Front | Back |
Jean Piaget
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- 1st person to advance a theory of children's cognitive development
- 1896-1987 |
Cognitive equilibrium
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- Goal of intelligence
- A balanced harmonious relation between thought processes and the environment - Piaget |
Cognitive disequilibrium
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- Imbalances between children's thinking and the environment
- Piaget |
Piaget viewed intelligence as ___ in nature
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Active
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2 invariant functions of intelligence
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- Organization and adaptation
- Piaget |
Piaget's concept of organization
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- Refers to the fact that our psychological/cognitive structures are organized into coherent systems
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Adaptation's 2 complementary processes
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- Assimilation and accommodation
- Piaget |
Assimilation
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- Current psychological structures are used to interpret the external world
- i.e. toddler seeing a cow for the first time and calling it "dog" - Piaget |
Accommodation
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- New psychological structures are created or old ones are adjusted upon noticing aspects of the environment that current psychological structures do not capture
- i.e. Child imitating a parent's gestures - Piaget |
Piaget's stages of development
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0-2 years = Sensorimotor Stage
2-7 = Preoperational Stage 7-11 = Concrete Operational Stage 11+ = Formal Operational Stage |
The Sensorimotor Stage
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- Ages 0-2
- Capable of overt actions - Not capable of mental thought - Psychological structures of this stage = sensorimotor action schemes - Intelligence is built upon basic reflexes - Piaget |
Object permanence
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- Understanding that objects continue to exist when the child is not seeing or acting upon them
- Culmination / milestone of Sensorimotor Stage (around age 2) |
The Preoperational Stage
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- Ages 2-7
- Mental representation (the symbolic function) emerges - i.e. Acquiring words and developing language; symbolic play - Capable of thought but limited |
Egocentrism
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- Inability to take another person's perspective
- Children presume that others have the same viewpoint as themselves |
Collective monologue
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- Child speaks aloud with others present, but is actually speaking a soliloquy
- Example of egocentric speech - Piaget |