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Title: Piaget


1
Piagets Cognitive Development Theory
2
Cognition
  • All the mental activities associated with
    thinking, knowing, and remembering
  • Children think differently than adults do

3
Childs Thinking
  • Play The Magic Years (1000) Segment 25 from
    Scientific American Frontiers Video Collection
    for Introductory Psychology (2nd edition)

4
Jean Piaget (pee-ah-ZHAY)
  • (18961980) Swiss psychologist who became leading
    theorist in 1930s
  • Developmental psychologist who introduced a stage
    theory of cognitive development
  • Proposed a theory consisting of four stages of
    cognitive development
  • Believed that children actively try to make sense
    out of their environment rather than passively
    soaking up information about the world.

5
Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
  • Piaget believed that children are active
    thinkers, constantly trying to construct more
    advanced understandings of the world
  • These understandings are in the form of
    structures he called schemas

6
Schemas
  • Concepts or mental frameworks that people use to
    organize and interpret information
  • Sometimes called schemes
  • A persons picture of the world

7
Development of Schemas
  • Schemas are frameworks that develop to help
    organize knowledge
  • Assimilationprocess of taking new information or
    a new experience and fitting it into an already
    existing schema
  • Accommodationprocess by which existing schemas
    are changed or new schemas are created in order
    to fit new information

8
Assimilation
  • Interpreting a new experience within the context
    of ones existing schemas
  • The new experience is similar to other previous
    experiences

9
Accommodation
  • Interpreting a new experience by adapting or
    changing ones existing schemas
  • The new experience is so novel the persons
    schemata must be changed to accommodate it

10
Assimilation/Accommodation
11
Assimilation/Accommodation
12
Assimilation/Accommodation
As children assimilate new information and
experiences, they eventually change their way of
thinking to accommodate new knowledge
13
Piagets Approach
  • Primary method was to ask children to solve
    problems and to question them about the reasoning
    behind their solutions
  • Discovered that children think in radically
    different ways than adults
  • Proposed that development occurs as a series of
    stages differing in how the world is understood

14
Piagets 4 Cognitive Developmental Stages
  • Sensorimotor stage,
  • from birth to age 2
  • Preoperational stage,
  • from age 2 to age 7
  • Concrete operational stage,
  • from age 7 to age 11
  • Formal operational stage,
  • begins during adolescence and continues into
    adulthood.
  • Each new stage represents a fundamental shift in
    how the child thinks and understands the world

15
Sensorimotor Stage (birth 2)
  • Information is gained directly through the senses
    and motor actions
  • In this stage child perceives and manipulates but
    does not reason
  • Symbols become internalized through language
    development
  • Object permanence is acquired - the understanding
    that an object continues to exist even if it
    cant be seen

16
Object Permanence
  • The awareness that things continue to exist even
    when they cannot be sensed
  • Occurs as babies gain experience with objects, as
    their memory abilities improve, and as they
    develop mental representations of the world,
    which Piaget called schemas
  • Before 6 months infants act as if objects removed
    from sight cease to exist
  • Can be surprised by disappearance/reappearance of
    a face (peek-a-boo)
  • Out of sight, out of mind

17
Object Permanence
18
Object Permanence
  • Play Object Permanence Video 15 from Worths
    Digital Media Archive for Psychology

Click Here to view in a separate window
19
Preoperational Stage (27 years)
  • The word operations refers to logical, mental
    activities thus, the preoperational stage is a
    prelogical stage
  • Children can understand language but not logic
  • Emergence of symbolic thought - ability to use
    words, images, and symbols to represent the
    world.
  • Centration - tendency to focus, or center, on
    only one aspect of a situation, usually a
    perceptual aspect, and ignore other relevant
    aspects of the situation
  • Egocentrism - inability to take another persons
    perspective or point of view
  • Lack the concept of conservation - which holds
    that two equal quantities remain equal even if
    the appearance of one is changed, as long as
    nothing is added or subtracted
  • Irreversibility - child cannot mentally reverse a
    sequence of events or logical operations back to
    the starting point

20
Egocentrism
  • The childs inability to take another persons
    point of view
  • Child on the phone says, See the picture I drew
    for you Grandpa! and shows the picture to the
    phone.
  • Includes a childs inability to understand that
    symbols can represent other objects

21
Childhood Thinking
  • Play A Change of Mind (1200) Segment 26 from
    Scientific American Frontiers Video Collection
    for Introductory Psychology (2nd edition)

22
Conservation
  • An understanding that certain properties remain
    constant despite changes in their form
  • The properties can include mass, volume, and
    numbers.

23
Conservation
  • Number

In conservation of number tests, two equivalent
rows of coins are placed side by side and the
child says that there is the same number in each
row. Then one row is spread apart and the child
is again asked if there is the same number in
each.
24
Conservation
  • Length

In conservation of length tests, two same-length
sticks are placed side by side and the child says
that they are the same length. Then one is moved
and the child is again asked if they are the
same length.
25
Conservation
  • Substance

In conservation of substance tests, two identical
amounts of clay are rolled into similar-appearing
balls and the child says that they both have the
same amount of clay. Then one ball is rolled out
and the child is again asked if they have the
same amount.
26
Piagets Conservation Task
  • Play Piagets Conservation Task Video 18 from
    Worths Digital Media Archive for Psychology

To view in a separate window click here
27
Conservation
28
Conservation
29
Conservation
30
Types of Conservation Tasks
31
Concrete Operational Stage (712 years)
  • Ability to think logically about concrete objects
    and situations
  • Child can now understand conservation
  • Classification and categorization
  • Less egocentric
  • Inability to reason abstractly or hypothetically

32
Formal Operational Stage (age 12 adulthood)
  • Ability to think logically about abstract
    principles and hypothetical situations
  • Hypothetico-deductive reasoning (What if.
    problems)
  • Adolescent egocentrism illustrated by the
    phenomenon of personal fable and imaginary
    audience

33
Cognitive Development
  • Play Infant Cognitive Development (714)
    Segment 14 from The Mind Psychology Teaching
    Modules (2nd edition)

34
Assessing Piagets Theory
  • Scientific research has supported Piagets most
    fundamental idea that infants, young children,
    and older children use distinct cognitive
    abilities to construct their understanding of the
    world
  • BUT
  • Piaget underestimated the childs ability at
    various ages.
  • Piaget confused motor skill limitations with
    cognitive limitations in assessing object
    permanence during infancy.
  • Piagets theory doesnt take into account culture
    and social differences.

35
Piagets Theory Challenged
  • New studies indicate infants do more than sense
    and react
  • One study had 1-month-old babies suck one of two
    pacifiers without ever seeing them
  • When shown both pacifiers, infants stared more at
    the one they had felt in their mouth
  • This requires a sort of reasoning
  • Renée Baillargeon used visual tasks, rather than
    manual tasks, and found that three-and-a-half-mont
    h-old infants could mentally represent objects
    that had disappeared from view

36
Critique of Piagets Theory
  • Underestimates childrens abilities
  • Overestimates age differences in thinking
  • Vagueness about the process of change
  • Underestimates the role of the social environment
  • Lack of evidence for qualitatively different
    stages
  • Some adults never display formal operational
    thought processes

37
Information-Processing Perspective
  • Focuses on the mind as a system, analogous to a
    computer, for analyzing information from the
    environment
  • Focuses on the development of fundamental mental
    processes, such as attention, memory, and problem
    solving
  • Developmental improvements reflect
  • increased capacity of working memory
  • faster speed of processing
  • new algorithms (methods)
  • more stored knowledge

38
Vygotskys Sociocultural Perspective
  • Emphasized the childs interaction with the
    social world (other people) as a cause of
    development
  • Vygotsky believed language to be the foundation
    for social interaction and thought
  • Piaget believed language was a byproduct of
    thought

39
Vygotskys Sociocultural Perspective
  • Believed that cognitive development is strongly
    influenced by social and cultural factors, such
    as the support and guidance that children receive
    from parents, other adults, and older children
  • Children learn from interactions with other
    people
  • Zone of proximal developmentwhat a child can do
    by interacting with another person, but cant do
    alone.
  • Critical thinking based on dialogue with others
    who challenge ideas
  • Piagetfocused on childrens interaction with the
    physical world

40
Cross-Cultural Viewpoint
  • Cross-cultural studies show that cognitive
    development is strongly influenced by the skills
    that are valued and encouraged in a particular
    environment
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