opinion on complex questions of control or an idea for
cutting-edge research on the topic of motivation, coping, and
control.
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