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Jean Piaget

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Equilibration: search for mental balance between cognitive schemes and ... Process of concentrating on one aspect of an object & ignoring other aspects. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jean Piaget


1
Jean Piaget
  • Swiss Psychologist

2
Advance Organizer for Piaget
  • Key terms assimilation, accommodation,
    equilibrium
  • Constructivist approach
  • 4 Stages
  • Key concepts object permanence, conservation
  • Teaching implications

3
Processes of Development
  • Move from one stage to another via maturation,
    activity, social experiences and equilibration.
  • Equilibration search for mental balance between
    cognitive schemes and information from the
    environment.

4
Processes continued
  • Schemes-framework that exists mentally to
    organize and interpret information.
  • Assimilation-fitting new information into
    existing schemes.
  • Accommodation-altering existing schemes or
    creating new ones in response to new information.

5
Stage Theory of Development
  • Everyone passes through 4 stages
  • in exactly the same order
  • Hierarchical Stages- that means one needs to be
    completed before you can move to the next.
  • Step like development.
  • Constructivist theory

6
Sensorimotor 0-2 years of age
  • Experience the world via the childs actions
    which are primarily sucking, grasping, looking,
    touching
  • circular reactions-events which the infant liked
    and tries to repeat.

7
Object Permanence
  • Hide an object and the child will not look for it
  • Out of sight, pretty well out of mind
  • Pay attention for new info on this later in
    lecture

8
Preoperational Stage-2-7 years
  • Extraordinary increase in mental representation
  • Use of symbolic thinking grows, mental reasoning
    emerges, use of concepts increases.

9
Centration
  • What you see is what is.
  • Process of concentrating on one aspect of an
    object ignoring other aspects.
  • A boy in a dress is a girl.
  • Longer rows of coins have more money. Smashed
    balls of clay are more clay.

10
So, they lack conservation
  • Conservation knowledge that quantity is
    unrelated to arrangement physical appearance of
    objects.
  • Up to about age 7 very perception bound

11
Irreversible Thinking
  • Can not mentally undo things
  • Do you have a brother? Yes
  • Does your brother have a sister? No

12
Egocentrism
  • Inability to take anothers point of view
  • May cover their own eyes when they wish to hide
    from you
  • Parallel conversation aka collective monologue

13
Parallel conversation
  • Child 1 We went to the circus.
  • Child 2 I got a new doll.
  • Child 1 I rode the baby elephant.
  • Child 2 My doll has 2 outfits.

14
Teaching Preops
  • 1. Use concrete props and aids.
  • 2. Have them make comparisons.
  • 3. Avoid long explanations. Show the students
    what you want them to do.
  • 4. Dont expect them to take anothers
    perspective well.
  • 5. Take field trips.

15
Concrete Operations 7-12
  • Given real materials, they can conserve.
  • Can do Mental Representions.
  • Still are not good at abstract thinking.

16
Teaching Ideas for this stage
  • Continue with concrete props for more difficult
    material.
  • Give students a chance to manipulate and test
    objects (bake real bread, make candles, make a
    hamburger grill, et cetera etc.)
  • Present problems that require logical thinking.

17
Formal Operations Stage 11 Up
  • Thought is more abstract and logical
  • Can develop hypotheses to solve problems
    systematically reach a conclusion

18
Formal Operational Stage 12 Up
  • can think about what ifs.
  • Not restricted to thinking about acquired facts.
    What is possible is more important than what is
    real.
  • Higher levels of math are possible.
  • Should be able to consider more than one variable
    at a time.

19
Formal Operational Students
  • This includes you.
  • Continue to use concrete items but can use
    sophisticated graphs, diagrams, charts.
  • Give students chance to explore hypothetical
    questions.
  • Give students a chance to solve problems and
    reason scientifically.
  • Teach broad concepts, not just facts.

20
Criticisms of Piaget
  • Fundamentally correct in that human cognition
    does unfold the way he said
  • Chief problem underestimated childrens
    competence
  • Sensorimotor stage 2 studies which contradict
    Piaget
  • Piaget said 6-9 months Baillargeon says 3.5
    months

21
Imitation
  • Piaget proposed 18-24 months
  • Meltzoff showed they could do this after 24 hours
    at 9 months old.
  • TV depiction of adult manipulating unique toy.
  • Next day, children imitated this. Control
    children did not.

22
Preoperational - Conservation
  • Checker task Which has more? and the child
    takes the longer row. May think longer means
    more.
  • When replaced with M Ms and asked which row
    they wanted to take home, they were clear on the
    concept.
  • Children still fail on mass liquid so he was
    more right than wrong.

23
Formal Operations
  • Do adults really use logic to solve problems?
  • Only 30 of adults used a logical per unit price
    when asked to compare prices on objects.
  • World Trade Center example.
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