Understanding Human Development, 4th edition
Published by Pearson (April 17, 2018) © 2019
- Wendy L. Dunn Coe College
- Grace J. Craig University of Massachusetts at Amherst
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Revel
- Inspire engagement through active learning
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- Assess student progress with performance insights
For courses in Lifespan Development.
An introduction to development that emphasizes family and cultural contexts
Understanding Human Development presents an overview of development across the lifespan that emphasizes the dynamic interactions among biological, psychological and sociocultural forces. Authors Wendy Dunn and Grace Craig present people as they are in the context of culture and subculture, helping all students to find themselves mirrored in the course.
The 4th Edition includes coverage of contemporary topics that will draw students into their study of development. These include changing notions of family, the effects of media on children and recent LGBT+ issues.
Hallmark features of this title
- Changing Perspectives features explore controversies about human development, often within a specific cultural context, that encourage thought and discussion.
- Current Issues features emphasize the “doing” of developmental research. They help students conceptualize how research projects help us better understand the processes involved in human development.
- Learning objectives at the beginning of each chapter pose overarching themes, stimulating interest in the main topics and serving as a preview of the chapter.
New and updated features of this title
- NEW: The authors have incorporated significant new content into every chapter. Highlights include:
- a specific focus on how millennials differ from baby boomers, to illustrate age cohort differences
- expanded coverage of the family as a system, emphasizing changing definitions of what constitutes a family
- an updated treatment of bullying, including cyberbullying, and a new section on the negative impact of bullying on bullies themselves
- updated coverage of gender identity and sexual orientation, including a discussion of LGBT+ issues
- new coverage of links between heart disease, cognitive impairment and physical exercise
Features of Revel for the 4th Edition
- Interactive figures allow students to delve into the statistics and compare different sets of data to fully understand how researchers have studied human development.
- Two simulations in one, MyVirtualLife offers profound insights into development across the entire lifespan. After students parent a virtual child (by way of the included MyVirtualChild learning path), MyVirtualLife pivots to the first-person perspective of a virtual adult, providing a vivid sense of the impact of genetics, attitudes and decisions over the course of a lifetime.
- Fill-in application questions provide additional opportunities at the end of each chapter for students to think about how their experiences fit into the development across the lifespan.
1. Fundamentals of Human Development
2. Heredity and Environment
3. Prenatal Development and Childbirth
4. Physical, Cognitive, and Language Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
5. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Infancy and Toddlerhood
6. Physical, Cognitive, and Language Development in Early Childhood
7. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Early Childhood
8. Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood
9. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Middle Childhood
10. Physical and Cognitive Development in Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
11. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
12. Physical and Cognitive Development in Young Adulthood
13. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Young Adulthood
14. Physical and Cognitive Development in Middle Adulthood
15. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Middle Adulthood
16. Physical and Cognitive Development in Older Adulthood
17. Personality and Sociocultural Development in Older Adulthood
18. Death and Dying
About our authors
Wendy L. Dunn is the James Y. Canfield Professor of Psychology at Coe College in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. A first-generation college student who grew up on a farm in Iowa, Wendy earned her undergraduate and master’s degrees from Iowa State University; she holds 2 PhDs, both from the University of Iowa. Although she has assumed a variety of administrative appointments during her academic career, including serving for a time as Vice President of Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty and currently as Executive Director of Planning, Wendy takes the greatest pleasure in teaching and mentoring undergraduate students. She is the recipient of the C. J. Lynch Outstanding Teacher award at Coe College.
Wendy’s research centers on human learning and decision making. She has long been interested in how students learn and has written a wide variety of instructor’s manuals and student study guides to accompany many well-known psychology books. She is a co-author of 2 Introductory Psychology texts: Psychology: A Concise Introduction, with Lyle Bourne and Bruce Ekstand, and Psychology: Concepts and Applications, with Charles Morris and Al Maisto. Her partnership with Grace Craig through 4 editions of Understanding Human Development has been an especially rich collaboration.
Outside of her academic career, Wendy has been an active community volunteer, serving in leadership roles on boards for the Metropolitan YMCA, the United Way, Orchestra Iowa, the Cedar Rapids Museum of Art, and Brucemore, Inc., a property of the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Wendy has been happily married to Greg Dunn for more than 40 years; together they have a son, Bobby; a daughter, Whitney; a son-in-law, Eliot; and a 2-year-old grandson, Jake. Wendy believes that the study of human development comes alive when contextualized through the events of one’s own life and that her experiences as daughter, wife, mother and grandmother have contributed a rich and valuable perspective to how she views the unfolding of life’s story.
Grace J. Craig is Professor Emerita at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where she taught for more than 40 years after teaching for 4 years at Smith College. She taught a variety of courses throughout her career, including child psychology, early childhood education, special education, lifespan development and child development. She has been an associate dean, acting dean, and, intermittently, the head of the Departments of Human Development, Student and Personnel Development, and Teacher Education and Curriculum Studies before her retirement in 2012. Grace's focus throughout her career was always on helping students, through teaching, advising and guiding them in their research. She has done research on child and family studies, lifespan development, and early childhood education, but she prefers working with students.
Grace earned her undergraduate degree in sociology and anthropology, and her master's degree and PhD in psychology, from the University of Massachusetts. She was a school psychologist for a few years while her daughter was young. She also supervised facilities such as a day-care center, a center for children with special needs, and preschools. Throughout her career, she has authored and co-authored several textbooks, including Human Development, now in its 9th Edition; Children Today; and Human Development: A Social Work Perspective.
Now retired, Grace enjoys birding. Her husband, Ralph, taught in Massachusetts public schools before his death in 2015. Her daughter, Talli McCormick, is a nurse practitioner who currently teaches Nursing at Massachusetts General Hospital, Institute for Allied Health Professionals. Her grandson, Edward McCormick, is earning his bachelor's degree at the University of Massachusetts.
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