Title: Adolescence: Cognitive Development
1Part V
Chapter Fifteen
- Adolescence Cognitive Development
Adolescent Thinking Teaching and Learning
2Adolescence Cognitive Development
- adolescence combines ego, logic, and emotions
ego overwhelms logic sometimes emotions
overrides both
3Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Adolescent Thinking
- brain maturation, intense conversation,
additional years of schooling, moral challenges,
and increased independence occurs between 11 and
18 years of age
4Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Egocentrism
- adolescent egocentrism
- a characteristic of adolescent thinking that
leads young people (ages 10-13) to focus on
themselves to the exclusion of others - a young person might believe that his or her
thoughts, feelings, and experiences are unique,
more wonderful or awful than anyone elses.
5Adolescence Cognitive Development
- The Invincibility Fable
- an adolescents egocentric conviction that he or
she cannot be overcome or even harmed by anything
that might defeat a normal mortal - unprotected sex, drugs,
- or high speed driving
6Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Imaginary Audience
- the other people who, in an adolescents
egocentric belief, are watching, and taking note
of, his or her appearance, ideas, and behavior - this belief makes many teenagers very
self-conscious
7Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Egocentrism Reassessed
- recent waves of research has found that many
adolescents do not feel invincible. - egocentrism may signal growth towards cognitive
maturity (Vartanian, 2001)
8Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Formal Operational Though
- Piagets theory, the fourth and final stage of
cognitive development, characterized by more
systematic logic and the ability to think about
abstract ideas
9Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Piagets Experiments
- showed that, in contrast to concrete operational
children, formal operational adolescents imagine
all possible determinants, and systematically - varied the factors one by one
- observed the results correctly
- kept track of the results
- drew the appropriate conclusions
10Adolescence Cognitive Development
11Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Hypothetical-Deductive Though
- formal operational thought is the capacity to
think of possibility, not just reality - hypothetical though
- reasoning that includes propositions
possibilities that may not reflect reality
12Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Abstract Thinking
- deductive reasoning
- reasoning from a general statement, premise, or
principle, through logical steps, to figure out
(deduce) specificstop-down thinking - inductive reasoning
- reasoning from one or more specific experience or
facts to a general conclusion, may be less
cognitively advanced than deductionbottom-up
reasoning
13Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Intuitive, Emotional Thought
- because adolescents can use hypothetical-deductiv
e reasoning does not mean that they use it - adolescents find it easier and quicker to forget
about logic and follow impulse
14Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Two Modes of Thinking
- dual-process model
- the notion that two networks exist within the
human brain, one for emotions and one for
analytical processing of stimuli
15Adolescence Cognitive Development
- intuitive thoughts
- thought that arises from an emotion or a hunch,
beyond rational explanationpast experiences,
cultural assumptions, and sudden impulses are the
precursors of intuitive thoughtcontextualized or
experiential thought - analytic thought
- thought that results from analysis, such as a
systematic ranking of pros and cons, risks and
consequences, possibilities and facts analytic
thought depends on logic and rationality
16Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Comparing Intuition and Analysis
- sunk cost fallacy
- the belief that if time or money has already been
invested in something, then more time or money
should be invested - because of this fallacy, people spend money
trying to fix a lemon of a car or sending more
troops to win a losing war
17Adolescence Cognitive Development
- Better Thinking
- adolescents use their minds with more economy
than children - with age thinking is more efficient and less
likely to go off on a tangent - analytic mode joins the intuitive mode
18Teaching and Learning
- Given the nature of the adolescent mind, we are
left with the question to ponder What and how
should teenagers be taught?
19Teaching and Learning
- secondary education
- the period after primary education and before
tertiary education.it usually occurs from about
age 12 to18, although there is some variation by
school and by nation - traditionally grades 7th through 12th
20Teaching and Learning
- separate schools have been created for children
who have outgrown primary school - once called high school, with younger students
put in separate schools called junior high
(7th,8th,9th grades)
21Teaching and Learning
- middle school
- a school for the grades between elementary and
high school...middle school can begin with 5th
grade or and usually ends with 8th grade - with puberty occurring earlier than in years
pastoften at age 11 many intermediate middle
schools have been established to educate 6th
graders with 7th and 8th graders - 9th graders have been reassigned to high schools
22Teaching and Learning
- middle school
- academic achievement often slows down and
behavioral problems become more commonplace - the first year of middle school is called the
low ebb of learning - many teachers feel ineffective
- long term academic trajectories are strongly
influenced by experienced in grades 6th-8th
23Teaching and Learning
- middle school
- middle school scheduling means teachers have
many students - bonding between students and teachers is key to
learningyet, doesnt always occur do to
scheduling - students relationships with one another
deteriorate... due to the numbers of people they
come in contact with in schools
24Teaching and Learning
- middle school
- answers are not clear adolescent egocentrism is
particularly strong in early adolescence and the
intuitive thought generally overwhelms logic - research finds that egocentrism, intuitive
thought, and logic coexist in every classroom
25Teaching and Learning
- Technology and Cognition
- is no longer limited only to developed nations
- teenagers worldwide use the Internet
- adults hope that computers will be a boon to
learning - some fear that technology will undercut respect
for adults and schools
26Teaching and Learning
- Technology and Cognition
- it is easy to see egocentrism and intuitive
thought in adolescent use of technology it is
easy to see the educational possibilities
however, it is not obvious how adults can guide
teenagers through the current maze of technology.
27Teaching and Learning
- Transitions and Translations
- students find that changes, even positive ones,
are disruptive - transitions from one school to another are
difficult, decreasing a persons ability to
function and learn - changing schools just when the growth spurt and
sexual characteristics develop is bound to create
stress
28Teaching and Learning
- Transitions and Translations
- hormones, body shape, sexual impulses, family and
culture contribute to disorders in transition
29Teaching and Learning
- Teaching and Learning in High School
- adolescents think abstractly, analytically,
hypothetically, logically personally,
emotionally, intuitively and experientially - by high school, the curriculum and teaching style
is often analytic and abstract - adolescents can use logic to override the biases
that not only preserve existing beliefs but also
perpetuate stereotypes and inhibit development.
30Teaching and Learning
- Focus on the Brightest
- an evaluation that is critical in determining
success or failure if a single test determines
whether a student will graduate or be promoted,
that is a high-stakes test
31Teaching and Learning
- Focus on the Dropouts
- not every student who begins secondary school
stays until finished - developed nations typically require students to
stay in school between 14 and 18, with age 16
being the average - in the U.S. and Canada 90 are high school
graduates - most dropouts leave at the age of 17
32Teaching and Learning
- Student Engagement
- students who are capable of passing classes are
as likely to drop out as those with learning
disabilities - persistence, diligence, and motivation play more
crucial roles than intellectual ability when it
comes to earning a high school diploma
33Teaching and Learning
- Student Engagement
- many students express boredom and unhappiness
with school - honor students and delinquents have high rates
of boredom, alienation, and disconnection from
the meaningful challenge of school
34Teaching and Learning
- Student Engagement
- students are often disengaged
- usual because formal operational thought is
promoted - egocentric and intuitive thought, are more
rational and social, and are usually excluded
35Teaching and Learning
- Student Engagement
- students are often disengaged
- teachers are hired for their expertise in one or
more academic fields, rather than their ability
to relate to adolescents
36Teaching and Learning
- Student Engagement
- possible improvements
- keep high schools small
- 200 to 400 students
- encourage extracurricular activities
37Teaching and Learning
- School violence
- The same practices that foster
- motivation and education can also
- prevent violence.
- students are less likely to be destructive or
afraid if - they are engaged in learning
- bond with teachers and fellow students
- are involved in school activities
38Teaching and Learning
- School violence
- studies also show that metal detectors, and
strict punishment, are more likely to increase
violence than decrease violence
39Teaching and Learning
- School violence
- primary prevention to improve school climate
- increase friendships
- strengthen teacher-student relationships
- promote student involvement
- programs that teach conflict resolution have also
had some success