Title: Chapter 2
1Chapter 2 Cognitive and Linguistic Development
2Piagets Preoperational Stage
- The preoperational stage emerges when the child
is about 2 years old and continues until the
child is about 6 or 7. Hence, we are likely to
see characteristics of this stage in most
preschoolers, as well as in many children in
kindergarten and the early elementary grades.
3Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 1. Language Use of language in both social
communication and mental representation of the
world. - Example A child can express his/her needs and
desires to others. - Example A child can think about an object
simply by thinking about the word for that
object.
4Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 2.Preoperational egocentrism An inability to
view situations from another persons
perspective. - Example Children may have trouble understanding
why they must share their toys with a guest, or
why they must be careful not to hurt someone
elses feelings - Example Children may play games together
without ever checking to be sure that they are
all playing according to the same rules - Example Children may exhibit egocentric speech,
saying things without really considering the
perspective of the listener
5Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 3. Confusion between physical and psychological
events Confusing external, physical objects
with ones own internal, mental ideas. - This characteristic takes two forms
- Animism Children attribute psychological
qualities such as thoughts and feelings to
inanimate objects. - Example A child who accidentally bumps his head
on a table spanks the table to punish it. - Example A child expresses a concern that a doll
is sad or in pain when its leg is torn off
6Piagets Preoperational Stage
- Realism Children believe that their thoughts
and ideas have physical reality. - Example A child has an imaginary playmate.
- Example A child worries that monsters and
bogeymen lurk in the basement. - Example A child finds nightmares realistic and
terrifying.
7Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 4. Lack of conservation A lack of understanding
that, when nothing is added or taken away, amount
stays the same regardless of alterations in shape
or arrangement. - Example When water is poured from a tall, thin
glass into a short, fat one, a child believes
that there is a different amount of water (either
less or more) than before.
8Piagets Preoperational Stage
- Example Two rows of six pennies each are placed
in front of a child, like this - O O O O O O
- O O O O O O
- The child agrees that both rows contain the same
number of pennies. The pennies in the second row
are then spread farther apart, so that the two
rows now look like this
9Piagets Preoperational Stage
- O O O O O O
- O O O O O O
- The child is now likely to say that the second
row has more pennies than the first row because
the coins are spread farther out or the row is
longer. Without the realization that the number
of objects is constant despite changes in
arrangement (i.e., without conservation of
number), preoperational children have a limited
understanding of the concept of number itself.
10Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 5. Centration Focusing on one dimension of an
object to the exclusion of other dimensions. - Example When explaining why water poured from a
tall, thin glass into a short, fat glass is now
less than it was before, a child says that the
water in the first glass is taller. The child
does not recognize that the first glass is also
thinner and that height compensates for width.
11Piagets Preoperational Stage
- Example During the conservation of number task
just described, a child justifies the conclusion
that the second row has more pennies by saying
that its longer, without acknowledging that the
pennies are also spread farther apart. -
12Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 6. Inability to reason about transformations
Difficulty thinking about change processes.
Preoperational children tend to focus on static
situations. - Example In the conservation tasks just
described, a child doesnt take into account the
fact that the same amount of water was merely
poured into a different glass and that the
pennies in one row were simply spread farther
apart.
13Piagets Preoperational Stage
- Example A child has trouble arranging a series
of pictures of a pencil to show its various
positions as it is held in a vertical position
and then allowed to fall (Sund, 1976). - Example A child resists the idea of
caterpillars becoming butterflies through the
process of metamorphosis he/she may instead
insist that the caterpillars crawled away and
butterflies came to replace them (Harris, 1986).
14Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 7. Irreversibility Difficulty recognizing that
transformations can be undone, or reversed. - Example A child does not comprehend that
subtraction is the reverse of (i.e., it undoes)
addition. The child is therefore likely to learn
2 3 5 and 5 3 2 as two separate,
unrelated number facts.
15Piagets Preoperational Stage
- 8. Single classification An inability to
classify an object as being a member of two
categories at the same time. - Example A child is shown 10 wooden beads, of
which 8 are brown and 2 are white. When asked,
Are there more brown beads or more wooden
beads? the child says that there are more brown
beads. - Example A child denies that a mother can also
be a teacher.
16- In general, the preoperational stage is
characterized by rudimentary but immature logical
thought processes.