Title: Piaget: Cognitive Development
 1Piaget Cognitive Development 
 2Some recurring questions...
- How can we find out what infants and children are 
 thinking?
- How is a childs thinking different from an 
 adults?
- Does nature or nurture have more influence on 
 childrens development?
- Can a childs rate of development be accelerated?
3Jean Piaget (1896-1980)
- The first person to study cognitive development 
 scientifically and systematically.
- The most influential theory of cognitive 
 development.
4ADAPTATION SCHEMA
- The process by which the child changes its mental 
 models of the world to match more closely how the
 world actually is. Piaget argued that children
 actively construct knowledge themselves as they
 interact with new objects or experiences.
5Cognitive development
As the child gets older its schemas become... 
 6Cognitive development
The childs understanding develops because... 
 7Sources of Continuity
- Three processes work together from birth to 
 propel development forward
- Assimilation The process by which people 
 translate incoming information into a form they
 can understand
- Accommodation The process by which people adapt 
 current knowledge structures in response to new
 experiences
- Equilibration The process by which people 
 balance assimilation and accommodation to create
 stable understanding
8Discontinuities
- The discontinuous aspects of Piagets theory are 
 distinct, hierarchical stages
- Central properties of Piagets stage theory 
- Qualitative change 
- Broad applicability across topics and contexts 
- Brief transitions 
- Invariant sequence 
- Hypothesized that children progress through four 
 stages of cognitive development, each building on
 the previous one
9Stage Theories
- Development is discontinuous 
- Each stage is qualitatively distinct 
- The sequence is universal and invariant 
- Piaget said that childrens cognitive development 
 unfolds in stages.
- These statements are true of all stage theories 
 of development. What might they mean as applied
 to cognitive development?
- What does a stage theory imply about development? 
10Gradualist vs. Stage theories
Psychological attribute
How might the line representing a stage theory be 
different?
Time 
 11A Constructivist Approach
- Jean Piagets theory remains the standard against 
 which all other theories are judged
- Often labeled constructivist because it depicts 
 children as constructing knowledge for themselves
- Children are seen as 
- Active 
- Learning many important lessons on their own 
- Intrinsically motivated to learn 
12Piagets stage theory
- Childrens ability to understand, think about and 
 solve problems in the world develops in a
 stop-start manner.
- At each stage of development, the childs 
 thinking is qualitatively different from the
 other stages.
- All children go through the same stages in the 
 same order (but not all at the same rate)
13Piagets Stage Theory of Cognitive Development
Stage Stage Characteristics Typical Age
Sensorimotor stage Substages 1-3 Ability to deal with situations is limited to i) Having sensations and producing actions ii) The here and now 0-8 months
Sensorimotor stage Substages 4-6 Intentional actions emerge trial and error behaviour object concept  object permanence develops simple pretend play language acquisition 8-24 months
Preoperational stage Preconceptual period Symbolic thought develops egocentrism animism centration 2-4 years
Preoperational stage Intuitive period Judgements based on appearance not logical thought less egocentric unable to conserve 4-7 years
Concrete operational stage Concrete operational stage Conservation seriation transitivity class inclusion 7-11 years
Formal operational stage Formal operational stage Abstract concepts hypothetical thinking flexibility in thinking 12 years 
 14Sensorimotor stage(0-2 years)
- In the first stage, the child thinks by sensing 
 (sensori-) and by performing actions on
 (-motor) the world around it.
- It does not think by manipulating mental 
 representations, like an adult does.
- Characterised by profound egocentrism. Does not 
 distinguish between itself and the environment.
- Lack of object permanence. (Piaget argued object 
 permanence starts to develop around 8 months)
15(No Transcript) 
 16General Symbolic Function
- During the sensorimotor stage a range of 
 cognitive abilities develop. These include
- Object permanence 
- Self-recognition 
- Deferred imitation 
- Representational play 
- They relate to the emergence of the general 
 symbolic function, which is the capacity to
 represent the world mentally
17Object permanence
- Objects are tied to infants awareness of them 
- out of sight, out of mind 
- Hidden toy experiment 
- 4 months no attempt to search for hidden object 
- 4-9 months visual search for object 
- 9 months search for and retrieve hidden object 
- A-not-B task (Diamond, 1985) 
- 9 months A/B error after 1/2 second delay 
- 12 months 10 second delay needed to produce 
 error
18Object permanence
Typical age Search behaviour
Before 8m Does not search for hidden object at all.
8-12m Searches for hidden object in initial hiding place even if the object is moved to a second hiding place while the child watches (the A not B error)
12-18m Searches in most recent hiding place. 
 19Object permanence
- Peekaboo is played across diverse cultures 
 (Fernald  ONeill, 1993). Recorded in as diverse
 communities as the US, Japan and Africa.
- 3-5 months  babies laughs and smiles as the 
 adults face moves in and out of view
- 5-8 months  baby shows anticipation. 
- 12 months  babies start to imitate the game  
 then it is the adult who acts more like an idiot.
20Piagets Sensorimotor
- According to Piaget  the journey from reflex 
 behaviour to thought is long and slow. For 18
 months or so, babies learn only from their
 movements (according to Piaget) and do not make
 the breakthrough to conceptual thought until
 18-24 months.
- Modern tools and simplified tasks suggest infants 
 master conceptual thought earlier. What Piaget
 saw as inability may have been due to immature
 linguistic and motor skills.
- Infants more cognitively competent than Piaget 
 envisioned. He may have been mistaken with his
 emphasis on motor skills as the prime engine of
 cognitive growth.
21Pre-operational stage (2 years  7 years)- 
Cognitive advances
- Understands use of symbols  ability to use 
 symbols or mental representations without cues.
 Able to use numbers, words, images where the
 person has attached meaning. Also  pretend
 play/fantasy play begins.
- Understanding objects in space  understand scale 
 models, maps and the objects or spaces they
 represent. In the mal experiment  90 of 5 year
 olds  60 of 4 year olds able to successfully
 find objects.
- Understanding causality  while Piaget argued 
 that children link two events simply because they
 occur close in time and not because of any sense
 of cause and effect relationship  evidence
 suggests that children DO have a sense of cause
 and effect.
22Pre-operational stage (2 years  7 years)- 
Cognitive advances
- Understanding identities and categorisation  the 
 idea that people and many things are essentially
 the same even if they change form, size or
 appearance. Ability to determine the difference
 between living and non-living things (the
 difference between a rock, a person and a doll).
 Also learn to label people as good or bad etc
- Understanding Number  by age 4, most children 
 have words for comparing quantities
23Pre-operational stage (2 years  7 years)- 
Immature aspects
- Egocentrism 
- Failure to understand CONSERVATION 
- Lack THEORY OF MIND 
- Failure to recognise FALSE BELIEFS 
- Unable to distinguish between Appearance and 
 Reality
- Difficulty distinguishing between Fantasy and 
 Reality
24Pre-operational stage(2 years  7 years) 
 25Pre-operational stage(2 years  7 years) 
 26Egocentric Conversations 
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 28Procedures Used to Test Conservation 
 29Theory of mind  Sally anne 
 30PIAget  concrete operational
- Children learn to carry out concrete operations  
 logical manipulation of objects  cause and
 effect and other relationships between objects
- Categorisation  arrange objects in a series 
 according to one or more dimensions Class
 inclusion (10 flowers  7 roses, 3 carnations
 are there more roses than flowers? Say roses
 because they compare roses with carnations rather
 than looking at the entire bunch.
- Inductive reasoning (my dog barks, Doriss dog 
 barks, all dogs bark)
- Spatial thinking  can use a map to find a hidden 
 object can estimate distance to get from one
 place to another
- Number/math  can work out simple story problems
31Piaget  formal operational
- Capacity for Abstract Thought 
- Use symbols to represent other symbols (x  8) 
- Appreciate allegory and metaphor 
- Think in terms of what might be rather than what 
 is
- Hypothetical-deductive thinking  the pendulum 
 problem
- Piaget believed that the attainment of the formal 
 operational stage in contrast to other stages is
 not universal
32Inhelder and Piagets Pendulum Problem
- The task is to compare the motions of longer and 
 shorter strings, with lighter and heavier weights
 attached, in order to determine the influence of
 weight, string length, and dropping point on the
 time it takes for the pendulum to swing back and
 forth
- Children below age 12 usually perform 
 unsystematic experiments and draw incorrect
 conclusions
33Critique of Piagets Theory
- Although Piagets theory remains highly 
 influential, some weaknesses are now apparent
- The stage model depicts childrens thinking as 
 being more consistent than it is
- Infants and young children are more cognitively 
 competent than Piaget recognized
- Object permanence in 3-month-olds (Bower, 1974) 
- Number conservation in 4 year olds (McGarrigle  
 Donaldson, 1974)
34Critique of Piagets Theory
- Piagets theory understates the contribution of 
 the social world to cognitive development
- Piagets tasks are culturally biased 
- Schooling and literacy affect rates of 
 development
- e.g. Greenfields study of the Wolof 
- Formal operational thinking is not universal 
- e.g. Gladwins study of the Polynesian islanders 
- Piagets theory is vague about the cognitive 
 processes that give rise to childrens thinking
 and about the mechanisms that produce cognitive
 growth