chapter 5
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Chapter 5. Cognitive Development – Piaget. Piaget’s Cognitive Developmental Theory. Schemes organized ways of making sense of experience Assimilation using current schemes to interpret the external world Accommodation - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 5Lecture 6
Cognitive Growth – Piaget
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Piaget’s Cognitive Developmental Theory
• Schemes – organized ways of making sense of
experience
• Assimilation– using current schemes to interpret the
external world
• Accommodation– adjusting schemes or creating new ones
when current ways of thinking do not fit the environment
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Motivation for Learning• Cognitive equilibrium – a steady,
comfortable condition (more assimilation)
• Cognitive disequilibrium – a state of discomfort which creates a shift toward accommodation
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Stages of Cognitive Development
• Sensorimotor Birth – 2 years• Pre-Operational 2-7 years• Concrete Operational 7-11 years• Formal Operational 11 years
onward
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Sensorimotor Stage• Reflexes
• Circular reactions – stumbling onto a new experience caused by the baby’s motor activity– “circular” because the infant tries to
repeat the event again and again
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Sensorimotor Stage – Repeating Chance
Behavior • Newborn reflexes are the building
blocks of sensorimotor intelligence
• By repeating chance behaviors (primary circular reactions), reflexes come under voluntary control and become simple motor habits
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Sensorimotor Stage• Primary Circular Reactions (Substages 1-2)
– Centers around the infant’s own bodily sensations
• Secondary Circular Reactions (Substages 3-4)– Manipulation of objects and people
• Tertiary Circular Reactions (Substages 5-6)– Producing novel effects, experimental
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Sensorimotor Substages• 1) simple reflexes• 2) 1st habits & primary circular
reactions• 3) secondary circular reactions• 4) coordination of secondary circular
reactions• 5) tertiary circular reactions & curiosity• 6) internalization of schemes
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The Sensorimotor Stage
Primary Circular Reactions1 (birth to 1 mo.) reflexes2 ( 1-4 mos.) simple motor
habitsSecondary Circular Reactions
3 (4-8 mos.) repeating, imitation
4 (8-12 mos.) intentionTertiary Circular Reactions
5 (12-18 mos.) exploration6 (18-24 mos.) mental
depictions
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Sensorimotor Stage – Intentional Behavior
• Substage 4 (8-12 months)• Deliberately coordinating schemes
to reach a goal or solve a problem• Object permanence – infants
retrieve hidden toys• Anticipate and try to change
events
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Sensorimotor Stage – Gaining Object Permanence
• Overall, search strategies improve during the first year.
• Awareness of toy’s disappearance (violation-of-expectations research methods)
• Looks for toy by 8 months (Piaget)• A-not-B search error• Invisible displacement (finds toy
moved while out of sight)
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Sensorimotor Stage – More Recent Research
• Violation-of-expectation method – infants look longer at an impossible than at a possible event
• May reflect only infant’s perceptual preferences or limited awareness
• Led to conclusions that infants understand, explore earlier than Piaget believed, possibly from birth
• Renee Baillargeon – possible events• Carrot and screen study• Train through the box study
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End of Sensorimotor Stage – Mental
Representations • Internal depictions of information
that the mind can manipulate– Images– Concepts (categories, groups)– Sudden solutions rather than trial
and error– Invisible displacement – finding a toy
moved while out of sight– Deferred imitation
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Mental Representations (Memory)
More Recent Research• Piaget says 18 months; others
say 8-month olds recall object locations.
• Deferred imitation, present at 6 weeks (adult facial expression).
• 24-hour memory for activity board objects among 6-9-month olds.
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Sensorimotor Stage - Evaluation
• Piaget’s perspective – Skills acquired through learning, motor behavior– Vs.
• Core knowledge perspective – babies are born with innate knowledge systems or prewired understandings– Physical numerical– Linguistic psychological
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PiagetPre –Operational Stage
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The PreOperational Child• Is age 2-7• Has achieved object permanence• Initiates & explores• Uses mental representations &
symbols (language)• Is not logical
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During the Preoperational Stage – ages 2-7
• The child will:– Gain ability to reconstruct in thought
what is experienced in behavior– Gain in ability to use symbols – words,
drawings, images– Form stable concepts – By the end of the stage show an
emerging capacity to reason
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Preoperational Symbolic Function Substage
• Egocentric – – cannot take another’s point of view– Three-mountains task
• Animistic – – believe inanimate objects have
lifelike qualities such as wishes, feelings, intentions
• Magical beliefs– Show in drawings
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Preoperational Intuitive Thought Substage
• Intuitive thought is a combination of primitive reason and fast acquisition of knowledge.
• Cannot answer the question “what if?”• Asks the question “why?” frequently.• Begin to grasp functionality – that actions and
outcomes are related in fixed ways.• Begin to grasp identity-the reality that some
things do not change (underlies conservation)
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Piaget’s Preoperational Stage
• Cannot conserve – Unable to understand that certain
physical characteristics stay the same even though outward appearance changes (identity)
– Because of centration• Unable to classify hierarchically
– Also lack reversibility
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Conservation and Logic, cont.
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Criticisms of Piaget’s Pre-Operational Stage
• They are not egocentric, the 3 mountains task is the problem
• Animism is overestimated because Piaget asked about objects like the moon with which children have little experience
• They see magic as out of the ordinary, but they do attribute lifelike qualities to dolls and stuffed toys
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Summary Criticism of the First Two Stages
• Logic develops more gradually than Piaget believed that it did
• The primary problem of Piaget’s observations was complexity of the task(s)
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PiagetConcrete Operational Stage
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Concrete Operational Stage
• Piaget said that thought is more logical, flexible and organized at ages 7-11.
• Terms for operations they can perform– Conservation– Reversibility– Classification– Seriation (but not transitive inference)
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Concrete Operational Thought
• Children are logical only when dealing with concrete information that they can perceive directly.
• Example is a transitivity task compared to a seriation task.
• Horizonal decalage – development within a stage (working out the logic of each problem separately)
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PiagetFormal Operational Stage
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Piaget –Formal Operational Stage
• Starts at age 11 - 15
• Develop the capacity for abstract, scientific thinking
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Two Major Features• Hypothetico-deductive reasoning
– Deduce hypotheses from theory– Start with possibility and end with reality– Piaget’s pendulum problem
• Propositional thought– Algebra and geometry
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Consequences of Abstract Thought
• Argumentativeness• Idealism• Planning and indecision• Self-consciousness
– Imaginary audience– Personal fable
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Adolescent Egocentrism• Imaginary audience
• Personal fable– uniqueness– destiny– invincibility
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Do all adults reach formal operations?
• No, 40-60% of college students fail the formal operations problems.
• People are most likely to reach it in subjects where they have had experience.
• It may be a culturally transmitted way of thinking.
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Piaget & Education• Constructivist approach – set up
classroom for exploration and discovery
• Let learning occur naturally, facilitate
• Consider the child’s knowledge & level of thinking – sensitive to readiness, accept individual differences
• Use ongoing assessment
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Piaget and Education
• Too time-consuming to implement, requires individual portfolios
• Educators have always ignored developmental maturation; the system
makes it difficult to deal with individual differences
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Summary: Evaluating Piaget
• Still major cognitive theorist
• Criticisms– Cognitive abilities emerge earlier than he
thought– Development more gradual, not as stagelike
as he thought– He ignored culture & education as factors