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Infants - Intellectual Development

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Title: Infants - Intellectual Development


1
Infants - Intellectual Development
2
Intellectual Development
  • I.D. is how people learn, what they learn and how
    they express what they know through language

Mental Development
Cognitive Development
3
  • Happens as quickly as physical development
  • From birth, use all sense organs
  • By age one, infants know many words and may even
    be able to say a few words

4
How do infants learn?
  • Brain development research suggests the following
    three factors
  • Babys physical development (mainly brain)
  • Babys environment
  • The interaction of the first two factors using
    the windows of opportunity

5
  • As motor skills develop, infants are able to move
    toward many sights, sounds, and other learning
    experiences.

6
Motor Center
  • Cognitive development aids in motor development!
  • They learn that their movements are voluntary and
    they are responsible.
  • Reach/touch objects

7
Vision Center
  • Very active in early infancy
  • Maturing eyes and brain wiring helps them look at
    peoples faces and objects
  • 2-3 Months can see objects at a distance very
    clearly
  • 8 Months Vision Peaks! They begin to inspect
    everything!!!

8
  • Binocular Vision necessary to recognize how far
    away an object is.
  • Eyes guide how far the must reach or how far down
    the step might be

9
Thinking and Memory Centers
  • They try to figure out what is happening and how
    to make things happen!
  • Make a ball roll, etc.
  • Important for new environments/experiences
  • Interesting things to see, hear, and touch

10
Perception
  • Organizing information that comes through the
    senses
  • Infants notice how things are
  • alike and different
  • Size
  • Color
  • Shape
  • Texture
  • Perceptions come through the senses about
  • Form
  • Space
  • Weight
  • Numbers

11
Perception
  • Perception also involves how fast the brain
    organizes information

12
Perception
  • Perception involves the way a person reacts to
    different sensory experiences
  • Example child in a crowded room vs. alone with
    mom playing with blocks
  • What do children usually do?

13
Cognition
  • Cognition- the act or process of knowing or
    understanding

14
The Sensorimotor Stage Piaget
  • Birth to age 2
  • Infants use senses and motor skills to learn and
    communicate
  • Practicing Reflexes and Repeating New Learnings
  • Beginning to Control
  • Solving Problems
  • Imitating

15
Perceptual Concepts
  • Object Constancy or Sameness -airplane
  • Object Concept- separate from ones interactions
    with them
  • Object Identity same bear, Daddy/clothes
  • Object Permanence
  • Depth Perception
  • Why might depth perception be important?

16
Beginnings of Language!
17
How do babies communicate?
  • Crying and Cooing - babies do not have control
    over the sounds they make
  • 1st Month cries
  • 2nd Month coos (light, happy sounds)
  • Babbling Important pre-talking skill!
  • 4th and 5th month (ba, da, gi)

18
  • First Words (consistently refer to object or
    person as that word)
  • 9th Month

19
First Words
  • Before first words, babies must do the following
  • Understand object permanence
  • Understand that people, objects, places and
    events have names
  • Remember words that go with people, objects,
    places and events
  • Have the ability to make the sounds
  • Realize that talking is important

20
  • Reduplication babbling-
  • da-da-da-da
  • Adult should make connection
  • Point, confirm and repeat!
  • By age 1 3 words
  • 2nd year Spoken Vocab
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