Title: Piagets theory of Cognitive Development
1Piagets theory of Cognitive Development
- Nature of intellectual development.
- Intelligence
- means by which humans adapt to the
environment- construct an understanding of
reality by interacting with it. - Knowledge-
- does not come ready made, it is discovered
actively, even invented. - NOT just a copy of the external world (i.e.
passive registration of associations as in S-R
psychology) - NOT just the unfolding of pre-formed structures
(i.e. maturation as in the nativist /biological
approach
2- Thus, knowledge is
- constructed by continuous interaction between
the subject and the external world. So Piagets
theory is constructivist he sees the child as a
scientist. - Structures develop in a predictable fashion
summarised into four stages all children pass
through these stages in the same order. - Underlying the changes are fundamental aspects of
the development process which work in the same
way throughout various stages these are- - Assimilation, accommodation and equilibration.
3- But what actually changes?
- Schema
- basic unit /building block of intelligent
behaviour organised knowledge used to guide
action.
Become more co-ordinated join together into
larger structures become more internal mental
processes rather than overt behaviours actual
thoughts
Schemas start simple basic reflexes, not really
linked together overt behaviour
4- How do schemas change?
- Copy out the diagram on page 491
- Define assimilation, accommodation, equilibrium,
disequilibrium, equilibration and adaptation. Add
a practical example to the diagram e.g. how does
a baby change how he/she drinks. (see also your
text book pg 37?)
5Piagets 4 stages of cognitive development
6Sensori motor stage
0-2 years
Intelligence in action. Child interacts with
environment by manipulating objects
7Pre-operational stage
Pre-conceptual stage 2-4 years
Intuitive stage 4 7 years
Thinking dominated by perception but child
becomes more and more capable of symbolic
thinking. Language development occurs. Child
still unduly influenced by own perception of the
environment
8Concrete operations stage
7- 11 years
Logical reasoning is developing but can only be
applied to objects that are real or can be seen.
9Formal operations stage
12 years upwards
Person can now think logically about abstract
ideas and/or potential events. Can think
hypothetically.
10Stages of cognitive development
- Sensorimotor stage birth 2years
- Intelligence is basically motor/practical.
Interaction with environment consists of overt
actions either sensory or motor (hence the name
of this stage!) - No thought as we mean it understand the world
through actions performed on it discovers
relationship between sensation and action.
11- Frequent interaction with objects
-
-
- Development of object permanence major
achievement of this stage. - How does Piaget think this develops in the first
year of life? Draw a table relating the
development of object permanence to the
sub-stages of the sensorimotor stage? - Object permanence fully developed at approx 18
months, once child can take into account
something might have happened which it hasnt
seen.
object permanence
12- E.g. child sees toy placed in matchbox and then
placed under pillow. Toy is removed without child
seeing and empty box placed in front of child.
Does child search under pillow for missing toy?
Is so, object permanence is fully developed
child can now infer invisible displacement. - This stage is very important for the development
of the general symbolic function where a child
starts to represent objects to itself in the form
of mental images starting now to work things
out in their heads no longer so dependent on
having things actually present.
13- The three major ways in which the general
symbolic function manifests itself are- - Language symbolic thought.
- Deferred imitation imitate something not there.
- Representational play using one object as
though it were something else. - All of the above rely on the ability to remember
- Task- Draw a summary diagram of the
sensori-motor stage of cognitive development
14Egocentric cannot distinguish between self and
environment
Learns thro sense and actions. How does this
develop over the 2 years?
Sensorimotor stage 0 2 years
Develops object permanence. Briefly chart the
development of this.
Development of general symbolic function How is
this shown in the infants behaviour?
15Pre-operational stage - (2 7 years)
- Operation mental routine for transposing
information reversible. Child in this stage
lacks this ability hence the name! - Influenced by how things look rather than
logical principles /operations. - World is very concrete and absolute things are
as they seem. - Continued development and use of internal images
/symbols and language important for childs
increasing sense of self-awareness. - Stage is actually split into two
- pre-conceptual
- intuitive
16Pre-conceptual sub stage
Intuitive sub stage
2-4 years
4-7 years
Finds seriation tasks very difficult
Can do seriation task (often after trial and
error)
Can perform syncretic tasks accurately
Limited syncretic thought - finds concentrating
on more than two objects difficult
17- Pre-conceptual stage 2- 4 years
- Child thinks in absolute terms cannot
understand relative terms e.g. bigger. - Things are just biggest /big.
- Can only classify things in terms of one
attribute at a time centration - E.g. if you give a 3 year old some big green
squares big red squares some small green
squares small red squares s(he) can put all red
shapes in one box and all green shapes in another
OR could put all the big squares in one box and
all the small squares in another BUT cannot sort
out big red squares from big green squares and
small red squares from small green squares into
four separate groups.
18- Until child can decentre will be unable to
classify things in a logical way. - Syncretic thought
- tend to link things in a sequence on the
basis of the previous item only no overall
common factor - E.g. give a 3 year old a box of shapes and ask
them to pick out 4 that are alike. Tend to pick
out ones that are linked in some way to the
previous shape but have no overall characteristic
in common. - Copy the diagram on pg 493 and explain what the
child is thinking.
19- Transductive reasoning
- assumes two objects are the same if they
have one attribute in common - i.e. A has 4 legs, B has 4 legs therefore A B
(e.g. all 4 legged animals will be dog!) - This type of thinking can lead to
- Animism
Belief that inanimate object are alive, e.g.
calling cars by a name!
20- Pre-conceptual child has difficulty with
seriation - arrange objects on basis of a particular
dimension e.g. height. Find it particularly
difficult to introduce an item in to a series.
Cannot cope with the concept of B is smaller than
A but bigger than C
B
C
A
A
B
C
21- Intuitive stage 4 7 years
- Child now beginning to be able to tackle problems
s(he) couldnt do in the pre-conceptual stage.
Still very limited in ability to think logically
particularly in terms of classification
experience difficulty with class-inclusion tasks. - Cannot understand the relationship between the
whole (superordinate) class and the parts
(subordinate) class.
22- E.g. give child some wooden beads mostly brown
with a few white beads. - Qu. Are all the beads wooden?
- Ans __________________
- Qu. Are there more brown or white beads?
- Ans __________________
- Qu. Are there more brown beads or more wooden
beads? - Ans. _________________
- Child still influenced by what is immediately
obvious (i.e. that there are more brown beads
than white) than that they are all, in fact,
wooden. - Piaget assumed this was because the child could
not decentre.
Yes
Brown
Brown
23- Egocentrism
- child sees world from own viewpoint cannot
understand that others may see it differently . - E.g. Do you have a brother?
- Yes, Andrew.
- Does Andrew have a brother?
- No.
- How did Piaget Inhelder investigate this?
24- Conservation
- things remain the same despite some change in
outward appearance - Major feature of this stage - child fails to
conserve perceptual appearance dominates
things are what they seem. - Outline how a child would fail to conserve-
liquid quantity, number, and substance quantity.
25- Lack of conservation another example of
centration e.g. for volume, child is only
taking one height of beaker into account fails
to take note of width. - Child cannot compensate
- allow for increasing height but decreasing
width. - Has no reversibility
- cannot mentally return situation back to
beginning. - Task- Draw a summary diagram of the
pre-operational stage of cognitive development
remember to include the two sub-stages
26Concrete Operational Stage 7 11 years.
- In this stage children develop the mental
structure called an operation. - Operation a mental action comprising
- a)________________
- b) ________________
- Best demonstrated by the ability to conserve.
- Can only do the operation with the objects
actually present. Hence the stage is referred to
as the concrete operational stage.
compensation
reversibility
27- Conservation is usually mastered in the same
order - Number and liquid quantity
- Substance /quantity length
- Weight
- Volume
6 7 years
7 8 years
8 10 years
11 - 12 years
28- Step by step acquisition of new operations
- Decalage (i.e. displacement or slips in level
of performance) - Horizontal decalage
- inconsistencies within the same ability or
operation (e.g. can conserve number but not
weight) - Vertical decalage
- inconsistencies between different abilities
or operations (e.g. can do all types of
classification but not all types of conservation)
29- Ability to classify is improving - child can now
understand the relationship between superordinate
and subordinate classes i.e. can understand the
part /whole relationship this clearly relates
to their ability to perform mathematical
operations such as addition and subtraction. - Childs ability to decentre is growing
- i) Can sort objects on the basis of 2 or more
attributes
30- ii) Egocentrism decreases and child is more able
to see things from anothers point of view - Transitivity tasks (eg if Mark is taller than
Anne and Anne is taller than Jane who is taller,
Mark or Jane?) still difficult unless they can
use actual objects cannot do them in their
heads. - Jane Anne Mark
31The Formal Operational Stage (11 15 years)
- Formal operational thinker can manipulate ideas
/propositions (first order operations) Can reason
just using verbal statements (second order
operations) - Formal
- Ability to follow the form of an argument without
reference to content - E.g. in case of transitivity can reason If A is
taller than B and B is taller than C then A must
be taller than C this will be true
irrespective of what A, B and c actually refer
to! - Can think hypothetically now evidence of
increasing ability to decentre. Can deal with
possibilities and think about how things could be
different from actual reality. Can deal with
inconsistencies in behaviour both their own and
others.
32- Can ask deep and meaningful questions like who
am I? Who do I want to be? - Can experiment and search systematically for a
solution to a problem considering all factors
and arrive at a solutions by careful reasoning
hypothetico-deductive reasoning - can propose and test a hypothesis and draw a
conclusion /new hypothesis from this - May not be a universal stage adults make
mistakes on formal reasoning tasks. - May be that only about 1/3 of average adolescents
adults ever reach formal operations stage? - Dasen (1977) type of reasoning within formal
operational thought does not appear in all
cultures if it does, may not be typical mode of
thought. Not considered of great value in every
community even in some Western societies. Very
dependent on secondary schooling.
33- Gladwin (1970) questioned how appropriate
Piagetian tasks are for testing cognitive
development of non-western populations. - Formal operational thought has often been
acquired but in a culturally specific manner. - E.g. Pulawat navigators of Polynesia
- show complex formal operational
- thought when guiding canoes at sea
- but fail standard western tests of
- cognitive development.
34- Flavell (1977) formal operational thought may
emerge during adolescence but isnt the typical
type of thought during this stage. - Piaget (1972) all normal people develop formal
operational thought by 20 yrs (if not sooner) but
only in certain skill areas depending on
aptitude and experience. In other words, if you
have a certain aptitude for, say, history and
study it to a high level then you may develop
formal ops within the skill area of history only
but may remain at the concrete operational stage
when solving maths problems - Implication is that this fourth and final stage
of cognitive development is dependent upon
specific knowledge and training (i.e. secondary
schooling) as well as general level of cognitive
development - -different to other three stages
which seem to develop irrespective of specific
training.
35Evaluation of Piagets theory
- Object permanence Bower Wishart (1972)
- - how object disappears influences infants
reponse. - If infant is looking at something and lights are
turned off infant carries on searching for over a
minute - (using infra red cameras)
- so DOES realise it is still there.
- Baillargeaon Devos the disappearing carrot!!
(see separate sheet)
36Centration-
- Donaldson child may not understand what they
are supposed to do. - Sleeping cows alternative
- Are there more black cows
- or more cows?
- 25 correct.
- Are there more black cows
- Or more sleeping cows?
- 48 correct
37- Why the difference?
- Task is now more child friendly more relevant
to them. - Gelman (1978) more means different things to
adults and children- - Adults more greater number.
- Children more general concept larger,
occupies more space, longer etc.
38Egocentrism-
- Gelman (1979) 4 year olds can appreciate a
listener is blindfolded change their
explanation to suit therefore can see things
from their point of view. - Also change explanation when talking to 2 year
old. - Can select appropriate presents for their mother.
- Swiss mountain scene very difficult.
- Borke Hughes more meaningful
- task more accurate response
39- Hughes
- policeman doll experiment
- Where do you hide the
- boy so he cannot
- be seen?
- 3.5 5 year olds
- could do this 90
- of the time.
- Why?
- It made sense to them
40- Perspective taking ability Flavell et all
(1990) - Made a look like a
- What does it look like?
- What is it really?
- 3 yr olds it is a sponge looks like sponge
or - it is a rock looks like a rock
- 4 yr olds it looks like a rock but is a
sponge - 1. 2/3 yr olds know others experience things
differently - 2. 4/5 yr olds use complex rules to work out what
other sees.
41- Gopnik Wellman belive that 4/5 yr olds have a
sophisticated theory of mind - Understanding that people, (not objects) have
desires, beliefs etc which may be false - why do they come to this conclusion Box 34.5
pg 497
42Conservation
- This may well occur much earlier than Piaget
thought. His results may well be due to they way
he phrased his questions i.e. by asking how much
is in this beaker? (for example) both before and
after the transformation! - Donaldson (1974) experimenter forces child into
thinking something has changed by asking the same
question twice! Child thinks - Well, something
must have changed otherwise why ask the same
question again?
43- Rose Blank (1974) did not ask
pre-transformation question. - Result 6 yr olds often did much better on
conservation task AND on standard Piagetian task
a week later - Naughty Teddy transformation seen
- as accidental so does not affect
- number of counters.
- Generally, children are much more able to
conserve when the situation is meaningful for
them.
44- However, it is possible that in the accidental
/incidental conditions the child is actually
being misled into giving the right answer for the
wrong reasons! - Piagets version of the conservation task
implication take note of the transformation
so child gives a different answer second time the
question is asked. - Accidental /incidental version implication
take no note of transformation so child gives
the same answer when the question is asked for
the second time.
45- So what would happen if a change does actually
take place in the accidental /incidental
condition? - Children tested in this condition do not tend to
spot the change that has taken place but children
tested in Piagets standard way do spot the
change. - Another criticism of Piaget words used in
conservation task questions may not be understood
by the children in the same way adults understand
them. Typically a child is asked which beaker
contains more. Children may be interpreting
this as meaning fuller when they ask for more
milk the level in the glass rises ?they say
more to mean simply a higher level. - more than because level is higher
46Cross-cultural tests of Piagets stages
- Dasen 1994- 8-14 yr old Aborigines
- Conservation of liquid, weight and volume
spatial task either a) locating an object on a
model and then find same location on second model - Or b) bottle of water tilted behind a screen
- had to draw water level on outline
- drawing of bottle.
47- Results-
- On conservation tasks - same shift from pre-op to
concrete op thinking BUT much later than Swiss
children (10-13 instead of 5 -7). Quite a few
adolescents and adults could not conserve. - On spatial tasks same shift again BUT much
earlier than for Swiss children. - Why? Well, in Aboriginal culture, where things
are matters a lot but how much of it you have
matters little (numbers only go up to 5 any
more is many!) - E.g. finding water is vital (good spatial skills)
but exactly how much you have is not so important
48- How scientific were Piagets methods?
- Methods used underestimated childs abilities
language used was too complex and tasks not
relevant for children. - Used clinical interview technique i.e. start off
with same question for all but subsequent
questions depend upon the answer to previous
question thus we cannot compare children to
establish general trends - procedure basically
un-standardised (different for each participant). - Little detail given regarding numbers and ages of
participants no statistical analysis.
49- Social Factors in Cognitive development.
- Donaldson intellectual development cannot be
understood in isolation from social
understanding. - Children dont interpret words, they interpret
situations more concerned to make sense of a
situation than to work out what individual words
mean. - Piaget tried to isolate cognitive aspects of
development in order to study it - this basic
flaw in Piagets work led to him underestimating
the abilities of children. - Saw child as isolated individual - led to him
excluding the contribution others make to a
childs intellectual development
50- Applying Piagets theory to education
- Three main implications of Piagets theory - not
explicit instructions. - Concept of readiness give tasks tailored to a
childs needs. (But kids can be trained to do
tasks beyond them so may not be valid?) - What to teach curriculum needs to be roughly in
line with Ps stages right order and
appropriate concepts. - How to teach active self discovery teacher
guides and directs provides opportunities for
kids to explore
51- Central view of teacher in Piagetian classroom-
- children learn from actions rather than passive
observation - need to do things, not just watch active
self-discovery/discovery learning. - Teacher needs to understand that child must
construct knowledge for themselves and that this
results in deeper understanding - I watch , I forget I do, I understand
52- Role of teacher-
- 1. Assess individual stage of development to be
able to set tasks tailored to child which are
intrinsically motivating. - 2. Provide children with learning opportunities
that enable them to move on to next stage i.e.
need to create disequilibrium. But cant just
provide materials and tell them to get on with
discovering! Should create good balance between
directing /guiding child and leaving them to
explore for themselves. - 3. Focus on process of learning rather than end
product - encourage questioning, experimentation
and exploration. Look for reasons behind answers
especially wrong answers! - 4. Teacher guides in childs process of
discovery curriculum needs to fit individual
needs of each child
53Critically consider Piagets theory of cognitive
development.
- Outline Piagets theory of how cognition develops
and how schemas change. - Identify and briefly describe each stage.
- Take 2 or 3 key concepts and describe the
evidence P used to come to his conclusions about
these concepts. - How can these studies be criticised?
- How have Ps views been modified?
- Discuss more general evaluation points e.g. what
influence has Ps theory had and how can it be
applied? - Maximum 750 /800 words.