000 01798 a2200277 4500
001 1351678248
005 20250317111559.0
008 250312042017GB eng
020 _a9781351678247
037 _bTaylor & Francis
_cGBP 33.99
_fBB
040 _a01
041 _aeng
072 7 _aJMC
_2thema
072 7 _aJBSF11
_2thema
072 7 _aJMC
_2bic
072 7 _aJFFK
_2bic
072 7 _aPSY000000
_2bisac
072 7 _aPSY004000
_2bisac
072 7 _a362.712
_2bisac
100 1 _aElly Singer
245 1 0 _aChild-Care and the Psychology of Development
250 _a1
260 _aOxford
_bRoutledge
_c20171206
300 _a190 p
520 _bAre child-care centres good for children? How can we provide good day-care? Feminists have long argued for the provision of day-care facilities so that mothers may be free to work outside the home. The call had enjoyed little support from politicians and experts, however. Feminists had been seen to stand for women’s interests, and psychologists and pedagogues for children’s – as if the two were opposed. Only in the early 1990s had the opinions of politicians and experts begun to change. Yet, even so, a positive policy on day-care was still lacking. Originally published in 1992, Elly Singer’s exciting book shed a fresh and critical light on its subject. She exposes the preoccupations and contradictions of mainstream developmental psychology and its experts, shows how their theories blind them to many important questions, and reveals the almost total denial by mainstream psychology of the daily realities of parents and their children at the time. Elly Singer then proposes fresh ways of thinking to meet the new and different circumstances in which children and parents find themselves in contemporary society.
999 _c3961
_d3961