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Stages of Development. Stages of Cognitive Development Children learn through their senses, exploration, & trial & error Sensorimotor stage - Birth to.

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Presentation on theme: "Stages of Development. Stages of Cognitive Development Children learn through their senses, exploration, & trial & error Sensorimotor stage - Birth to."— Presentation transcript:

1 Stages of Development

2 Stages of Cognitive Development Children learn through their senses, exploration, & trial & error Sensorimotor stage - Birth to age 2 Preoperational stage – age 2 through age 6 Concrete operational stage – age 7 through 11 Formal operational stage – age 12 through adulthood

3 Sensorimotor Stage Ages birth to 2 Learning is limited through senses, trying to make sense of their world - Eyes - Sight – looking - Ears - Sound – Listening - Nose - smell - Mouth –Sucking – taste, shape, feel of object - Hands – grasping, touching Babies – hand to mouth - They learn about objects and things through their senses and their mouth is the first body part with which they explore

4 Preoperational Stage Age 2 to 6 Pre concrete stage K – 1 st grade Experiments Language Development Symbolism i.e. a broom becomes a horse, a stick becomes a sword Playing, Pretending & Role Playing (doctor, mommy) Liquid in a cup Money – which is more? - Children will select nickel over dime when asked which is more, because the nickel is larger in size

5 Concrete Operational Stage Age 7 to 11 Elementary school age Grade 2 through 5 Hands-on learning is CRITICAL Children see things in concrete ways They do not have abstract thought, thus can’t understand hypothesis and things they cannot see; i.e. inflation, sportsmanship Implications for teaching Demonstrations & Pinpointing are hugely important! Use concrete boundary markers (cones to mark corners, use lines to help children line up, polyspots for personal space, show me with your fingers how many; point to your next station; stand beside your partner, face your partner, etc.) - Line up shoulder to shoulder (be direct & specific) - Teachers must be specific!

6 Formal Operational Stage Age 12 to adulthood – 6 th grade & up Some never reach this stage, thus important for teachers to use concrete examples frequently Begins to think abstractly Can think hypothetically Can think inside one’s head

7 Formal Operational Stage Can think about things one can’t see or touch; such as: - Sportsmanship, offense, defense - Inflation, Social Justice, Capitalism, democracy This is when we see children at this stage of thinking getting involved with solving problems (using Styrofoam in cafeterias); volunteerism, etc.

8 Formal Operational Stage Can generalize i.e. to have good friends I must be a good friend Can begin to use a general principle to solve a specific problem - important for math and science; strategy in game play, can imagine how an offensive play will work… Begins to think about outcomes & consequences – if I do this – that will happen

9 Formal Operational Stage Can problem solve, likes to think about world issues (poverty, gender roles, democracy) likes puzzles, word problems, etc. Can begin to see gray areas – not just black & white

10 Deductive Reasoning Strong logic Weak Logic All men are mortal Socrates is a man Therefore, Socrates is mortal All monkeys like bananas Fido is a monkey Therefore, Fido likes bananas All monkeys like bananas I like bananas Therefore, I am a monkey

11 Inductive Reasoning There are 20 balls in an urn, either black or white. To estimate their respective numbers you draw a sample of 4 balls and find that 3 are black, one is white. A good inductive generalization would be: there are 15 black and 5 white balls in the urn.


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