05499nam 2200661 450 991078740070332120200520144314.01-119-03994-01-119-03996-7(CKB)3710000000321376(EBL)1895974(SSID)ssj0001432684(PQKBManifestationID)11888380(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001432684(PQKBWorkID)11405932(PQKB)11428911(Au-PeEL)EBL1895974(CaPaEBR)ebr11005767(CaONFJC)MIL692335(OCoLC)898892876(MiAaPQ)EBC1895974(EXLCZ)99371000000032137620150131h20142014 uy| 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrChild development in Africa views from inside /Robert Serpell, Kofi Marfo, editorsSan Francisco :Jossey-Bass,[2014]©20141 online resource (131 p.)New directions for child and adolescent development,1520-3247 ;number 146, Winter 2014Description based upon print version of record.1-119-03992-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Child Development in Africa: Views From Inside; CONTENTS; 1 Some Long-Standing and Emerging Research Lines in Africa; Motivating Trends in African Developmental Psychology; Testing the Cross-Cultural Validity of Theories Developed "in the West," and the Search for Universals; Articulating the Contextual Relevance and Practical Usefulness of Developmental Psychology in Africa; Making Developmental Psychology Intelligible to Local Audiences; Challenges for Society and Field; Linguistic Hegemony and Its Effects on Research and Schooling; Schooling and the Marginalization of Indigenous LanguagesThe Challenge of Indigenizing the FieldPreview of Chapters in the Rest of This Volume; References; 2 Biomedical Risk, Psychosocial Influences, and Developmental Outcomes: Lessons From the Pediatric HIV Population in Africa; Biomedical Risk Factors for Poor Childhood Outcomes: Focus on HIV; Neurobehavioral Outcomes; Mental Health; Educational Outcomes; Uninfected Children of HIV-Infected Parents; The Clustering of Risk Factors; Poverty; Maternal Psychosocial Functioning; Orphanhood; Stigma; Future Directions; Refining Conceptual Models; Refining Methodology; Concluding Remarks; References3 African Early Childhood Development Curriculum and Pedagogy for Turkana Nomadic Pastoralist Communities of KenyaOverview of Western Models of Early Childhood Education in Africa; Context and Curriculum Activities in Rural ECD Centers in Nomadic Pastoralist Communities; Theoretical Support for Consideration of Turkana Cultural Knowledge and Practices; Turkana Pastoralists' Children Everyday Cultural Knowledge and Learning Styles; Understanding Turkana Calendar in Early Childhood Curriculum; Pedagogical Value of Turkana Children's Indigenous Knowledge in ECD; Conclusion; References4 Promoting Children's Sustainable Access to Early Schooling in Africa: Reflections on the Roles of Parents in Their Children's Early Childhood Care and EducationBackground to the Reflections; Home and School Literacy Practices Interface in Rural Zimbabwe Study; East Africa Quality in Early Learning (EAQEL) Study; Parent-Teacher Empowerment and Early Literacy Development Study; The Need to Invest in Parents' Empowerment; Recognizing Family Funds of Knowledge; Parents Creating Literacy-Rich Environments; Promoting Literacy Practices in Local Environments; Policy Recommendations; ConclusionReferences5 Design and Validation of Assessment Tests for Young Children in Zambia; Cross-Cultural Issues in Child Assessment; Common Approaches to Assessment Test Adaptation; Analysis of Instrument Design and Validation in Zambia; Panga Munthu Test (PMT); Zambia Child Assessment Tool (ZamCAT); Conclusions; References; 6 Some Growth Points in African Child Development Research; Responding to the Challenges of Generating an African Child Development Field; The Challenge of African Reflexivity; The Challenge of Contextual Diversity, Relevance, and Practical ImportanceThe Challenge of Intelligibility to African Audiences In this volume, African scholars engaged in research on the continent reflect on their recent and ongoing empirical studies. They discuss the strengths and limitations of research methods, theories, and interventions designed outside Africa to spur innovative research on the continent. And they explore how insights from African philosophical, theoretical, and empirical work can be combined with exogenous forms of knowledge to generate understanding of the processes of African children's development in ways that are responsive to local contexts and meaningful for indigenous stakeholders. A neNew directions for child and adolescent development ;no. 146.Child developmentAfricaChild welfareAfricaChild developmentChild welfare362.70967Marfo KofiSerpell RobertMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910787400703321Child development in Africa3760486UNINA