Children are different. Not just from each other, but from moment to moment.
You noticed? Robert Siegler proposes in Emerging Minds: The Process of Change in
Children’s Thinking (Oxford University Press, USA, $35, ISBN 0 19 507787
3) that it’s time developmental psychologists paid attention to this fact, and
that they should shift their attention from stepped stages of development to how
capabilities change, compete and evolve. Siegler has the germ of an excellent
connectionist idea, compatible with Oxford neuroscientist Susan Greenfield’s
ideas on epicentres of neural activation. She explained her ideas in Journey to
the Centre of the Mind (Cassell, 1996). Siegler needs to read Greenfield, and a
lot more about evolution, before he gets it quite right.
More from 51¶¯Âþ
Explore the latest news, articles and features
Popular articles
Trending 51¶¯Âþ articles
1
Mathematicians stunned by AI's biggest breakthrough in mathematics yet
2
Photos reveal unexpected details from the world's first atomic test
3
The Selfish Gene at 50: Why Dawkins’s evolution classic still holds up
4
How I used psychology to come back from the worst year of my life
5
Epic dreaming is leaving people exhausted and distressed
6
The ‘doomsday’ glacier’s giant ice shelf is about to break away
7
The distant world that is our best hope of finding alien life
8
Mystery of the ancient giant stone jars of Laos may have been solved
9
Putting CO2 into rocks and getting hydrogen out is climate double win
10
Can we harness quantum effects to create a new kind of healthcare?



