Cognitive Development

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cognitive development What do babies perceive? Do babies have memory? For what? Can babies problem solve? When? Do babies think in the same way as adults?
Advertisements

Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 7 Chapter 7 Cognition.
Chapter 3: Infancy and Childhood Mr. McCormick Psychology.
 Infancy And Childhood Standards IIIA-1.2 Examine the nature of change over the lifespan. IIIA-1.3 Identify the complex cognitive structures found in.
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT IN INFANCY AND CHILDHOOD: PIAGET’S COGNITIVE STAGES.
Cognitive Development
Child Development/ Jean Piaget FOUN 3100 August 25, 2003.
Cognitive Development - Piaget
Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Cognitive Development Theory.
Piaget. Educational Pioneer ● August 9, 1896 – September 16, 1980 ● Swiss philosopher, natural scientist and developmental psychologist ● “Education,
Cognitive Development We clearly are not as intelligent or mentally capable as infants as we are as adults. How do we develop the cognitive skills and.
Life-Span Human Development, Fifth Edition, Carol K. Sigelman and Elizabeth A. Rider Chapter 7 Chapter 7 Cognition.
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development EDU 251 Fall 2014.
Chapter 2: Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget ( )
Cognitive-developmental (Social constructivist)
Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Constructivism Theory.
Language Development Language and thought are intertwined. Both abilities involve using symbols. We are able to think and talk about objects that are not.
Jean Piaget ( ).
Early Childhood Theorists
Cognitive Development and Jean Piaget
Cognitive Development: Piaget’s and Vygotsky’s Theories
His Life His Theory Applications in Education
Cognitive Development
Cognitive Development
Developmental Psychology Piaget: Cognitive Development Theory.
Do Kids think differently than adults?
Cognitive development 14 th December Developmental psychology  study of progressive changes in human traits and abilities that occur throughout.
Piaget and Learning Tuesday, July 7th. Jean Piaget ( ) Remarkable mind that comes along very rarely in human history Before he was 10 years old,
Piaget’s Cognitive Development Theory. Cognition All the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, and remembering Children think differently.
Understanding Intellectual Development of Infants Chapter 10.1 Child/Human Development.
Cognitive Development
PIAGET’S WORLD VIEW 1. Human nature: positive, curious
Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2007 What Are the Developmental Tasks of Infancy and Childhood? Infants and children face especially important developmental.
Piaget Just the basics please. Rules of Development Stages are QUALITATIVELY different Effected by both environment and genetics follows a prescribed.
Chapter 7: Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
JEAN PIAGET HALIMA SHARIAT & TENI KURIAN.
Chapter 6 Cognitive and Learning Characteristics © Taylor & Francis 2015.
Chapter 3 Academic Diversity – Learning Styles Introduction to Special Populations.
His Mission… Piaget wanted to find out how intelligence, or the ability to understand, developed during childhood. How did he do it? –Observing, questioning,
JEAN PIAGET
Theories of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget. Jean Piaget ( )
Instructional Theory Presented by Frank H. Osborne, Ph. D. © 2015 EMSE 3230 Math and Science in Education 1.
Class Starter for 2/1/2010 Read p. 71 – How do children benefit from imaginary playmates? Did you ever have one?
Chapter 6: Theories of Cognitive Development. Chapter 6: Theories of Cognitive Development Chapter 6 has three modules: Module 6.1 Setting the Stage:
Issues in Developmental Psychology Nature and Nurture Heredity imposes some limits on what a person can become. Home, education, nutrition, etc. can evoke.
I CAN: Explain each Piagetian stage and apply them to given descriptions I can identify developmental markers within each stage of development.
Educational Psychology Ch. 2 Cognitive Development and Language Ashleigh Dunn 03/19/2011.
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT KELLY PYZDROWSKI.
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development In Children.
Cognitive Development Jen Brace Jean Piaget “Father” of cognitive development Studied his children Jacqueline, Lucienne & Laurent Where does.
Early Cognitive Development
Jeanne Ormrod Eighth Edition © 2014, 2011, 2008, 2006, 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. Educational Psychology Developing Learners.
Using Cognitive Development Psychology in the Classroom.
Unit 5 Seminar Cognitive Development Developmental Theories (Piaget and Vygotsky)
© 2013 by McGraw-Hill Education. This is proprietary material solely for authorized instructor use. Not authorized for sale or distribution in any manner.
CHAPTER 2 Cognitive development Identify the four factors that, according to Piaget, influence children’s thinking from early childhood to adulthood.
Cognitive Development in Middle Childhood Zembar and Blume Middle Childhood Development: A Contextual Approach, First Edition ©2009 Pearson Education,
Piaget’s Cognitive Development Theory. Cognition All the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, and remembering Children think differently.
Chapter 7 Cognition.
JEAN PAIGET "The principle goal of education in the schools should be creating men and women who are capable of doing new things, not simply repeating.
Piaget and Vygotsky.
Jean Piaget 1896 – 1980 Genetic Epistomology IBE director
Cognitive and Linguistic Development
Cognitive and Emotional Development
CHAPTER 7 COGNITION.
Cognitive Development
Infancy and Childhood.
Human Cognitive Development
Theories of Development
Presentation transcript:

Cognitive Development Chapter 13

Outline Major Approaches to Cognitive Development Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Development of Information-Processing Skills Metacognitive Skills and Memory Development Neurophysiological Changes in Development Increasing Neuronal Complexity Maturation of Central Nervous System Structures Cognitive Development in Adulthood Patterns of Growth and Decline Wisdom and Aging

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development The investigation of how mental skills build and change with increasing physiological maturity (maturation) and experience (learning) 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development The most comprehensive theory of cognitive development We can learn as much about children’s intellectual development from examining their incorrect answers to test items as from examining their correct answers

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Development occurs in stages that evolve via equilibration, in which children seek a balance (equilibrium) between what they encounter in their environments and cognitive processes and structures they have

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Equilibration involves three stages: Equilibrium Occurs when child’s existing mode of thought and existing schemas are adequate for confronting and adapting to the challenges of environment Assimilation Incorporating new information into the child’s existing schemas Accommodation Changing the existing schemas to fit the relevant new information about the environment

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Sensorimotor Stage (0-2 years) Involves increases in the number and the complexity of sensory (input) and motor (output) abilities during infancy 0-9 months – infant cognition seems to focus only on what the infants immediately can perceive through their senses

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Sensorimotor Stage (0-2 years) 9 months and older have a sense of object permanence Knowledge that objects continue to exist even when imperceptible to the infants Children begin to show signs of representational thought Child starts to be able to think about people and objects that are not necessarily perceptible at that moment

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Preoperational Stage (2 to 6-7 years) The child begins actively to develop the internal mental representations that started at the end of the sensorimotor stage Children exhibit centration A tendency to focus on only one especially noticeable aspect of a complicated object or situation

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Concrete-Operational Stage (7-8 to 11-12) Children become able to manipulate mentally the internal representations that they formed during the preoperational period Conservation of quantity The child is able mentally to conserve (keep in mind) a given quantity despite observing changes in the appearance of the object or substance

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Jean Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Formal-Operational Stage (older than 11-12 years) Children develop mental operations on abstractions and symbols that may not have physical, concrete forms Children are finally fully able to take on perspectives other than their own, even when they are not working with concrete objects

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Rediscovered in 1970s and 1980s Vygotsky emphasized the role of the environment in children’s intellectual development Internalization The absorption of knowledge from context The environment determines what the child internalizes

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Zone of proximal development (ZPD) The zone of potential development The range of potential between a child’s observable level of realized ability (performance) and the child’s underlying latent capacity (competence), which is not directly obvious

1. Major Approaches to Cognitive Development 1. Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Dynamic assessment environment The interaction between child and examiner does not end when the child responds In static testing, when a child gives a wrong answer, the examiner moves on to the next problem In dynamic assessment, when the child gives a wrong answer, the examiner gives the child a graded sequence of guided hints to facilitate problem solving

Cognitive Development in Adulthood Fluid intelligence The cognitive-processing skills that enable us to manipulate abstract symbols, as in mathematics Crystallized intelligence Our stored knowledge, which is largely declarative, such as vocabulary, but also may be procedural, such as the expertise of a master chess player Although crystallized intelligence is higher, on average, for older adults than for younger adults, fluid intelligence is higher, on average, for young (20s, 30s, 40s) adults than for older ones