Experts in the field of parenting and child development provide timely and practical answers to every parenting concern and issue and offer sound advice on everything from preparation for the birth of a first child and toilet training to discipline, learning styles, substance abuse, and health care. 25,000 first printing.
Although this survey of child development and parenthood packs considerable wisdom and bears a prestigious imprimatur, it comes off as fairly generic. With its emphasis on a conceptual, developmental approach, it stands out in strong intellectual counterpoint to the quick how-to tactics of many contemporary titles, such as Sally Ward’s BabyTalk: Strengthen Your Child's Ability to Listen, Understand, and Communicate. Mayes, director of early childhood programs at the Yale Child Study Center, and Cohen, its former director, cover individual topics in 36 chapters (e.g., “Your Baby’s Motor Development,” “Sexuality and Gender,” “The Course of Pregnancy”). Though this comprehensiveness is a plus, much of the advice is common sense (“negative experiences or the absence of appropriate care may cause serious, enduring harm to early brain development”). As admirable as the authors’ goals are, it is hard to imagine 'regular' people reading and retaining this much general information. Find it at a larger public library. (Index not seen.)
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A very readable and user-friendly guide to your child's development. Focuses mainly on infancy through preschool. I wish I had read this before I became a parent!