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Chapter 7: Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development
Module 7.1 General Principles of Piaget’s Theory Module 7.2 Piaget’s Four Stages of Cognitive Development Module 7.3 Evaluating Piaget’s Theory Module 7.4 Beyond Piaget’s Theory Children and Their Development, 3/e by Robert Kail
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7.1 General Principles of Piaget’s Theory
Schemes Assimilation and Accommodation Equilibration and Stages of Cognitive Development
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7.1 Schemes Schemes are like categories; they organize experience and knowledge Schemes first based on actions, then functions, and conceptions
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7.1 Assimilation and Accommodation
In assimilation, new experiences are readily incorporated into existing schemes In accommodation, existing schemes must be changed to incorporate new information
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7.1 Equilibration and Stages of Cognitive Development
Equilibrium: when assimilation and accommodation are in balance Periodically, schemes are inadequate and disequilibrium occurs. Equilibration is the process of reaching a new state of equilibrium Metaphor of child as scientist Three reorganizations of theories lead to 4 stages of cognitive development
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7.2 Piaget’s Four Stages of Cognitive Development
The Sensorimotor Stage The Preoperational Stage The Concrete Operational Stage The Formal Operational Stage
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7.2 The Sensorimotor Stage
From birth to approximately 2 years Begins with reflexive responding and ends with using symbols Object permanence: understanding that objects exist independently
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7.2 The Preoperational Stage
From approximately 2 to 7 years Children use symbols but are many errors in thinking Egocentrism Centration Confuse appearance and reality
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Three Mountains Problem
7.2: The Preoperational Stage
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Conservation Tasks 7.2: The Preoperational Stage
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Models as Symbols or “Shrinking Rooms”
7.2: The Preoperational Stage
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7.2 The Concrete Operational Stage
From approximately 7 to 11 years Thinking based on mental operations (strategies and rules that make thinking more systematic and powerful) Operations can be reversed Focus on the real and concrete, not the abstract
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7.2 The Formal Operational Stage
From approximately 11 years to adulthood Adolescents can think hypothetically Use deductive reasoning
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7.3 Evaluating Piaget’s Theory
Piaget’s Contributions to Child Development Criticisms of the Theory
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7.3 Piaget’s Contributions to Child Development
the study of cognitive development itself a new, constructivist view of children fascinating, often counterintuitive, discoveries
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7.3 Criticisms of the Theory
Some criticisms: alternative accounts of performance consistency in performance training on Piagetian concepts actual versus possible thinking
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Object Permanence and the “Impossible Event”
7.3: Criticisms of the Theory
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7.4 Beyond Piaget’s Theory
Neo-Piagetian Approaches to Cognitive Development The Child as Theorist The Sociocultural Perspective: Vygotsky’s Theory
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7.4 Neo-Piagetian Approaches to Cognitive Development
Retain Piaget’s basic claim of stages of intellectual development Each child develops distinct conceptual structures that reflect experience Working memory improves with age which allows children’s thinking to become more complex
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7.4 The Child as Theorist Builds on Piaget’s metaphor of child as scientist Research traces children’s knowledge of naive physics (understanding objects) naive psychology (theory of mind) and naive biology (understanding unique properties of animate objects)
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“Impossible” Physics Problem
7.4 The Child as Theorist
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Movement in Animate and Inanimate Objects
7.4 The Child as Theorist
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Theory of Mind 7.4 The Child as Theorist
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7.4 The Sociocultural Perspective: Vygotsky’s Theory
Cognitive development is inseparable from social and cultural contexts Zone of proximal development: difference between what can do alone or with assistance Scaffolding: teaching style that matches assistance to learner’s needs Private speech: comments intended to regulate own behavior Inner speech: thought
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Cultural Differences in Parental Scaffolding
7.4: The Sociocultural Perspective
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