Title: 7Cognitive Developmental Approaches
17Cognitive Developmental Approaches
- Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Applying and Evaluating Piagets Theory
- Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- Summary
2Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Piagets theory is a general, unifying story of
how biology and experience sculpt cognitive
development. - Adaptation involves adjusting to new
environmental demands. - Piaget stressed that children actively construct
their own cognitive worlds.
3Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Processes of Development
- Schemes Actions or mental representations that
organize knowledge. - Behavioral schemes characterize infancy.
- Mental schemes develop in childhood.
- Two processes are responsible for how children
use and adapt their schemes - Assimilation Incorporating new information
into existing schemes. - Accommodation Adjusting schemes to fit new
information and experiences.
4Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- To make sense out of their world, children
cognitively organize their experiences. - Organization Piagets concept of grouping
isolated behaviors into a higher-order, more
smoothly functioning cognitive system the
grouping or arranging of items into categories. - Equilibration A mechanism to explain how
children shift from one stage of thought to the
next. The shift occurs as children experience
cognitive conflict or disequilibrium in trying to
understand the world.
5Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Piaget proposed four stages of cognitive
development sensorimotor, preoperational,
concrete operational, and formal operational. - Sensorimotor Stage (birth to about 2 years of
age) Infants construct an understanding of the
world by coordinating sensory experiences with
physical, motoric actions. There are six
substages - Simple reflexesPiagets first sensorimotor
substage corresponds to the first month after
birth. The basic means of coordinating sensation
and action is through reflexive behaviors, such
as rooting and sucking, which infants have at
birth.
6Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Piagets Four Stages of Cognitive Development
7Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor Stage (continued)
- First habits and primary circular reactionsthe
infant coordinates sensation with habits and
primary circular reactions. (1 to 4 months of
age) - Habit A scheme based on a reflex that has become
completely separated from its eliciting stimulus.
8Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor Stage (continued)
- Internalizations of schemes
- infants mental functioning shifts from a purely
sensorimotor plane to a symbolic plane, and they
develop the ability to use primitive symbols. - Symbol An internalized sensory image or word
that represents an event.
9Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Sensorimotor Stage (continued)
- Object Permanence The Piagetian term for one of
the infants most important accomplishments
understanding that objects and events continue to
exist even when they cannot directly be seen,
heard, or touched. - Understanding of Causality Piaget was very
interested in infants knowledge of cause and
effect.
10Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Using the Violation of Expectations Method to
Study Object Permanence in Infants
11Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- The Infants Understanding of Causality
12Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Evaluating Piagets Sensorimotor Stage
- Researchers believe that infants see objects as
bounded, unitary, solid, and separate from their
background, possibly at birth or shortly
thereafter, but definitely by 3 to 4 months of
age. - The data do not always support Piagets claim
that certain processes are crucial in stage
transitions. - A-not-B error The mistake made by infants of
selecting a familiar hiding place (A) rather than
a new hiding place (B) as they progress into the
fourth substage, does not show up consistently.
13Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Evaluating Piagets Sensorimotor Stage
(continued) - Researchers believe that Piaget wasnt specific
enough about how infants learn about their world
and that infants are more competent than Piaget
thought.
14Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- The preoperational stage stretches from
approximately 2 to 7 years of age. It is a time
when children begin to represent the world with
words, images, and drawings. Stable concepts are
formed, mental reasoning emerges, egocentrism
begins strongly then weakens, and magical beliefs
are constructed. - Operations Internalized actions that allow
children to do mentally what before they could
only do physically. - Preoperational Thought
15Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Preoperational Thought (continued)
- Symbolic Function Substage
- The first substage of preoperational thought,
occurring roughly between the ages of 2 and 4. In
this substage, the young child gains the ability
to represent mentally an object that is not
present. - Egocentrism The inability to distinguish between
ones own and someone elses perspective. - The Three Mountains Task was used to study
egocentrism.
16Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
17Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Symbolic Function Substage (continued)
- Animism A facet of preoperational thought, the
belief that inanimate objects have lifelike
qualities and are capable of action.
18Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Preoperational Thought (continued)
- Intuitive Thought Substage
- The second substage of preoperational thought,
occurring approximately between 4 and 7 years of
age. Children begin to use primitive reasoning
and want to know the answers to all sorts of
questions. - Centration The centering of attention on one
characteristic to the exclusion of all others. - Conservation The awareness that altering an
objects or substances appearance does not
change its basic properties.
19Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Some Dimensions for Conservation Number, Matter,
and Length
20Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Concrete Operational Thought
- In this stage, which lasts approximately from 7
to 11 years of age, logical reasoning replaces
intuitive reasoning as long as the reasoning can
be applied to specific or concrete examples. - Concrete operations Reversible mental actions on
real, concrete objects.
21Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Concrete Operational Thought (continued)
- Conservation involves recognizing that the
length, number, mass, quantity, area, weight, and
volume of objects and substances are not changed
by transformations that merely alter their
appearance.
22Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Concrete Operational Thought (continued)
- Classification
- Concrete operational children can divide things
into sets and subsets and understand their
relationship. - Seriation Ordering stimuli along a quantitative
dimension (such as length). - Transitivity The ability to reason about and
logically combine relationships.
23Piagets Theory of Cognitive Development
- Formal Operational Thought
- Adolescents thought becomes more abstract,
logical, and idealistic between 11 and 15 years
of age. - Formal operational thought is more abstract than
a childs thinking it is full of idealism and
possibilities. - Hypothetical-deductive reasoning The
adolescents cognitive ability to develop
hypotheses about ways to solve problems and
systematically deduce which is the best path to
follow in solving the problem.
24Applying and Evaluating Piagets Theory
- Piaget and Education
- Piaget provided a sound conceptual framework from
which to view learning and education. - Take a constructivist approach.
- Facilitate rather than direct learning.
- Consider the childs knowledge and level of
thinking. - Use ongoing assessment.
- Promote the students intellectual health.
- Turn the classroom into a setting of exploration
and discovery.
25Applying and Evaluating Piagets Theory
- Evaluating Piagets Theory Contributions
- Children are active, constructive thinkers.
- His careful observations of children
demonstrated inventive ways to discover how they
act on and adapt to their world. - Children need to make their experiences fit
their schemes and simultaneously adapt their
schemes to experience. - Cognitive change is likely to occur if the
context is structured to allow gradual movement
to the next higher level.
26Applying and Evaluating Piagets Theory
- Evaluating Piagets Theory Criticisms
- Some cognitive abilities emerge earlier than
Piaget thought others may appear later. - Some concrete operational concepts do not appear
in synchrony. - Some children who are at one cognitive stage can
be trained to reason at a higher cognitive stage. - Culture and education exert stronger influences
on childrens development than Piaget believed.
27Applying and Evaluating Piagets Theory
- Evaluating Piagets Theory (continued)
- Neo-Piagetians
- Emphasize how children use attention, memory, and
strategies to process information - A more accurate portrayal of childrens thinking
requires attention to childrens strategies, the
speed at which they process information, the
particular task involved, and the division of
problems into smaller, more precise steps.
28Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- The Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)
- Vgotskys term for the range of tasks that are
too difficult for children to master alone but
that can be mastered with the guidance and
assistance of adults or more-skilled children.
29Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- Scaffolding
- Changing the level of support over the course of
a teaching session in which a more-skilled
individual (teacher or more advanced peer of the
child) adjusts the amount of guidance to fit the
childs current performance.
30Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- Language and Thought
- Vygotsky (1962) believed that young children use
language not only for social communication but
also to plan, guide, and monitor their behavior
in a self-regulatory fashion. - Private speech, an important tool of thought
during the early childhood years, represents an
early transition in becoming more socially
communicative (Piaget considered private speech
to be egocentric and immatureresearch supports
Vygotskys view).
31Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- Evaluating Vygotskys Theory
- Vygotskys Social Constructivist Approach
Emphasizes the social contexts of learning and
the construction of knowledge through social
interaction. - Vygotsky emphasized collaboration, social
interaction, and sociocultural activity. - The end point of cognitive development differs
depending on which skills are most valued by the
culture. - Piaget emphasized childrens need to explore
their world Vygotsky felt that students need
many opportunities to learn with a more-skilled
person.
32Vygotskys Theory of Cognitive Development
- Evaluating Vygotskys Theory Criticisms
- He overemphasized the role of language in
thinking. - His emphasis on collaboration and guidance has
potential pitfalls.