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Title: Cognitive Development: Piaget


1
Cognitive Development Piagets Theory and
Vygotskys Sociocultural Viewpoint
2
PIAGETS THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
  • Genetic epistemology is the experimental study of
    the development of knowledge, developed by Piaget
  • What is Intelligence?
  • According to Piaget, it is a basic life function
    that enables an organism to adapt to its
    environment.
  • All intellectual activity is undertaken with one
    goal in mind-cognitive equilibrium
  • Piaget described children as constructivist

3
Cognitive Schemes the structure of intelligence
  • Scheme is a term used by Piaget to describe the
    models, or mental structures, that we create to
    represent ,organize, and interpret our
    experiences.
  • There are 3 kinds of intellectual structures
  • 1.Behavioral schemes
  • First intellectual structures to emerge
  • 2.Symbolic schemes
  • Appears 2 year of life
  • 3.Operational schemes
  • 7 years

4
How we gain knowledge Piagets Cognitive
Processes
  • Organization is the process by which children
    combine existing schemes into new and more
    complex intellectual structures.
  • Adaptation is an inborn tendency to adjust to the
    demands of the environment.
  • The goal of adaptation is to adjust to the
    environment this occurs through assimilation and
    accommodation.
  • Assimilation is the process of interpreting new
    experiences by incorporating them into existing
    schemes.
  • Accommodation is the process of modifying
    existing schemes in order to incorporate or adapt
    to new experiences.

5
Piagetian Concept Example
Equilibrium Toddler who has never seen anything fly but birds thinks that all flying objects are birds
Assimilation Start Seeing an airplane flying prompts the child to call it a birdie
Accommodation Child experiences conflict upon realizing that the new birdie has no feathers. Concludes it is not a bird and asks for the proper term or invents a name. Equilibrium restored
Organization Finish Forms hierarchal scheme consisting of a superordinate class (flying objects) and two subordinate classes (birdies and airplanes).
6
Piagets Stages of Cognitive Development
  • According to Piaget, a childs development
    progresses through 4 qualitative stages and an
    invariant developmental sequence or universal
    pattern of development, which are
  • The Sensorimotor Stage (Birth to 2 Years)
  • The Preoperational Stage (2 to 7 Years)
  • The Concrete-Operational Stage (7 to 11 Years)
  • The Formal-Operational Stage (11-12 Years and
    Beyond)

7
The sensorimotor stage (Birth-2 years)
  • The 6 Developmental stages of Problem-Solving
    abilities
  • 1. Reflex activity (0-1mon.) exercising and
    accommodation of inborn reflexes
  • 2. Primary circular reactions (1-4 mon.)
    repeating acts centered on ones own body
  • 3. Secondary circular reactions (4-8 mon.)
    repeating acts toward external objects

8
Sensorimotor stage contd
  • 4. Coordination of secondary schemes (8-12 mon.)
    combining acts to solve simple problems.
  • 5. Tertiary circular reactions (12-18 mon.)
    experimenting to find new ways of to solve
    problems
  • 6. Symbolic problem solving (18-24 mon.) inner
    experimentation without relaying on
    trial-and-error experimentation

9
Development of imitation
  • Deferred imitation (18-24 mo.) is the ability to
    reproduce the behavior of an absent model.
  • Development of Object Permanence (8-12 mo) is the
    idea that objects continue to exist when they are
    no longer visible or detectable through the other
    senses.
  • A-not-B error tendency of 8-12- month olds to
    search for a hidden object where they previously
    found it even after they have seen it moved to a
    different location.

10
Challenges to Piagets account of sensorimotor
development
  • Neo-nativism idea that cognitive knowledge is
    innate and subject to biological constraints
  • theory theories theories of cognitive
    development that combine neo-nativism and
    constructivism

11
Preoperational stage (2-7 yrs)
  • There is an increase in their use of mental
    symbols to represent objects and events they
    encounter
  • The Preconceptual Period is the early substage of
    preoperations, from age 2 to age 4, characterized
    by the appearance of primitive ideas, concepts,
    and methods of reasoning. Marked by the
    appearance of symbolic function and play.
  • The Intuitive Period is the later substage of
    preoperations, from age 4 to age 7, when the
    childs thinking about objects and events is
    dominated by salient perceptual features.

12
The Preconceptual Period
  • Emergence of Symbolic thought
  • Symbolic function
  • Ability to use symbols to represent objects or
    experiences
  • Symbolic play
  • Play where one object, action, or actor
    symbolizes another

13
Deficits in preconceptual reasoning
  • Animism- attributing lifelike qualities to
    inanimate objects
  • Egocentrism- viewing the world from only ones
    perspective
  • Appearance/Reality distinction- inability to
    distinguish deceptive appearances from reality

14
The intuitive period
  • Here cognition is described as
  • Centered a tendency to focus on one aspect of a
    situation and not on others due to their
    inability to understand
  • Conservation- recognition that the properties of
    an object or substance do not change when its
    appearance is altered in some superficial way.
  • Reversibility- ability to reverse or negate an
    action by mentally performing the opposite action

15
The Concrete-Operational Stage (7 to 11 Years)
  • Here children are said to think more logically
    about real objects and experiences
  • Some examples of operational thought
  • Conservation
  • Reversibility
  • Logic
  • Classification
  • ability to create relationships between things.
  • Relational Logic
  • Mental seriation
  • Transitivity
  • The sequencing of concrete operations
  • Horizontal decalage- different levels of
    understanding conservation tasks that seem to
    require the same mental operations

16
The Formal-Operational Stage (11-12 Years and
Beyond)
  • Ability to reason logically about hypothetical
    process and events that may have no basis in
    reality
  • Hypothetico-Deductive Reasoning
  • a formal operational ability to think
    hypothetically.
  • Thinking Like a Scientist
  • Inductive reasoning- type of thinking where
    hypotheses are generated and then systematically
    tested in experiments.
  • Personal and Social Implications
  • The formal operation stage paves the way for
  • Identity formation
  • Richer understanding of other peoples
    psychological perspectives
  • The ability to way options in decision making

17
An Evaluation of Piagets Theory
  • Convinced us that children are curious, active
    explorers who play an important role in their own
    development.
  • His theory was one of the first to explain, and
    not just describe, the process of development.
  • His description of broad sequences of
    intellectual development provides a reasonably
    accurate overview of how children of different
    ages think.
  • Piagets ideas have had a major influence on
    thinking about social and emotional development
    as well as many practical implications for
    educators.
  • Piaget asked important questions and drew
    literally thousands of researchers to the study
    of cognitive development.

18
Challenges to Piagets cognitive developmental
theory
  • Underestimated developing minds
  • Failed to distinguish competence from performance
  • It is believed by some that Cognitive development
    does not evolve in a qualitative and stage like
    manner- it tends to develop gradually
  • Provides a vague explanation on cognitive
    maturation
  • Devoted little attention to social and cultural
    influences

19
STOP HERE
  • STOP HERE!!!

20
Vygotskys Sociocultural Perspective
  • Sociocultural theory states that
  • Cognitive development occurs in a sociocultural
    context that influences the form it takes
  • Most of a childs cognitive skills evolve from
    social interactions with parents, teachers, and
    other more competent associates

21
The role of culture in intellectual development
  • Vygotsky proposed that we should evaluate human
    development from four interrelated perspectives
  • Microgenetic-changes that occur over brief
    periods of time-minutes and seconds
  • Ontogenetic-development over a lifetime
  • Phylogenetic-development over evolutionary time
  • Sociohistorical- changes that have occurred in
    one's culture and the values, norms and
    technologies such a history has generated

22
Tools of intellectual adaptation
  • Vygotsky (1930-1935/1978) proposed that infants
    are born with a few elementary mental functions
    attention, sensation, perception and memory
    that are eventually transformed by the culture
    into new and more sophisticated mental processes
    he called higher mental functions.

23
The Social Origins of Early Cognitive
Competencies
  • Zone of Proximal Development range of tasks that
    are too complex to be mastered alone but can be
    accomplished with guidance and encouragement from
    a more skillful partner
  • Scaffolding- the expert participant carefully
    tailors their support to the novice learner to
    assure their understanding

24
Apprenticeship in Thinking and Guided
Participation
  • guided participation, adult-child interactions in
    which childrens cognitions and modes of thinking
    are shaped as they participate with or observe
    adults engaged in culturally relevant activities.
  • Our culture is one that uses what Vygotsky termed
    context-independent learning

25
Implications for Education
  • Children are seen as active participants in their
    education
  • teachers in Vygotskys classroom would favor
    guided participation in which they
  • structure the learning activity
  • provide helpful hints or instructions that are
  • carefully tailored to the childs current
    abilities
  • monitor the learners progress
  • gradually turning over more of the mental
    activity to
  • their pupils
  • Promote cooperative learning exercises

26
The role of language in cognitive development
  • According to Piaget
  • Children partake in egocentric speech, utterances
    neither directed to others nor expressed in ways
    that the listeners might understand
  • Egocentric speech played a little role in
    cognitive development
  • Speech tended to become more social as the child
    matures-less egocentric

27
The role of language in cognitive development
contd
  • According to Vygotsky
  • Thought and language eventually emerge
  • A childs nonsocial utterances, which he termed
    private speech, illustrate the transition from
    paralinguistic to verbal reasoning
  • Private speech plays a major role in cognitive
    development by serving as a cognitive
    self-guidance system, allowing children to become
    more organized and good problem solvers
  • As individuals develop, private speech becomes
    inner speech

28
To consider
  • According to contemporary research
  • Children rely heavily on private speech when
    facing difficult problems
  • There is a correlation between self-talk and
    competence
  • Private speech does eventually become inner
    speech and facilitates cognitive development

29
Theories of Cognitive DevelopmentVygotsky vs.
Piaget
Vygotskys sociocultural theory Piagets cognitive developmental theory
Cognitive development varies across cultures Cognitive development is mostly universal across cultures
Stems from social interactions Stems from independent explorations
Social processes become individual-physiological processes Individual (egocentric) processes become social processes
Adults are important as change agents Peers are important as change agents
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