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Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Jan 17, 2016

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Page 1: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Cognitive DevelopmentCognitive Development

Page 2: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Jean PiagetJean Piaget

• Schemas– the most basic psychological structures– provide a template for action in the world

• Adaptation– the process by which schemas change

Page 3: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

AdaptationAdaptation

• Assimilation– process by which a person absorbs a new

experience into an existing schema

• Accommodation– process by which an existing schema is

modified to adapt to a new experience

Page 4: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

• Assimilation and accommodation are invariant!

• So … what changes?

• Schemas and structures change!

Page 5: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Stages of Cognitive Stages of Cognitive DevelopmentDevelopment

• Sensorimotor (birth - 2 years)

• Preoperational (2 - 6 years)

• Concrete Operational (7 - 11 years)

• Formal Operational (11+)

Page 6: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Sensorimotor Stage Sensorimotor Stage ((birth - 2 yrsbirth - 2 yrs))

• How does Piaget see the young infant?– Active– Initiating behavior– Learning to distinguish among the features in

the environment– Learning to modify own behavior to fit the

demands of the situation

Page 7: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Special Qualities of Special Qualities of SensorimotorSensorimotor

• Egocentrism– the inability to perceive a situation or person

except in relation to the self

• Lack object permanence– the understanding that objects continue to exist

even when they are out of sight– major task of the sensorimotor stage

Page 8: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Reflexive Schemas(birth-1 month)

infant exercises innate reflexes in an automatic and involuntary manner

Page 9: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Primary Circular Reactions (1-4 months)

• Infant repeats a chance behavior involving his/her own body that led to a pleasurable outcome

Primary

Circular

Page 10: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Secondary Circular Reactions

(4-8 months)

• Infant directs attention to objects• repeats chance behavior involving object that led

to a pleasurable outcome

Not truly intentional

Conservative

Page 11: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Secondary Circular Reactions (4-8 months)

• Understanding of Object Permanence– begin searching for objects that are partially

hidden

– yet they quickly forget or ignore those objects they cannot see

Page 12: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions (8-12 months)

Intentional, goal-directed, original behavior

Truly intelligent behavior

Page 13: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Coordination of Secondary Circular Reactions

• Understanding of Object Permanence

– AB search error: baby looks for object in the last place it was found, even when baby saw it moved to a new place

Page 14: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Tertiary Circular Reactions (12-18 months)

Trial and error experimentation

“little scientists” who “experiment in order to see”

Page 15: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Tertiary Circular Reactions

• Understanding of Object Permanence:– no longer makes the AB search error when

they see the object moved to new place– however, if the baby did not see the object

moved, will continue to search in the last place it was found

• when the baby doesn’t find it there, will show distress

Page 16: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Representation (18-24 months)

• Mentally represent object/event in mind

• Symbolic problem solving

• Well-developed object permanence

• Deferred Imitation– ability to remember and copy the behavior of

models who are not immediately present

Page 17: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Preoperational Stage (2 - 6 years)

Page 18: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Emergence of the Symbolic Emergence of the Symbolic FunctionFunction

• Children are first able to form and use symbols

• Deferred imitation

• Language

• Pretend play

Page 19: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Forms of Play

• Sensorimotor play

• Functional play

• Pretend play

Page 20: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Development of Pretend PlayDevelopment of Pretend Play

• Increasingly detached from real-life

• Increasingly detached from the self

• Increasingly complex combinations of schemes of action

• Serves an emotionally integrative function

• Familiarity with social role possibilities

• Fun and useful!!!

Page 21: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Limitations to PreoperationalLimitations to Preoperational

• Egocentric

• Perception bound

• Centered and rigid

Page 22: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

EgocentrismEgocentrism

• Sensorimotor– inability to distinguish the self from others

• Preoperational– inability to distinguish one’s mental representations

from others’ mental representations

Page 23: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

EgocentrismEgocentrism

• Perspective taking games

Page 24: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

EgocentrismEgocentrism

• Animism –belief that inanimate object have

lifelike qualities

Page 25: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Thinking isThinking isPerception BoundPerception Bound

Maynard the Cat Study

confusion of appearance & reality in preschoolers

Page 26: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Perception Bound ThinkingPerception Bound Thinking

Page 27: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Centered and Rigid ThinkingCentered and Rigid Thinking

• Center on a single, salient feature and ignore other, less salient, features

• Lack the ability to mentally retrace through a series of steps

Page 28: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

Main Limitation: ConservationMain Limitation: Conservation

• Preoperational children lack conservation!

• Conservation = the knowledge that an underlying physical dimension remains the same despite superficial changes in its appearance

Page 29: Cognitive Development. Jean Piaget Schemas –the most basic psychological structures –provide a template for action in the world Adaptation –the process.

ConclusionsConclusions

• Children think about the world differently than adults.

• Children actively construct their knowledge about the world.

• Cognitive development follows an invariant and universal sequence.