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1 Psychology 3260: Personality & Social Development Don Hartmann, Spring 2006 Lecture 9: Piaget
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2 Overview of Piaget Lecture Coffee & Cream Introduction to Piaget Piaget’s Theory A Practical Application Evaluation Summary Black & White Marbles
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3 Coffee & Cream Begin with two cups, Cup 1 containing 8 oz. of cream, Cup 2 containing 8 oz. of coffee (or diet Coke) Remove 2 oz. of cream from Cup 1 and place it in Cup 2. Mix thoroughly. Remove 2 oz. of the coffee/cream mixture in Cup 2 and place it in Cup 1. Question: Is there 1. More coffee in Cup 1 than cream in Cup 2? 2. More cream in Cup 2 than coffee in Cup 1? 3. The same amount of cream in Cup 2 as coffee in Cup 1? 4. None of the above.
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4 Introduction to Piaget 3 rd Most influential psychologist of the 20 th century Father of Cognitive Developmental Theory Background facts
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5 Major Thesis Social development is a consequence of changes in cognitive development Responsible in large part for Social Cognition (e.g., gender conceptions, humor)
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6 The Nature of Piaget’s Theory Strong stage theory. Stages are: Qualitative (rather than quantitative) Coherent (consistent) Fixed (just four, no more) Universal (applicable to all, though not all are believed to achieve all the stages), and Invariant (we all go through them in the same order; no skipping).! o Based on structure of thought, rather than on content of thought
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7 Stages (1) Sensorimotor (0 ‑ 2). From reflex to reflective! Preoperational (2 ‑ 7). At this stage children have not yet gained the operations that allow them to think logically. Perception is characterized by centration & thinking by egocentrism
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8 Egocentrism
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9 Stages (2) Concrete operation (7 ‑ 12); use operations (e.g., transitivity), but fixed on real Formal operations (12 ‑ ?). Abstractions, logical reasoning
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10 Some Conservation Tasks
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11 Still More Conservation Tasks
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12 How does Growth Occur? 1. Through both nature and nurture; maturation + certain critical experiences 2. In general, through accommodation and adap- tation o 3. Though Cognitive Disequilibrium o 4. Though Interactions with Peers
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13 What about Learning? Learning is a product of one's cognitive development. The child's existing cognitive structures determine how he/she interprets social experiences and, hence, what is likely to be learned from interactions with others
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14 What about Personality? Dependent upon cognitive development; e.g., can't have notion of gender, until conservation. The Brain: Cognition; you get it, right?
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15 A Practical Application: Teaching Traditional Gender Behavior Match the instructional approach to the developmental level of the child Has the child developed the notion of gender constancy? Help the child form concept that she is a girl.
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16 Evaluation: Strengths Importance of cognition -- even for social content! o Process of thinking rather than content of thought o Wonderful descriptive framework
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17 Evaluation: Weaknesses Strong on developmental function; weak on IDs Specific ages often erroneous. When we think an event or a process occurs is in part a function of how we conduct the assessment! Characteristics of stages : Coherence of stages: conservation problems not conservation problem....(Gertrude Stein) Backsliding, Universality (e.g., of moral development ‑‑ gender differences), Description not explanation
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18 Summary What about Coffee & Cream? Answer tomorrow. Piaget in all his glory Tomorrow: Biologically-Based Theories oGo in Peace! o P.S. What about black & white marbles? Answer tomorrow
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19 What about Black & White Marbles? Urn 1 contains 100 white marbles; Urn 2 100 black marbles. Take 20 of the white marbles from Urn 1 and place them in Urn 2. Mix the marbles well. Take 20 of the mixture of marbles in Urn 2 and place them in Urn 1 The Question: 1. Is there more black marbles in Urn 1 than white marbles in Urn 2? 2. Is there more white marbles in Urn 2 than black marbles in Urn 1? 3. Is there is same number of white marbles in Urn 2 as black marbles in Urn !? 4. None of the above.
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