Children's Friendships
Zick RubinChildren’s Friendships covers such questions as how friendship develops out of the simple play among young toddlers, how the child’s conception of friendship changes with increasing cognitive sophistication, how individuals become popular or unpopular and how each affects them, why children form cliques, adopt stereotypes, follow fads, and (almost universally) exclude members of the opposite sex in the years just before puberty. The author’s answers to these and other questions may surprise even the most experienced child-watcher.
Whether we like it or not, children learn a great deal—both cognitively and emotionally—from one another. Children’s Friendships provides important insight into this kind of learning that all interested adults will find extremely valuable.