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Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)
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Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Child PsychologyCognitive Development

(McBride-Chang, 2007)

Page 2: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Outline

1. Piaget's theory of cognitive development and practical implications

2. Information processing theory

3. Overlapping Waves Model

(Robert Siegler)

Page 3: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Thought question:

The HK Law Reform Commission recommends that the age of criminal responsibility be 10 years old. Currently, the age of criminal responsibility is 7 years of age. Is this change justified, given what you learn about cognitive development today? In other words, is 10 years of age too old, too young, or just right?

Page 4: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

1) Piaget's theory of cognitive development

    constructivism

 

Page 5: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Stages1) Sensorimotor period (0-2 years)

a)reflexes (0-1 month)

  b)primary circular reactions (1-4 months)

c)secondary circular reactions (4-12 months)

--coordination of 2ndary schemes

d)tertiary circular reactions (12-18 months)

e)representational thought (18-24 months)

Page 6: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Stages 2) Preoperational period (2-7 years)

Focus on conservation 

Preoperational thought is illogical in the following ways:

a) Centering  b) Egocentrism  c) Irreversibility

d) Appearance as reality

Page 7: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Suggestions for teaching the preoperational child (Woolfolk,

1995)1. Be concrete

2. Make instructions short and use actions to demonstrate

3. Be sensitive to egocentrism

4. Clarify language

5. Do hands-on learning

Page 8: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Young children's play styles1.      Sensorimotor (12 months)

 2.      Constructive (after 12 months on)

 3.      First pretend (2nd year)

 4.      Substitute pretend (2-3 years on)

 5.      Sociodramatic (2-4 years on)

Page 9: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Stages

3) Concrete operational period (7-12 years) Mastery of reversibility

Inductive logic mastered

Deductive logic poor

Page 10: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

4)     Formal operational thinking (adolescents and adults)

--Abstract thinking mastered

--If X is correct, y, z, and a

should be observed

(hypothetico-deductive

reasoning)

Page 11: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Age of criminal responsibility

What age is appropriate?

Page 12: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Facts China/Taiwan=14 Macau=16 HK: schooling until 15 HK: In sexual abuse cases, child=16 or younger Rehabilitation vs. criminalization Nevertheless, recommended age of criminal

responsibility=10; actual legal age of criminal responsibility=7

Page 13: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Critique of Piaget's theory1)     Over-focus on language explanations2) Some skills appear earlier than posited

  --theory of mind (3-5 years old)  --gender constancy (4-5 years old)  3) Variabilities in performance

4)     Culture (individualism) --Vygotsky's zone of proximal development

  --Scaffolding

Page 14: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Conclusion

First 3 “stages” of cognitive development occurs much more gradually (less stage-like) and earlier than Piaget assumed; adolescents perform less

consistently hypothetico-deductively than originally postulated.

Page 15: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

List as many ways as you can to solve this problem.

5x10=?

Page 16: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

2) Information processing theory

A)  Mental hardware--built-in mental and neural structures

- speed  - attention  - memory  

Page 17: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

B)    Mental software--

 

- specific knowledge

- executive processes

Page 18: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Theory of mind

False belief A) Maturation B) Language C) Family experience

Page 19: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

3) Overlapping Waves Model (Siegler)

Assumption of variability, e.g.,

1) Addition

2) Spelling

3) Infant locomotion

4) Conservation

Page 20: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Strategic development depends upon

Acquisition of new strategies Changes in frequency of existing strategies Changes in speed of execution of strategies Changes in accuracy of execution of strategies Changes in range of problems to which each

strategy can be applied

Page 21: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Strategy choice depends on

Variability Adaptiveness Change Generalization to new situations

Page 22: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Lessons learned

1) Change is gradual.

2) Discoveries follow success as well as failure.

3) Early variability is related to later learning.

4) Discoveries are constrained by conceptual understanding.

Page 23: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

The End!

Page 24: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Very early, children --Can distinguish print from pictures and nonprint --Use visual cues to recognize first characters 

Better readers are--Faster --Better in language manipulation --Skilled at morphological awareness

Page 25: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Developmental Concepts of Reading:

Phonemic awareness, phonics, letter names, letter sounds (Bee, 2000; Berk, 2003; Feldman, 2004)

To date, developmental textbooks assume that READING=READING ENGLISH

Page 26: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Bronfenbrenner’s Ecological ApproachApplied to Learning to Read

Child’scognitive abilities

teaching

culture

language

scriptDepartmentEducation

Method of

reading

Page 27: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Phonological Awareness Awareness of and access to the sounds in language.

In English, “fisp” without the /s/ is “fip.” In Chinese,

Syllable awareness (e.g., McBride-Chang & Ho, 2000)

Onset-rime (Huang & Hanley, 1995; 1997; Siok & Fletcher, 2001)

Page 28: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Examples of levels of PA Syllable awareness:

大門口 (da4 men2 kou3) 大口 (da4 kou3)

Onset-rime/phonemic awareness: tai-/t/ =ai

Page 29: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Morphological Awareness

Morpheme=smallest unit of meaning

Morphological awareness--Awareness of and access to the meaning structure of language

Page 30: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Simple compounding examples

人 (Ren)

大人 (Adult)

女人 (Woman)

外國人 (Foreigner)

車 (Che)

火車 (Train)

汽車 (Private Car)

Page 31: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Cross-cultural measurement

Chomsky: generativity,creativity, productivity occur across languages

--Plantman for gardener--Clark, 1995

--”Genius comes from genie”

Berko (1958): Wug/wugs; What do you call one who zibs?Why do you think a ___is called a ___?

Page 32: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Our task, across cultures, requires that

Children produce novel words by combining familiar morphemes in new ways, e.g., sunset/moonset; treetop/treebottom.

Page 33: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Examples: 有一種家庭電器可以用來洗衣服,我們叫它洗衣機。 There is home appliance that uses to wash clothes, it is

called a ‘washing machine’. 有一種新的家庭電器可以用來洗鞋,我們會怎麼叫它呢? [ 洗鞋機 ] 。

If that home appliance uses to wash shoes, what would you call that? (washing shoes machine)

Page 34: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

有一種動物條頸好長既,叫做長頸鹿。 There is one animal that has a very long neck, we

call that a giraffe. 咁如果呢種動物條頸好短,咁我地會叫佢做咩呢?[短頸鹿 ] 。

If this animal’s neck has been shortened, what would you call that? (Giraffe with short neck)

Page 35: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Cross-Cultural Issues

Evolutionary primary abilities (Geary, 1995)

--phonological awareness, morphological awareness, vocabulary: Language constructs may be “universals.”

Evolutionary secondary abilities (reading) : For reading, it’s all relative.

Page 36: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Cultures included in this study

Beijing--Pinyin and Putonghua Hong Kong--No phonological coding system and

Cantonese S. Korea--Clear phonological structure and much

compounding U.S.--Clear need for phonemic awareness and less

transparent morphological structure

Page 37: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Conclusions Despite similar associations among language-related

constructs, these constructs predict reading differently in different scripts--Morphological is important in Chinese and Korean; phonological awareness is important in English and Korean.

These differences are specifically attributable to differences in scripts (and probably ultimately attributable to language differences as well.

Page 38: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Why should you care?

Theoretically, this theory of early reading growth accounts for observations of reading development across cultures better than do current conceptualizations as found in developmental textbooks.

Theoretically, this theory fits well with notions of evolutionarily primary and secondary skills.

Page 39: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Why else should you care?

This conceptualization suggests that different remediation strategies for those low in reading skills may be in order depending upon culture/script to be learned.

Practical implications: Morphological awareness may be particularly useful to develop and explicitly teach in Chinese and Korean for young children.

Page 40: Child Psychology Cognitive Development (McBride-Chang, 2007)

Future Directions

Longitudinal studies, particularly with children who initially cannot read

Language & literacy study--early language and emergent literacy in Beijing and HK

Intervention studies, based on previous intervention models in other areas: Early intervention is best.