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Published byCarmel Wilcox Modified over 9 years ago
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Cognitive Development and Language
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Major Questions in Human Development Continuous or discontinuous development? Nature or nurture? Is there one course of development or many?
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Piaget’s Assumptions Child as scientific problem solver Child ACTIVELY constructs meaning from environment Stage theory Changes are invariant and universal
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Developmental Processes Schemes Mental structures for organizing and interpreting information Adaptation –Assimilation Use current schemes to interpret the external world. –Accommodation Creating new schemes or adjusting old ones.
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Equilibrium Process New Experiences DisequilibriumNew Schemes Equilibrium
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Piaget’s Stage Theory Sensorimotor stage Preoperational stage Concrete operational stage Formal operational stage
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Sensorimotor Stage: 0-2 yrs Infants use senses to explore Object permanence Goal directed actions
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Preoperational Stage: 2-7 yrs Operations Semiotic function including language One-way logic Difficulty with centering & conservation Egocentrism
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Concrete Operational Stage: 7-11 yrs “Hands on” thinking Conservation, identity, compensation Reversibility Classification Seriation
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Formal Operational Stage: 11- adult Mental operations can now grasp the abstract Scientific thinking Hypothetical-deductive reasoning Logical Consequences adolescent egocentrism
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Implications of Piaget’s Theory for Teachers Understanding students’ thinking “Match” teaching to cognitive stage Individuals “construct” knowledge Use disequilibrium to motivate
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Limitations of Piaget’s Theory Not necessarily a qualitative change Not universal Difficult to test developmental processes Overlooks cultural basis of cognitive development
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Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory Cognitive development is inherently both a social and cultural process Knowledge is co-constructed –Interpsychological and Intrapsychological Role of cultural tools Role of language & private speech Role of adults and peers
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Zone of Proximal Development Gap between what person can do alone and what they are capable of doing if guided by more experience other
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Scaffolding Assistance provided in the zone of proximal development Should gradually decrease as children become more competent at a task
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Implications of Vygotsky’s Theory for Teachers Assisted learning Scaffolding Zone of proximal development Collaborative learning Alternative assessment
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Piaget vs. Vygotsky Egocentric vs. private speech Implications for education
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Implications for Education PiagetVygotsky Cognitive Development Child actively interacts w/ environment Thru scaffolding & ZPD LearningGiven stimulating environment Challenging tasks with help Teacher’s Role Provides environment Scaffolding ActivitiesDiscovery learningCooperative learning
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