August 1896 in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, the first child of Arthur Piaget — a medievalist historian who mo... toward the study of the mind. He was a prodigious child: at age ten he published his first scientific pap... motor intelligence. He was appointed Professor of Child Psychology at the University of Geneva in 1929 an... l stage** (approximately two to seven years), the child develops symbolic and linguistic representation b
uding //The School and Society// (1899) and //The Child and the Curriculum// (1902). In 1904 he resigned ... olates continuity. An experience that ignores the child's interests and purposes in favour of a curriculu... Society//. University of Chicago Press.
==== The Child and the Curriculum: Resolving a False Dualism ====
In //The Child and the Curriculum// (1902), Dewey addressed the
ary reputation, developed an innovative system of child-centred orphanage administration, and conducted a... he United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. When the Nazis forced the residents of Dom Siero... ===== Key Contributions =====
==== Centering the Child as Subject ====
Korczak's foundational pedagogical principle was that the child is not a future person in preparation but a perso
ctively in some intellectually honest form to any child at any stage of development." This was a direct c... e earliest possible stage, in forms suited to the child's current modes of representation, and return to ... re abstract and formally organised forms. A young child can grasp the concept of balance and fairness; an... e** mode represents knowledge through action: the child knows how to ride a bicycle, to tie a knot, or to
eau, Geneva's internationally renowned centre for child psychology and education, in the early 1930s, and... termed "viscosity" (//viscosité//), in which the child oscillates unstably between more and less advance... f the stage model.
==== //The Psychology of the Child//: The Authoritative Synthesis ====
//La psychologie de l'enfant// (The Psychology of the Child), co-authored with Piaget and published in 1966 a
gence, which he regarded as measuring only what a child has already achieved rather than what she is in t... ective teaching is not instruction pitched at the child's current independent level — which merely reinfo... rates just ahead of it, within the zone where the child can succeed with the support of a more knowledgea... of cultural development**: "Every function in the child's cultural development appears twice: first, on t
== Key Contributions =====
==== The Image of the Child ====
At the centre of Malaguzzi's educational ph... o children are — what he called the "image of the child." He argued that every educator holds, whether consciously or not, an internal theory of the child that shapes every decision about how to speak, listen, and respond. The image of the child that Malaguzzi worked to articulate and defend wa
//The Education of Man// (1826), which laid out a child-centered, developmental vision of learning from i... dergarten" in the 1840s from the German "kinder" (child) and "garten" (garden). The Prussian government, ... ing. His concept of transformation of forms — the child's capacity to connect inner imagination to materi... thing new — lay at the heart of his insistence on child-centered learning and the use of open-ended, mani
ant recipient to study developmental and clinical child psychology at the University of Minnesota's Institute of Child Welfare, an experience she later described as a t... pendently, with the process starting as soon as a child begins learning to speak. This "emergent literacy... repositioned the relationship between teacher and child, treating every child's existing knowledge and st
ds, driven by an unwavering conviction that every child was capable of learning in some form. Promoted ra... ions =====
==== The Right to Education for Every Child ====
Margaret Bancroft's foundational contributi... was the moral and practical insistence that every child — regardless of intellectual, physical, or neurol... tion of Horace Mann — whose conviction that every child deserved a right to education regardless of wealt
respect for the work of others. The furniture is child-sized, enabling genuine independence; the materia... e-hour uninterrupted work cycles, its emphasis on child-directed activity, its absence of external reward... s the period of the //absorbent mind//: the young child unconsciously and then consciously absorbs langua... who presents materials and withdraws to allow the child to work independently. The second is the multiage
g associate professor at Minnesota's Institute of Child Development. At Virginia he founded and directed ... ational Prize in Education Nominee.
==== Teacher-Child Relationships as the Regulatory System of Learnin... re and colleagues, Pianta has argued that teacher-child relationships are not a sentimental accessory to ... : educators, Pianta holds, shape every level of a child's functioning — physiological regulation, safety,
nd rigid. By advocating for a more democratic and child-centered approach, Neill inspired educators to co... cribed his expectations of Summerhill School as a child-centered school: "Self-government for the pupils ... to societal norms, advocating instead for a more child-centered approach that respects the individual ne... e education movements include:
**1. Promotion of Child-Centered Education:** Neill's advocacy for child-
His first encounter with armed robbery as a small child — recounted in his memoir //Fist, Stick, Knife, G... schools and developed the conviction that where a child is from has the greatest influence on that child's outcomes. Returning to New York, Canada worked as a s... rational poverty and that the entire ecology of a child's life must be transformed. The HCZ targets a twe
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==== The Play Technique and Access to the Child's Inner World ====
Klein's most immediately prac... displacement, condensation, and symbolisation. A child who repeatedly crashed toy cars was not simply pl... ic content into interpretations accessible to the child, thereby reducing anxiety and enabling developmen... d profound implications for nursery education and child observation, encouraging practitioners to treat c