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Chapter 7 - Piaget I.Piaget’s Theory 4 stages Cognitive development Same order in all kids.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 7 - Piaget I.Piaget’s Theory 4 stages Cognitive development Same order in all kids."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 7 - Piaget I.Piaget’s Theory 4 stages Cognitive development Same order in all kids

2 Principles - development proceeds via: Adaptation respond to environment

3 Assimilation - incorporating new info into current understanding Accommodation - changing existing understanding based on new information

4 Structures - organization Behavioral scheme - organized pattern of behavior Symbolic scheme - representing events mentally Operational scheme - mental problem-solving

5 Stages = different types of logic & cognition Impetus to advance = inability of old logic to handle new information

6 II. Stages A.Sensorimotor Period (Birth - 2) - using reflexes for beginning problem solving Substage 1 (Birth - 1 month) - refine reflexes

7 Substage 2 (2-4 months) - primary circular reaction - chance event occurs re stimulating own body - infant finds event pleasing - infant repeats => beginning of intentional behavior

8 Substage 3 (4-8 months) - secondary circular reaction - learn by chance to make things happen to external objects

9 Substage 4 (8-12 months) - coordination of secondary schemes - combining 2+ secondary reactions to achieve goal - 1 st truly intentional behavior

10 Substage 5 (12-18 months) - tertiary circular reactions - systematically experiment with objects - try new methods to solve problems - emergence of curiosity

11 Substage 6 (18-24 months) Symbolic problem-solving - carry out experiments mentally - insight and planning - deferred imitation Object permanence - know objects still exist even when hidden

12 Summary of Sensorimotor - from reflexive, immobile infants to planful thinkers - form simple concepts/solve problems Deficiency: no symbolic thought

13 B.Preoperational Period (2-7 years) - beginning use of mental symbols “Preoperational” - not yet thinking logically - magical thinking - focus on deficiencies

14 Ability:Symbolic function Beginning ability to make one thing represent another Language Pretend play

15 5 Deficiencies - perceive things only 1 way at a time Egocentrism - no perspective taking Animism - attribute lifelike qualities to inanimate objects

16 Phenomenism - think appearance = reality Centration - consider only one aspect when need to consider 2+ No conservation - cannot understand that basic properties of object do not change when appearance changes

17 C.Concrete Operational Period (7-11) Ability = Mental Operations - think logically - about real objects & experiences

18 Additional mental operations: Reversibility - ability to mentally reverse an action Seriation - ability to mentally arrange objects along a dimension

19 Deficiency - cannot think abstractly (concrete = bound to existing objects)

20 Piaget & Education Construct own knowledge Best = challenging but within ability range Use real objects Active learning (not listening) vs. Doman’s Better Baby Institute

21 D.Formal Operational Period (12+) Ability = Abstract thought - mental actions performed on ideas & propositions - reason logically - not necessarily based on reality

22 Hypothetical-Deductive Reasoning all factors that could affect an outcome generate hypotheses test the hypotheses in orderly fashion

23 Personal & social implications Positive Apply problem-solving to life choices Consider possibilities Form stable identity Take others’ perspectives

24 Problematic Anger at world’s illogicality Frustration with those in charge -> all-or-none thinking Greater self-consciousness: Egocentrism vs. Social perspective-taking

25 We don’t all reach formal operations Intellectual abilities Formal schooling Maybe we have reached but don’t demonstrate ability

26 III. Criticisms of Theory Competence vs. performance 1.Tasks may be too difficult 2.Low motivation to perform 3.Poor memory

27 Following social conventions Socially appropriate responses vs. understanding Training Piagetian Concepts Necessity of maturation vs. Research on teaching concepts (Gelman)

28 Lack of Consistency within Stages Children perform at different levels Timing of Stages/Skills Piaget’s ages not always appropriate But sequence of abilities is supported

29 IV. Neo-Piagetians 1.Qualitative changes in thinking - At 2, 7, 11 - Retain the 4 basic stages & their sequence - Still no good explanation of how/why children advance 2.Performance varies by task


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