2022 Award Recipients

Award for Distinguished Contribution to Developmental Science

 

Patricia Greenfield

Barbara Rogoff

 Early Career Award in Developmental Science

Audun Dahl

Doctoral Dissertation Prize

Ruthe Foushee

“Self-directed learning in language development: Interactions of linguistic complexity, learner attention, and language socialization”

University of California, Berkeley

 

Abstract: While we celebrate children as curious and resourceful learners, when we consider their development of language, we tend to study them as passive recipients of adult guidance. I show how instead adopting a view of the child as an active language learner can help resolve gaps in our understanding of what makes different language sources “effective” for learning, including by addressing a paradox in the literature: although even toddlers learn new words from overheard speech in laboratory studies, there is surprisingly little evidence that children learn from naturally-occurring overheard language. Drawing on evidence that infants disattend to stimuli that are overly complex, I propose that young rational learners in environments where child-directed speech is common may initially learn little from overheard speech because it is too complex to maintain their attention. A combination of results from methods across developmental science, natural language processing, psycholinguistics, and anthropology suggest that this proposal holds promise.

Past Recipients

Distinguished Contribution to Developmental Science

2021     Elliot Turiel

Early Career Award in Developmental Science

2021     Caitlin Mahy

2021     Kelly Lynn Mulvey

Doctoral Dissertation Prize

2020: Dr. Shereen Bielstein, University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana: Supporting Children’s Conceptual understanding of Fractions with Manipulatives and Gesture.

2019: Dr. Courtney Ball for her dissertation in Developmental Psychology, completed in the Department of Clinical and Social Sciences in Psychology at University of Rochester: Differential Associations among Affective and Cognitive Empathy and Moral Judgments across Middle Childhood.

2018: Dr. Boby Ching completed his dissertation at the Department of Education at Oxford University: The Importance of Additive Reasoning in Children’s Mathematical Achievement

2017: Dr. Jeremy T. Burman for his dissertation completed at York University, Toronto Canada:  Constructive History: From the Standard Theory of Stages to Piaget’s New Theory.

2015: Dr. Susanne Göckeritz of The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, Leipzig, for her dissertation: Children Constructing a Social World:  Exploring Preschoolers’ Understanding of Social Norms.

Please click below to learn more about the three awards that the Jean Piaget Society currently offers: