AltaMira Press
Pages: 410
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7591-1322-0 • Hardback • January 2010 • $152.00 • (£117.00)
978-0-7591-1323-7 • Paperback • December 2011 • $66.00 • (£51.00)
978-0-7591-1324-4 • eBook • January 2010 • $62.50 • (£48.00)
David F. Lancy is professor of anthropology at Utah State University. John Bock is professor of anthropology at California State University, Fullerton. Suzanne Gaskins is professor of psychology at Northeastern Illinois University.
Chapter 1. Putting Learning in Context
Chapter 2. An Evolutionary Perspective on Learning in Social, Cultural, and Ecological Context
Chapter 3. The Cross-Cultural Study of Children's Learning and Socialization: A Short History
Chapter 4. Parental Ethnotheories of Children's Learning
Chapter 5. Learning through Observation in Daily Life
Chapter 6. Work, Play, and Learning
Chapter 7. The Role of Adults in Children's Learning
Chapter 8. Learning from Other Children
Chapter 9. Learning in Schools
Chapter 10. Learning Communicative Competence
Chapter 11. Learning Morality
Chapter 12. Learning Gender Roles
Chapter 13. Skill Learning For Survival in Non-Human Primates
Chapter 14. Learning the Environment
Chapter 15. Learning to Hunt
Chapter 16. Learning In and From the Past
Chapter 17. Learning on the Streets: Peer Socialization in Adverse Environments
Chapter 18. Children's Learning in New Settings
David Lancy, John Bock, and Suzanne Gaskins have assembled an outstanding set of essays on what children around the world learn, how they learn it, and the many people involved in that learning. This book will be a valuable resource for students, researchers, educators, and all those interested in a broader cross-cultural perspective on these critical issues for understanding children and childhood.
— Jill E. Korbin, Case Western Reserve University
This reference volume is a unique contribution to childhood studies. The eminent contributors present the full breadth of anthropological knowledge about children's learning, from historical and cross-cultural studies to evolutionary biology and life-history theory. By leaving out no perspective or condition, the volume presents a synthesis of what anthropologists know about childhood learning. There is something for everyone here—students, teachers, and researchers alike. Nothing like this book currently exists, and it is unlikely to be matched for many years.
— Jane B. Lancaster, University of New Mexico
The Anthropology of Learning in Childhood shows us how and why we acquire knowledge and understanding of the world. The authors provide excellent overviews of evolutionary perspectives, social processes in learning, the roles of play and work, non-parental teachers, classrooms, and the importance of moral, sociolinguistic, and gender frameworks. The time and context ranges from non-human primates and the Paleolithic, right up to the present. This is a marvelously holistic, landmark book - one of the best books on learning in sociocultural contexts currently available.
— Thomas S. Weisner, University of California, Los Angeles
A fascinating collection of anthropological accounts of children's learning in context. From archaeology to evolutionary biology, from primate routines to identity construction, from pottery-making to street crime, this book brings to light the mundane and the extraordinary in children's experiences of learning culture across time and space. It challenges the reader to focus on the real conditions of contemporary children's lives.
— Margaret Eisenhart, Distinguished Professor Emerita, University of Colorado-Boulder
David Lancy, John Bock, and Suzanne Gaskins make an important contribution to our understanding of children’s learning through a unique collection of eighteen essays written by archaeologists, cultural anthropologists, evolutionary anthropologist, and linguist. This volume is noteworthy for its comprehensiveness including chapters examining the archaeological record, nonhuman primates, traditional societies, and children’s learning in adverse environments….As Lancy, Bock, and Gaskins’s book reflects, this scholarship has resulted in a fundamental reformulation of learning including its evolutionary significance, what children learn, and how learning takes place in diverse contexts.
— American Journal of Play