Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 282
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7425-4788-9 • Hardback • March 2007 • $154.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-7425-4789-6 • Paperback • March 2007 • $65.00 • (£50.00)
978-1-4616-3853-7 • eBook • March 2007 • $61.50 • (£47.00)
Daniel Ness, Ph.D. Columbia University, is an assistant professor in the Department of Human Development and Learning at Dowling College where he teaches courses in mathematics curriculum and instruction and cognitive development. He has taught mathematics at all levels, and his 10 years of clinical practice extends from teaching mathematics to conducting clinical interviews and diagnosing mathematical behaviors. Dr. Ness is the author of numerous articles on mathematics cognition and the development of spatial and geometric thinking. He is a contributing co-editor of "After the Bell" in Science Scope, a contributing author of Trivializing Teacher Education: The Accreditation Squeeze (Rowman & Littlefield), and co-editor of the Encyclopedia on Education and Human Development (M.E. Sharpe).
Stephen J. Farenga, Ed.D. Columbia University, is an associate professor and former chairperson of the Department of Human Development and Learning at Dowling College. His research has appeared in major journals in science education, technology, and education of the gifted. Dr. Farenga has taught science for 15 years at the elementary and secondary levels and has served on the Commissioner's Advisory Council on the Arts in Education in New York State. Dr. Farenga has established an educational research clinic to examine methods of best practice and has served as a consultant for urban and suburban school districts. He is a contributing co-editor of "After the Bell" in Science Scope, a contributing author to Trivializing Teacher Education: The Accreditation Squeeze (Rowman & Littlefield), and co-editor of the Encyclopedia on Education and Human Development (M.E. Sharpe).
Chapter 1 Spatial, Geometric, and Architectural Thinking: The Big Picture
Chapter 2 Developmental Perspectives on Spatial and Geometric Thinking
Chapter 3 Children as Architects: The Identification of Architectural Principles Underlying Young Children's Geometric Constructions
Chapter 4 Contextual Observation: The Assessment for Measuring Spatial, Geometric, and Architectural Thinking of Young Children (SPAGAR)
Chapter 5 Age, Gender, Socioeconomic Status Factors in Spatial, Geometric, and Architectural Thinking
Chapter 6 Constructing Alone: Cases 1 and 2
Chapter 7 Constructing Interactively: Cases 3 and 4
Chapter 8 Beyond the Blocks: Implementing Praxis
For preschool educators as well as interested developmental researchers, Knowledge under Construction offers a succinct, useful introduction to the topic, delineating various aspects of spatial, geometric, and architectural thinking and related theoretical perspectives that can be brought to bear on children's construction play. The book also contains helpful pedagogical features such as a set of topics and questions at the end of each chapter for discussion. Major contributions of the book are in situating this important developmental topic in natural settings (young children's spontaneous construction play) and in pointing to some promising directions regarding how this knowledge can shed light on preschool and elementary education, particularly in science and mathematics.
— David Yun Dai, State University of New York at Albany; PsycCRITIQUES
Daniel Ness and Stephen Farenga demonstrate that there is more going on during free play than previously presumed; specifically, they delineate emergent mathematical and scientific thinking....The unique characteristic of this book is the study of young children as architects manipulating blocks during play, and the identification of architectural principles underlying the development of spatial and geometric thinking.
— Betty Ruth Baker; Teachers College Record
This is a fascinating book that explores how young children construct knowledge with regard to the spatial and geometric aspects of behavior during block play....The boko has a contribution to make in mathematics, early childhood education, and the field of cognitive sciences. The research is a pioneering study in an area where little data currently exists and serves as a catalyst for further investigations into the importance of play, cognitive development, and success in school.
— Teaching Children Mathematics, August 2008
Significant for educators, parents, and researchers.... These are important findings that buttress the instructional goals of the National Council of Teachers of mathematics (NCTM) for young learners.... Thought-provoking quotes and...expansive use of examples.... The authors provide insights into the implications of the research for those concerned with the education of young children. This is one of the most comprehensive works to date on the spatial, geometric, and architectural thinking of young children. Overall, this book significantly contributes to our understanding of the oftentimes overlooked mathematical abilities of our youngest learners.
— Jenifer Thornton; American Journal of Play, Spring 2009
This is a well-written, abundantly documented volume whose authors achieve their aim: to identify and define values and significance inherent in or related to young children's block play. This is an area of research heretofore somewhat neglected or underestimated with regard to various dimensions of the child's mathematical and scientific development. Daniel Ness and Stephen Farenga demonstrate that there is more going on during free play than previously presumed; specifically, they delineate emergent mathematical and scientific behaviors that form the basis for the development of mathematical and scientific thinking.
— Betty Ruth Baker, Baylor University; Teachers College Record
Despite its importance in early childhood mathematics education, young children's block play has seldom been investigated in depth. But now the field is fortunate to have Ness and Farenga's detailed study of young children's use of blocks to explore basic ideas of space, geometry, and even architecture. This book shows how intellectually rich the opportunities that block play offers are, and how children—regardless of gender and socioeconomic status—make splendid and surprising use of them. This book should be of vital interest to early childhood educators!
— Herbert P. Ginsburg, Teachers College, Columbia University
The work of Ness and Farenga can meet the needs of early childhood educators by helping them understand how the everyday actions of young children in block play summon spatial characteristics and how educators can support the continued learning of young children through free play, rather than through more formal learning methods.
— Lynn E. Bensen, Barry University; Childhood Education