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LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT

Cognitive Developmental Approaches. Piaget's Theory of Cognitive DevelopmentApplying and Evaluating Piaget's TheoryVygotsky's Theory of Cognitive DevelopmentCognitive Changes in Adulthood . Processes of Development. OrganizationEquilibriumEquilibration . Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development.

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LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT

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    1. LIFE-SPAN DEVELOPMENT

    2. Cognitive Developmental Approaches Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development Applying and Evaluating Piaget’s Theory Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Cognitive Changes in Adulthood

    3. Processes of Development Organization Equilibrium Equilibration

    4. Schemes Actions or mental representations that organize knowledge Behavioral schemes: physical activities characterizing infancy Mental schemes: cognitive activities develop in childhood

    5. Assimilation and Accommodation Both operate even in very young infants Assimilation — incorporate new information or experience into existing knowledge schemes Accommodation — adjust existing schemes to take in new information and experiences

    6. Organization Children cognitively organize experiences - Grouping isolated behaviors into a higher-order cognitive system; receives continual refinement - Grouping items into categories

    7. Equilibrium and Equilibration Proposed explanation of cognitive shift (qualitative) from one stage of thought to next Disequilibrium — creates motivation for change; shift occurs as children experience cognitive conflict Equilibration — they resolve conflict through assimilation and accommodation, to reach a new balance or equilibrium of thought

    8. Stages of Development Piaget’s theory unifies experiences and biology to explain cognitive development Motivation is internal search for equilibrium Four stages of development…progressively advanced and qualitatively different

    9. Sensorimotor stage First of Piaget’s stages Birth to about 2 years Infants construct understanding of world by coordinating sensory experiences with motoric actions Contains six substages

    10. Sensorimotor Substages

    11. Sensorimotor Substages

    12. Object Permanence Understanding that objects and events continue to exist even when they cannot be seen, heard, or touched One of infant’s most important accomplishments Acquired in stages Violation of expectations testing

    13. Infant’s Understanding of Causality

    14. Evaluating Piaget’s Sensorimotor Stage New research techniques suggest Piaget’s theory needs to be modified Some abilities develop earlier Intermodal perception; substantiality and permanence of objects Transitions not as clear-cut; AB error No general theory on how development changes in cognition and nature-nurture issue

    15. Preoperational Stage Second Piagetian developmental stage About 2 to 7 years of age; two substages Children begin to represent the world with words, images, and drawings Not ready to perform Operations Internalized actions that allow children to do mentally what they only did physically before Reversible mental actions

    16. The Symbolic Function Substage

    17. The Three Mountains Task

    19. The Intuitive Thought Substage Children begin using primitive reasoning and want to know answers to all sorts of questions (4-7 years) Why? questions exhaust adults Centration — focusing attention on one characteristic to exclusion of all others Conservation — object or substance amount stays same regardless of changing appearance; lacking in preoperational stage

    20. Piaget’s Conservation Task

    21. Some Dimensions of Conservation: Number, Matter, and Length

    22. Concrete Operational Stage Piaget’s third stage (7-11 years) Children can perform concrete operations Logical reasoning replaces intuitive reasoning if applied to specific, concrete examples Consider several characteristics of object at once Cross-cultural variations exist

    23. Classification Skills Concrete operations child understands one person can be father, brother, and grandson Seriation — involves stimuli along quantitative dimension (e.g. length) Transitivity — if relation holds between first and second object, and holds between the second and third object, then it holds between first and third object

    24. Classification: An Important Ability in Concrete Operational Thought

    25. Formal Operational Stage Individuals move beyond concrete operations and think in more abstract and logical ways (11-15 years) Abstract, Idealistic, and Logical Thinking Verbal problem-solving ability increases Increased ability to think about thought itself Thought is full of idealism and possibilities

    26. Formal Operational Stage Children solve problems by trial-and-error Adolescents think more like scientists Hypothetical-deductive reasoning Have cognitive ability to develop hypotheses, or best guesses, and systematically deduce the best path to follow in solving a problem Assimilation dominates initial development

    27. Adolescent Egocentrism Heightened adolescents’ self-consciousness Imaginary audience Belief that others are as interested in them as they are Involves attention-getting behavior motivated by desire to be noticed, visible, and “on stage” Personal fable — adolescent’s sense of uniqueness and invincibility

    28. Piaget and Education Take a constructivist approach Facilitate rather than direct learning Consider child’s knowledge, level of thinking Use ongoing assessment Promote the student’s intellectual health Turn classroom into setting of exploration and discovery

    29. Evaluating Piaget’s Theory Contributions Vision of children as active, constructive thinkers Criticisms Some estimates of children’s competence is inaccurate Development not uniformly stage-like Effects of training underestimated Culture and education influence development

    30. Neo-Piagetians Argue Piaget got some things right, but theory needs revision More emphasis to memory, attention, information-processing strategies, and processing speed

    31. Vygotsky’s Theory of Cognitive Development Social contexts; minds are shaped by cultural context in which they live Tools are provided by society Children actively construct their knowledge and understanding through social interactions

    32. The Zone of Proximal Development Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) Tasks too difficult for children to master alone but that can be mastered with guidance and assistance from more-skilled person Scaffolding Changing level of support over course of a teaching session to fit child’s current performance level; dialogue is important tool

    33. Vygotsky’s Zone of Proximal Development

    34. Vygotsky: Language and Thought Believed young children use language to plan, guide, and monitor behavior Language and thought initially develop independently, then merge Private speech: language of self-regulation Self talk (3 to 7 years of age) Inner speech: child’s thoughts

    35. Teaching Strategies based on Vygotsky’s Theory Successfully applied to education Effectively assess child’s ZPD Use child’s ZPD in teaching Use more-skilled peers as teachers Monitor and encourage private speech Place instruction in meaningful context

    36. Tools of the Mind Emphasizes child’s self-regulation Give special attention to at-risk children Poverty Difficult conditions (e.g. homeless, drug problems in home) Dramatic play has central role in classroom Child writings are important

    37. Evaluating Vygotsky’s theory Social constructionist approach Importance of skills valued by specific culture Knowledge constructed through social interactions (sociocultural) Criticisms: Overemphasize role of language Facilitators may be too helpful, overcontrolling

    38. Piaget’s View of Adult Cognition Thinking qualitatively in formal operations same as adolescents Adults have more knowledge Research shows: Many don’t reach highest level until adulthood Many adults don’t use formal operational thinking

    39. Cognitive Changes in Adulthood Thinking of young adults is beyond formal operational stage of adolescents. It is… Realistic — Idealism decreases in face of real world constraints Pragmatic — Switch from acquiring knowledge to applying it Reflective and Relativistic — Move away from absolutist thinking of adolescence

    40. Is There A Fifth, Postformal Stage? Postformal thought is Reflective, relativistic, and contextual Provisional Realistic Open to emotions and subjective More research needed Another possible stage may be wisdom

    41. The End

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