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Cognitive Development

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Stage 1 Dualism. Students learn how to learn. There are right answers and wrong answers. ... Position 4: Complex Dualism and Advanced Multiplicity ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cognitive Development


1
Cognitive Development
  • A Look at How Students Think

2
Do any of these sound familiar?
  • Sowhich is the right answer?
  • What exactly do you want from us?
  • Well, if there is no right answer, then my
    opinion is just as valid as yours.

3
If so, its not surprising
  • And its not necessarily because the students
    have been given wrong answers
  • Or, because youve been confusing or unclear
  • Ratheryour students cognitive development may
    not have reached a level appropriate to what you
    are expecting from them

4
Cognitive Development
  • What is Cognitive Development?
  • Why is it important to understand?
  • Perrys model of Cognitive Development
  • Other models
  • References

5
What is Cognitive Development?
  • Cognitive development is a process through which
    people develop more sophisticated methods of
    understanding or perceiving information,
    opinions, theories, or facts.
  • In a senseit describes the intellectual
    transition a person makes from being able to deal
    with a black and white world, to one with many
    shades of gray.

6
Why is it important to understand?
  • Provides insight into student perspectives
  • Helps instructors appreciate how students
    understand or perceive information
  • Allows instructors to appropriately tailor
    information or questions
  • Current level
  • Beyond

7
Why is it important to understand?
  • Concepts appropriately beyond the current
    cognitive level result in
  • disequilibrium
  • followed by
  • accomodation
  • Going too far can cause frustration. If too
    great, the student may leave.

8
Perrys Model
  • Perrys model is concerned with
  • How students move from a dualistic (black and
    white) view of the universe to a more
    relativistic (shades of gray) view
  • How students develop commitments within the
    relativistic world
  • Perrys model includes four separate stages which
    are broken down into nine individual positions

9
Perrys Model The Positions
  • Stage 1 Dualism
  • Position 1 Basic Duality
  • Position 2 Dualism Multiplicity
    Prelegitimate
  • Stage 2 Multiplicity
  • Position 3 Early Multiplicity
  • Position 4 Complex Dualism and Advanced
    Multiplicity

10
Perrys Model The Positions
  • Stage 3 Relativism
  • Position 5 Relativism
  • Position 6 Relativism Commitment Foreseen
  • Stage 4 Commitment
  • Positions 7, 8 and 9 Levels of Commitment

11
Stage 1 Dualism
  • Students learn how to learn
  • There are right answers and wrong answers.
  • Learning is information exchange.
  • Knowledge is quantitative and the right answers
    are dispensed by authorities.

12
Position 1 Basic Duality
  • World view is dualistic right versus wrong
  • Authorities know all of the answers
  • Men identify with authority. Women do not.
  • Instructor should teach correct answers. Failure
    to do so indicates the instructor is bad.
  • Conflicts with multiplicity result in
    accommodation by modifying position 1 and moving
    to position 2.

13
Position 2 Multiplicity Prelegitimate
  • Multiplicity exists, but basic dualistic view
    maintained
  • There is a right and wrong.
  • Multiple views are either wrong or the authority
    is playing games to make us figure out the right
    answer
  • Since authorities can be wrong, the absolute
    answers are independent of authority, and
    consequently some authorities are smarter than
    others.

14
Position 2 Multiplicity Prelegitimate
  • Engineering students in this position can solve
    problems
  • Closed-end
  • Single correct answer

15
Stage 2 Multiplicity
  • Students learn to think independently and improve
    their ability to think analytically.
  • There are conflicting answers, so one must trust
    their inner voice, not authority.
  • A continuum exists such that diverse views can be
    accepted when the answer is unknown.
  • All opinions are valid.

16
Position 3 Early Multiplicity
  • Multiplicity unavoidable even in hard
    sciences/engineering
  • Still one right answer, but it may be unknown by
    authority
  • Gap widens between authority and the one truth

17
Position 3 Early Multiplicity
  • Realization begins that knowledge in some areas
    is fuzzy
  • Conflict arises how can instructor evaluate
    students work if the answer is not yet known?
  • What do they want?
  • In engineering few opportunities exist, outside
    of design classes, to move to positions 3 or 4

18
Position 4 Complex Dualism and Advanced
Multiplicity
  • Tries to retain dualistic view, but understands
    that variety of opinion legitimately exists
  • Conforms to what authority wants by learning
    independent intellectual thought
  • Learns that independent-like thought will earn
    good grades

19
Position 4 Complex Dualism and Advanced
Multiplicity
  • May oppose authoritys wants in areas where
    multiplicity is important
  • Engineer in position 4 can generate clever,
    creative solutions to problems.
  • May lack vision and ability to prioritize.
  • Many engineers with advanced degrees are in
    positions 3 and 4

20
Stage 3 Relativism
  • Individual recognizes the need to support
    opinions
  • Rationale for beliefs takes into account
    questioning as well as a contextual basis for
    positions taken.
  • Knowledge is viewed more qualitatively.
  • Knowledge is contextually defined, based on
    evidence and supporting arguments.

21
Position 5 Relativism
  • Student now sees everything as relative
  • Relativism is now the common characteristic and
    absolutes are the exceptions. This is the
    reverse of position 4.
  • Relativistic thought becomes habitual without
    being noticed.
  • Students in a relativistic position advances
    beyond the all opinions are equal stage by
    using evidence to develop positions which are
    more likely.

22
Position 6 Relativism Commitment Foreseen
  • Student can see the need for commitment, but has
    not yet made it
  • Commitment is a mature decision made after one
    has accepted that the world can be viewed as
    relativistic and has seen all of the possibilities

23
Position 6 Relativism Commitment Foreseen
  • Previous decisions recalled and examined from a
    detached viewpoint.
  • Commitments can be made in a variety of areas
    such as career, religion, marriage, politics,
    values, etc.
  • Major commitments are not to be rushed. Student
    may stay in position 6 for a while.

24
Stage 4 Commitment
  • Student finds the sense of identity searched for
    elsewhere.
  • Knowledge learned from others integrated with
    personal experience and thought.
  • Making choices in a contextual world.
  • Initiates the ethical development of the thinker

25
Positions 7, 8 and 9 Levels of Commitment
  • Positions 7 through 9 are levels of commitment
    beginning initially in position 7.
  • Positions represent degrees of development and
    depth.

26
Other Cognitive Development Models
  • Baxter Magolda's Model of Epistemological
    Reflection
  • Belenky's Epistemological Perspectives from Which
    Women Know and View the World
  • Sinnotts Complex Postformal Thought

27
References
  • Wankat, Phillip C., Oreovicz, Frank S., Teaching
    Engineering, McGraw-Hill, Inc., New York, Chapter
    14.
  • www.cs.buffalo.edu/rapaport/perry.positions.html
  • www.ericfacility.net/ericdigest/ed284272.html
  • www.new.towson.edu/iact/main_files/cognitive.htm
  • admin.vmi.edu/ir/sid.htm

28
References
  • academic.pg.cc.md.us/wpeirce/MCCCTR/perry1.html
  • arl.cni.org/newsltr/193/ld.html
  • english.ttu.edu/kairos/2.1/features/brent/perry.ht
    m
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