Margaret Donaldson

Margaret Donaldson
Born 1926 (age 8990)
Academic background
Alma mater University of Edinburgh
Academic work
Discipline Psychology
Sub discipline Developmental psychology
Institutions University of Edinburgh
Notable works
  • Children's Minds
  • Human Minds

Margaret Caldwell Donaldson (born 1926) is a former professor Professor of Developmental Psychology at the University of Edinburgh.[1]

She was educated at the University of Edinburgh, where she continued as a teacher after graduating. In 1980, she was appointed Professor of Developmental Psychology. Her main research interest has always been in the study of human thought and language. At Edinburgh, Professor Donaldson oversaw the development of research in Developmental Psychology and Psycholinguistics.[2]

At an early stage in her career she spent some time at Jean Piaget's research institute in Geneva, and was much influenced by that experience, though she later came to question some important aspects of Piagetian theory. She spent a year in the United States as the holder of a John Hay Whitney Fellowship, and has also worked there with Jerome Bruner on curriculum development projects.

She is the author of A Study of Children's Thinking and Children's Minds. Along with Robert Grieve and Chris Pratt, she has edited a book of readings entitled Early Childhood Development and Education. Jerome Bruner has described Donaldson's Children's Minds as "One of the most powerful, most wisely balanced and best informed books on the development of the child's mind to have appeared in twenty years. Its implications for education are enormous."[3]

Publications

References

  1. Wendy A. Conroy (1997). Biographical Dictionary of Psychology. Taylor & Francis. pp. 150–. ISBN 978-0-415-09997-4.
  2. "Psychology Department - History". University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 2009-04-09.
  3. Publicity quote in Donaldson, Margaret (1978) Children's Minds, Fontana Press. ISBN 0-00-686122-9.
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