Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory proposes that a child's development is influenced by different environmental systems, with the microsystem being the closest to the child and including immediate settings like home or school, the mesosystem comprising connections between microsystems, the exosystem involving contexts not directly experienced by the child like a parent's workplace, and the macrosystem as the overarching culture or subculture.
Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory proposes that a child's development is influenced by different environmental systems, with the microsystem being the closest to the child and including immediate settings like home or school, the mesosystem comprising connections between microsystems, the exosystem involving contexts not directly experienced by the child like a parent's workplace, and the macrosystem as the overarching culture or subculture.
Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory proposes that a child's development is influenced by different environmental systems, with the microsystem being the closest to the child and including immediate settings like home or school, the mesosystem comprising connections between microsystems, the exosystem involving contexts not directly experienced by the child like a parent's workplace, and the macrosystem as the overarching culture or subculture.