Child Development: A Topical Approach

Child Development: A Topical Approach (McGraw-Hill, 2003) presents pivotal research and theories in a readable, accessible style. It teams Diane Papalia's teaching and writing expertise with Ruth Feldman's professional writing, and it introduces Dana Gross, a child development researcher and professor at St. Olaf's College in Minnesota. Applauded by reviewers for its combination of research coverage with applications and real-life examples, this text also includes Papalia's hallmark of superior coverage of cross-cultural and social policy topics, and an emphasis on the history of child psychology.

About the Authors
As a professor, Diane E. Papalia has taught thousands of undergraduates at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She received her bachelor's degree, majoring in psychology, from Vassar College and both her master's degree in child development and family relations and her Ph.D. in life-span developmental psychology from West Virginia University. She has published numerous articles in such professional journals as Human Development, International Journal of Aging and Human Development, Sex Roles, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, and Journal of Gerontology. Most of these papers have dealt with her major research focus, cognitive development from childhood through old age..

Dana Gross received her Ph.D. in child psychology from the Institute of Child Development at the University of Minnesota. Since 1988 she has been at St. Olaf College, where she is an associate professor of psychology, Director of Linguistic Studies, and an affiliate faculty member of the Asian Studies department. Her broad teaching and research interests include perception, language, cognition, and social cognition, as well as cross-cultural child development. She has published in several professional journals, has presented her work at numerous conferences, and coauthored a chapter in Developing Theories of Mind, edited by Astington, Harris, and Olson. Dr. Gross has prepared instructor's manuals and test banks for several McGraw-Hill textbooks and served as chief consultant on Papalia, Olds, and Feldman's A Child's World.

Ruth Duskin Feldman is an award-winning writer and educator. A former teacher, she has developed educational materials for all levels from elementary school through college and has prepared ancillaries to accompany the Papalia-Olds books. In addition to the four books she has coauthored with Diane Papalia, she has written four books addressed to general readers, including Whatever Happened to the Quiz Kids? Perils and Profits of Growing Up Gifted. She has contributed to numerous newspapers and magazines and has lectured extensively and made national and local media appearances throughout the United States on education and gifted children. She received her bachelor's degree from Northwestern University, where she was graduated with highest distinction and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa.

Selected Works

Biography
Ruth interviewed her Quiz Kid colleagues to find out how being celebrated as gifted children affected their lives. The result was Whatever Happened to the Quiz Kids? (Chicago Review Press, 1982; iUniverse, 2000).
College textbooks
Ruth has coauthored six editions of this leading McGraw-Hill textbook on child development with psychology professor Diane E. Papalia.
Ruth coauthored three editions of this McGraw-Hill textbook with psychology professors Diane E. Papalia, Harvey Sterns, and Cameron Camp.
Ruth coauthored this McGraw-Hill textbook with psychology professors Diane E. Papalia and Dana Gross.
Ruth has coauthored seven editions of this leading McGraw-Hill textbook, now retitled Experience Human Development, with psychology professor Diane E. Papalia.