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Cognitive Development

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Title: Cognitive Development


1
Cognitive Development
  • Acquiring knowledge

2
I. What is cognitive development?
  • The process by which our intellectual abilities
    (problem solving, perception, reasoning, etc.)
    form evolve over time.

3
Are cognitions different from behaviors?????
  • From a behaviorist point of view, cognitions
    (thoughts, beliefs) are believed to be actions
    and as such are behaviors.
  • The primary difference between cognitions other
    overt behaviors that can be seen is the location.
  • Skinner argued that cognitions are really
    behaviors that occur inside the skin, which he
    called private events.

4
What are cognitions??
  • Knowledge
  • Ability
  • Problem Solving
  • Others include beliefs, reasoning, perceptions

5
II. Theories of cognitive development
  • 1. Piagets theory
  • 2. Vygotskys theory
  • 3. Information-processing theory

6
A. Piagets theory
  • Is a stage theory of development.
  • Examines how children acquire knowledge from
    birth onward.
  • Examines the processes by which childrens
    thinking changes over time.

7
Important contributions of Piagets theory
  • 1. Focused on children being active participants
    in the learning process.
  • 2. Argued that children adapt thinking learn
    from their mistakes.
  • 3. Provided a broad-based view of cognitive
    development in the natural context of the
    environment.
  •  
  • 4. Object permanence.

8
Assumptions of stage theories
  • 1. Childrens thinking in earlier stages differs
    qualitatively from their reasoning in later
    stages.
  • 2. At a given point in development, children
    reason similarly on many problems.
  • 3. Changes from one stage to the next are marked
    by an abrupt transition.

9
How do children progress from one stage to
another?
  • Piaget argued that we need to adapt to our
    environment.
  • Two processes are critical to adaptation
    Assimilation accommodation (mutually influence
    one another).

10
1. Assimilation
  • We transform incoming information so that it fits
    within our existing way of thinking.
  • We add new information to our existing mental
    framework.
  • (E.g., an infant grasps a new object with same
    strategy she used for grasping other objects.).

11
2. Accommodation
  • Adjusting our knowledge (framework) in response
    to characteristics of an object or event (that is
    often different from what weve encountered).
  • Changing existing mental framework to new
    information.
  • (E.g., infant changes the way she grasps a new
    object, based on its shape).

12
Piagets stages of cognitive development
  •  
  • 1.     Sensorimotor period (birth to 2 yrs.)
  • 2.     Preoperational period (2-6 yrs.)
  •  
  • 3.     Concrete operations period (6-12 yrs.)
  •  
  • 4.     Formal operations period (12)
  •  

13
1. Sensorimotor
  • Infants use reflexes to form primitive mental
    representations of objects events.
  • Symbolic thought begins, allowing infants to
    devise strategies for attaining goals solving
    problems.
  • Hallmark Child learns that objects have
    permanence, even if out of sight (object
    permanence) by 8 months of age.

14
A. Was Piaget correct about the timing of when
children acquire Object Permanence?
  • No!!! Infants appear to have the concept of
    object permanence much earlier than Piaget
    thought.
  • Piaget argued that infants show object permanence
    by 8 months or after.
  • It turns out that infants as young as 3.5 months
    have object permanence concept.

15
2. Preoperational Period (2-6 yrs.)
  • Symbolic thought improves as language
    acquisition comes on-line. Children start
    babbling in first year of life, and start
    producing simple two-word sentences by age 2.
  • Mental representations that allow children to
    think about objects in their absence develops.
  • Hallmark Cannot conserve objects (changing an
    objects physical appearance does not alter
    substance of object.)

16
2. stages in preoperational period
  • A. Preconceptual stage (2-4 years)
  • 1. Animistic thinking (the attribution of
    life to inanimate objects).
  • E.g, a child believing the wind talks to the
    trees.

17
Conversation between Piaget a preoperational
child demonstrating animalistic thinking
  • Piaget Does the sun move?
  • Child Yes, when one walks it follows. When one
    turns around it turns around too.
  • Piaget Why does it move?
  • Child Because when one walks, it goes too.
  • Piaget Why does it go?
  • Child To hear what we say.
  • Piaget Is it alive?
  • Child Of course, otherwise it wouldnt follow
    us, it couldnt shine. (Piaget, 1960, p.215)

18
2. Egocentricity
  • The child views world from his/her own
    perspective cant see it from others view.
  • The dialogue where the sun follows the child
    illustrates the childs sense of egocentric
    thinking.

19
Piagets 3-Mountain Task egocentrism
  • Models of 3 mountains of different sizes are
    placed on a square table chairs are placed at
    all four sides of the table.
  • The child is seated in 1 chair, dolls are
    placed in the other 3 chairs, 1 at a time.
  • Child is asked what doll sees. Has to select 1
    set of drawings or use cardboard cutouts to
    construct dolls view.
  • Piaget found kids couldnt consistently identify
    dolls view from each of the three views until
    9-10 yrs old.

20
Criticisms of 3-Mountain Task
  • 1. Piagets Models lacked salient characteristics
    that could allow kids to differentiate 1 view
    from the next.
  • 2.  The task of reconstructing the display, or
    choosing the appropriate drawings may be beyond
    the ability of a young child.
  • Borke (1975) had child do task, but placed
    snowcaps, trees, or houses, on the sides of the
    mountains, to make them more distinctive and also
    asked kids to rotate a small model of the
    mountain display so that they could present the
    correct view, rather than reconstruct the scene
    from drawings. This resulted in correct
    performance in kids as young as 3 years.

21
B. Intuitive Stage
  • Child can solve some problems, but cant tell you
    why.
  • Children cannot
  •  Perform a seriation task- in which objects are
    grouped on the basis of a specific dimension
    (height, length).
  • Perform class inclusion problems (if child is
    given 5 toy cats 3 toy short-haired tabbies (a
    type of cat) asked whether there are more cats
    than tabbies, they cant do it.

22
Limitations of Preoperational Thought
  • Preoperational children cannot conserve (matter,
    liquid,etc.). Conservationaltering an objects
    physical appearance, does alter its basic
    properties.
  • Conservation of liquid task. The experimenter
    shows a child 2 short wide glasses with the same
    amount of liquid.
  • Then, the experimenter pours the liquid from 1 of
    the glasses into a tall skinny glass.
  • The child is asked which glass contains more
    picks the tall glass.

23
2. The Period of Concrete Operations
  • Learn to perform operations mentally manipulate
    representations.
  • Can conserve (number, matter, liquid).
  • Master concept that operations are reversible
    may be organized with other operations into
    larger systems.

24
3. Period of Formal Operations
  • Hallmark- capacity to think abstractly.
  • Learn that operations may be organized into more
    elaborate systems.
  • (a girl thinking about why she is thinking
    about thinking)
  • Adolescents realize that the reality they live
    in, may be one of several realities they could
    experience.

25
Criticisms of Piagets theory
  • 1. Piaget underestimated infant capabilities
    older childrens cognitions.
  •  
  • 2. Piaget was wrong about object permanence
    conservation.

26
B. Vygotskys theory
  • Is a stage theory.
  • Childrens thinkingthe result of their
    interaction with more skilled sophisticated
    partners (parents, teachers, etc.).
  • Children born with innate abilities to learn, but
    need social interaction to develop cognitively.

27
Elementary and Higher Mental Functions
  • Elementary functions Are innate structures
    (memory, attention, perception) that we all
    possess that influence our interaction with
    others.
  • Higher mental functions (logic, abstract
    reasoning) Require complex mediators (language
    symbols) to develop.

28
The Zone of Proximal Development
  • The difference between a childs actual
    developmental level his/her potential as
    determined by an adult through the childs
    interaction with more capable peers adults.
  • Examines childrens potential during optimal
    conditions.

29
Overview of Vygotskys theory
  • 1. Focused on importance of social interactions
    in cognitive development.
  •  
  • 2. Social contexts are important in development.
  • 3. Did not specify the processes that govern
    development nor does it tell us whether they are
    the same at all
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