Stages involve - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Stages involve

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: Anne Hungerford Last modified by: AHungerford Created Date: 9/15/2003 11:23:47 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stages involve


1
  • Stages involve
  • Discontinuous (qualitative) change
  • Invariant sequence
  • Stages are never skipped

2
  • Sensorimotor Stage (birth-2 years)
  • Newborns have reflexes (motor behavior) and basic
    perceptual abilities
  • Refine these innate responses (accommodation)
    during the first month of life

3
  • Gradually become capable of repeating satisfying
    behaviors that initially occurred by chance

4
  • First learn to repeat actions involving their own
    body
  • Ex thumb sucking
  • Then learn to repeat actions involving objects
  • Ex shaking rattle

5
  • Object Permanence Understanding that objects
    continue to exist when they cannot be perceived
    directly
  • Infants have some understanding of object
    permanence at around 8 months

6
  • A-not-B error Tendency to reach where objects
    have been found before, rather than where they
    were last hidden
  • Infants make this error until about 12 months of
    age

7
  • From 12 months on, infants increasingly engage in
    active exploration of objects and their functions

8
  • At end of sensorimotor stage, mental
    representations develop
  • Deferred Imitation Imitation of a behavior
    after a period of delay
  • Implies mental representation (memory)

9
  • Egocentrism Tendency to focus on ones own
    viewpoint and ignore others perspectives
  • Ex 3 Mountains Task

10
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11
  • Centration Tendency to focus on one feature of
    an object or event to the neglect of other
    important features

12
  • Conservation Understanding that certain
    physical characteristics of objects remain the
    same even when their outward appearance changes
  •  

13
  • Preoperational children fail conservation tasks
    because of
  • Centration
  • A tendency to focus on static states rather than
    transformations

14
  • Concrete Operations (7-11)
  • Understand conservation tasks
  • Can focus on multiple features of an object or
    event
  • Can consider transformations, not just static
    states

15
  • Limitations of Concrete Operations
  • Childrens logical thinking is limited to
    concrete information that can be perceived
    directly
  • Cant reason about abstract or hypothetical ideas

16
  • Formal Operations (11 on)
  • Ability to think abstractly or hypothetically
  • What if . . . ?

17
  • Can consider all possible outcomes of a situation
    (scientific reasoning)
  • Ex pendulum problem

18
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19
  • Criticisms of Piagets Theory
  • Underestimated role of social environment in
    cognitive development
  • Ex Certain experiences (like formal schooling)
    may promote conservation and other abilities

20
  • Doesnt explain HOW cognitive development occurs
  • Better description than explanation of childrens
    cognitive development

21
  • The stage model describes childrens thinking as
    being more consistent than it really is
  • Ex Children can solve some conservation
    problems sooner than others

22
  • Infants and young children are more cognitively
    advanced than Piaget claimed
  • Ex deferred imitation (and thus mental
    representation) is present earlier than Piaget
    thought
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