Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Cognitive Transitions

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Cognitive Transitions"— Presentation transcript:

1 Cognitive Transitions
Chapter 2

2 Changes in Cognition (Thinking)
Main advantages over child’s thought Thinking of possibilities Thinking about abstracts Thinking about the process of thinking Thinking in multidimensional terms Seeing knowledge as relative

3 Thinking about Possibilities
Children’s thinking based on concrete/observable events; Adolescents can now think of what “might be” Example: Ways in which their lives might be affected by different career choices Can now move easily between the specific and the abstract to generate alternative possibilities Development of deductive reasoning” “If-then” thinking (hypothetical thinking) Major intellectual accomplishment Many parents believe that their children become more argumentative during adolescence. What probably happens in that their children become better arguers. An adolescent does not accept other people’s points of view unquestioningly but instead evaluates them against other theoretically possible beliefs. Inductive reasoning is used by people of all ages, even very young children . Deductive reasoning is seldom seen before adolescence. Inductive reasoning (page 65) – an inference is made based on the accumulated evidence that one has.

4 Thinking about Abstract Concepts
Ability to comprehend higher-order abstract logic inherent in puns, proverbs, metaphors, and analogies The growth of social thinking (social cognition) during adolescence is directly related to the young person’s improving ability to think abstractly Underlies interest in topics like interpersonal relationships, politics, philosophy, religion, morality This is clearly seen in the adolescent’s increased facility and interest in thinking about interpersonal relationships, politics, philosophy, religion, and morality—topics that involve such abstract concepts as friendship, faith, democracy, fairness, and honesty.

5 Metacognition: Thinking about Thinking
Monitoring one’s own cognitive activity during the process of thinking Increased introspection thinking about our own emotions Increased self-consciousness Thinking about others thinking of us Increased intellectualization Thinking about our own thoughts

6 Metacognition may result in problems
Adolescent egocentrism Extreme self-absorptions Imaginary audience Behavior is the focus of other’s concern Personal fable Experiences are unique “That won’t happen to me…” The imaginary audience involves having such a heightened sense of self-consciousness that the teenager imagines that his or her behavior is the focus of everyone else’s concern and attention. The personal fable revolves around the adolescent’s egocentric (and erroneous) belief that his or her experiences are unique. Page 67

7 Thinking in Multiple Dimensions
Can now see things in complicated ways rather than one aspect at a time More sophisticated understanding of probability Ability to understand when someone is being sarcastic Can understand double-entendres Adolescents describe themselves and others in more differentiated and complicated terms (“I’m both shy and extroverted”) and find it easier to look at problems from multiple perspectives (“I know that’s the way you see it, but try to look at it from her point of view”). Ability to understand when someone is being sarcastic. (Demorest et al, 1984) page 69 Before age 9 children had difficulty picking out sarcastic remarks Ages 9 to 13 children got better at understanding sarcasm. The ability to understand increased through adolescence. Can understand double-entendres Such as “He said ‘erector set’” (page 69)

8 Adolescent Relativism
Ability to see things as relative rather than as absolute (children see things in absolute terms: either black or white) Skepticism becomes common (begin to question EVERYTHING!) Everything may seem uncertain No knowledge seems completely reliable Food For Thought: The main cognitive changes of adolescence are usually seen as intellectual improvements, but are they always advantageous? Can you think of any circumstances under which one or more of the five changes discussed in the previous section would be disadvantageous?

9 Piagetian View of Adolescent Thinking
SENSORIMOTOR STAGE BIRTH TO TWO YEARS PREOPERATIONAL 2 TO 6 YEARS CONCRETE OPERATONAL 6 TO 11 YEARS FORMAL OPERATIONS 11 + YEARS Page 70 of the textbook Table 2.1 covers the chief characteristics of each stage. Cognitive-developmental view Cognitive development goes through a fixed sequence of four qualitatively distinct stages: sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operational periods

10 The Development of Value Autonomy
KOHLBERG’S THREE LEVELS OF MORAL REASONING Preconventional Moral Reasoning (worrying about punishment/reward) Conventional Moral Reasoning (following societal rules and norms) Postconventional Moral Reasoning (most abstract and advanced)

11 The Development of Value Autonomy
Moral Development during Adolescence Research has shown that moral behavior does not always match moral reasoning Contextual factors influence how a person acts when facing moral dilemmas in the real world Carol Gilligan Argues against Kohlberg, says his theory is gender-biased Women may use a care orientation to moral dilemmas Men may use a justice orientation However, research does not support Gilligan’s argument

12 The Heinz Dilemma Was it right or wrong for Heinz to steal the drug for his wife? Would your answer be considered preconventional, conventional, postconventional?

13 Work and Leisure

14 WORK AND LEISURE IN CONTEMPORARY SOCIETY
American adolescents spend more time on leisure, less time in productive activities, than peers in other countries Example Average American high school student spends < 5 hours per week on homework In Asian countries a student spends 4 to 5 hours per day on homework Having large amounts of free time is one hallmark of adolescence in modern society, although how adolescents use their free time varies considerably around the world.

15 Adolescents and Work: Working and Adolescent Development
The Development of Responsibility Most people believe that working helps teens build character, teaches them about the real world, and prepares them for adulthood But recent studies show that benefits of working during adolescence have been overstated What do you think? Few teenagers exercise a great deal of responsibility when it comes to managing their earnings. The majority of working teenagers spend most of their earnings on their own needs and activities. Most teenagers are not making genuine contributions to their family’s incomes as they were during the Great Depression. Page 239 Intensive employment during the school year may lead to more cynical attitudes toward work and the endorsement of unethical business practices. Pages

16 Adolescents and Work: Working and Adolescent Development
Work and Its Impact on Other Activities Working more than 20 hours/week may jeopardize school performance Absent from school more often Less likely to be in extracurricular activities Report enjoying school less Spent less time on homework Earned lower grades

17 Adolescents and Work: Working and Adolescent Development
Work and Problem Behavior Time-honored belief: Working will deter teens from criminal activity by keeping them out of trouble Research findings: Working long hours may actually be associated with increases in aggression, school misconduct, precocious sexual activity, minor delinquency.

18 Adolescents and Work: Working and Adolescent Development
Work and Problem Behavior Differential Impact: Middle-Class vs. Poor Youth Poor youth – working may not lead to problem behavior – WHY? Pages


Download ppt "Cognitive Transitions"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google