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Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development
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Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Dec 30, 2015

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Brianna Walton
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Page 1: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

PiagetTheory of Cognitive

Development

Page 2: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Schemas, schemas, schemas!

• Born with innate schemas– Based on natural reflexes– As child interacts with environment, these are

modified

• Constantly built, used and updated

Children actively construct knowledge!

Page 3: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Assimilation

• Interpret new experiences in terms of our current schemas

• Make the new information “fit”– Interpret the world around you in ways you are

comfortable with & already know.

Page 4: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Accommodation

• Adjust our schemas to incorporate information from new experiences

• Information doesn’t “fit!” – Initially confusing– update and/or creating new schemas

Growth & new knowledgeProgress through stages of cognitive

development

Page 5: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Sensorimotor Stage Birth-2 years 

• Infants try to make sense of the world using innate skills

– i.e. looking, sucking, grasping, and listening

•Knowledge of the world limited to:– sensory perceptions– motor activities

•Object Permanence- understanding that things can exist when they aren’t seen/heard

•Reflexes– Behaviors  limited to simple motor responses caused by sensory stimuli

Page 6: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Preoperational StageAges 2-7  

• Language Development– Not just words, begin to classify

•Egocentrism- can’t take the point of view of other people

–What will someone think is in a piggy bank?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OinqFgsIbh0&NR=1 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLj0IZFLKvg

Page 7: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Preoperational Stage (Continued)• Theory of Mind

– Ability to infer other people’s mental states– Develops between 3 ½ and 4 ½

Page 8: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Preoperational Stage (Continued)

•Animism- belief that everything that exists has some kind of consciousness.

•Artificialism- belief that natural phenomena are created by human beings

•Symbolism- something is allowed to stand for or symbolize something else

• Children can not:– understand concrete logic– mentally manipulate information

Page 9: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Concrete Operational StageAges 7-11

• Begin to have :–Logical thought about concrete events

• don't understand abstract/hypothetical concepts

–Inductive logic- going from a specific experience to a general principle

•difficulty with deductive logic- going from a general principle to determine the outcome of a specific event

–Conservation- ability to understand that redistributing material does not affect its mass, number or volume

–Use reversibility- awareness that actions can be reversed• My dog is a Labrador, a Lab is a dog, and a dog is an animal.•7 + 8 = 15 so 15 – 7 = 8

–Problem solving is generally random!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gA04ew6Oi9M&feature=related

Page 10: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,
Page 11: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Formal Operational Stage

Begins around ages 11-15 - adulthood • New thought processes emerge:

–Abstract thought –Logical thought– Deductive reasoning– Problem-solving (instead of trial and error)– Systematic planning– Long Term planning– Can appreciate nuanced conversation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjJdcXA1KH8&feature=related

Page 12: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

“If a card has a vowel on one side, then it has an even number on the other side.” 

Which cards do I need to turn over to test the rule?

Page 13: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

The Answer…

The E and the 7. 

•The E must have an even number on the back -- that much is obvious. 

•The 7 is odd, so it cannot have a vowel on the other side -- that would be against the rule

•The rule says nothing about what has to be on the back of a consonant such as the K

•Nor does it say that the 4 must have a vowel on the other side

Page 14: Piaget Theory of Cognitive Development. Schemas, schemas, schemas! Born with innate schemas –Based on natural reflexes –As child interacts with environment,

Criticisms• Assumption that we automatically progress from stage to stage

– What about the effect of the environment?•Education, culture, birth order, etc

•Only used his own children

•Recent research suggests that timing is wrong:–Children understand object permanence at a younger age–Children of 4-5 years do understand their own mental processes as well as other peoples

• aka less egocentric than Piaget thought–Some of Piaget’s tasks asked questions twice(conservation) which made children think hewanted a different answer!