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Published bySibyl Annis Craig Modified over 9 years ago
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Chapter 6 Off to School
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What were you good at in kindergarten and first grade? How did you learn?
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Piaget’s Last 2 stages Concrete Operational (7 – 11 years of age) –Accepting view as not the only one –Mental operations form Reverse thinking Beginning Math* Limited to “real” things
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Formal Operational Thinking This is what you used to figure out the puzzles. –Deductive reasoning –Consider all sides! Piaget says that we end cognitive development by 12 to 3 years of age
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How did you learn……… in the beginning?
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By 7/8 children use the simple strategy of rehearsal. –Repeat, repeat, repeat –Working memory v/s long term memory. Eventually able to use other strategies. –How do you study today? Rehearsal Main points Outlines Draw
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I am smart therefore I am intelligent. I scored a 180 on my IQ test, therefore I am smart
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There are those that believe that an IQ test is the only way to determine intelligence. Others believe that you can be intelligent in some aspects and not others!
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Gardner’s Multiple Intelligence Theory (g=intelligence) 9 Intelligences –Linguistic –Logical –Spatial –Musical –Bodily – Kinesthetic –Interpersonal –Intrapersonal –Naturalistic –Existential Each on different development path Different parts of brain control Savants demonstrate this theory
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Sternberg’s Triarchic theory Componential – dependant on cognitive processes (organize and process) Experiential – applying experience to new situations. Contextual – environmental/cultural influences.
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So, what’s an IQ test like??
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Intelligence Tests First development –Feeble minded from the “select few” There are many different ones out there now. –Stanford-Binet –Wechsler Scales –Kaufman Scales These are standard measures These tests DO NOT directly predict a child’s potential for future learning!!!!!!!
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How do I know if the test I use is a good one? Validity – relates to what is measured Reliability – repeatable Culturally fair – reduces biases
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The Impact of Heredity & Environment Heredity –2 parents with high IQ’s tend to have a child with a higher IQ. –WHY? Is it biological? Is it environmental? –Adoption Study Environment –Characteristics of family/home –Historical Changes –Increase in strategy for economically disadvantaged
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Gifted = IQ of greater than 130. OR exceptionally talented in an area (Gardner’s Theory!) Intelligence is not creativity! –Intelligence – using information to determine (convergent thinking) –Creativity – at times using novel, unusual explanations (divergent thinking) –Intelligence is to creativity as convergence is to divergent thinking
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Mental Retardation –IQ below 70 –Types Organic Familial –4 levels of functioning »Mild (90% of pop.) »Moderate »Severe »Profound
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Learning disability –Difficulty mastering a particular subject –Normal intelligence* –Not suffering from other condition DSM identified LD’s –Reading –Mathematic –Written expression –Others Not specified.
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Attention Deficit Disorder 3 to 5% of school aged children are diagnosed Boys outnumber girls 3 to 1 3 symptoms –Overactivity –Inattention –Impulsivity Multiple treatments today
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Academic Skills READING –Starts with word recognition Dog The Cat Chase Comprehension,ability to extract meaning, comes later -increases as development progresses….. The dog chases the cat.
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A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Before you read you learn to recognize letters. Remember Letter Day in Kindergarten!!!!! Working memory makes reading much easier.
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Mathematics –Preschool – understand concept… 1, 2, 3, 5 –Kindergarten – able to count (may use fingers) –First grade – able to do simple math in your head –8 to 9 years old – able to skip steps in math (addition/subtraction) –Gender Differences!!!!
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Many concepts have been introduced into the classroom and teachers are now approaching teaching from a different view. Is current education more/less efficient than it used to be?
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Influences on learning Effective classroom management Teachers views of their jobs Mastery of topics encouraged Active Teaching Pacing Tutoring Teacher Techniques
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