1 / 17

Child Development: Unit 5 Toddler and Preschool

Child Development: Unit 5 Toddler and Preschool. Preschool Cognitive Development. List major cognitive milestones for a preschooler. 3 Year Old Short sentences 896 Words Great growth in communication Tells simple stories Uses words as tool of thought Answers questions Imaginative

ham
Download Presentation

Child Development: Unit 5 Toddler and Preschool

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Child Development:Unit 5Toddler and Preschool Preschool Cognitive Development

  2. List major cognitive milestones for a preschooler • 3 Year Old • Short sentences • 896 Words • Great growth in communication • Tells simple stories • Uses words as tool of thought • Answers questions • Imaginative • May recite few nursery rhymes • 4 Year Old • Uses complete sentences • 1540 words • Asks endless questions • Learning to generalize • Highly imaginative • Dramatic • Can draw recognizable objects

  3. Pre-schoolers all over the  United States  were shown this picture asked the same question. • Which way is the bus below traveling?To the left or to the right? Can't make up your mind?Look carefully at the picture again.Still don't know?

  4. 90% of the pre-schoolers said: 'The bus is traveling to the left.' When asked, “Why do you think the bus is traveling to the left?”They answered:  • “Because you can't see the door to get on the bus.” How does it make you feel?

  5. SORTING • Common household objects being put into categories according to similarities. • Examples • Blocks, buttons, silverware, colored items, laundry

  6. CLASSIFYING • Grouping nature objects into categories according to their similarities. • Examples: • Rocks, boys/girls, bathrooms, people characteristics, animals, things in nature

  7. SERIATION • Organizing objects according to increasing or decreasing qualities. • Example • Age, height, weight, length, lining up, building a snowmen, your lockers

  8. TRANSFORMATION • Changing an object’s state. • Example • Popcorn • Water into ice or ice into water, • powder jello mix into jigglyjello and then adding hot water to the jello to turn it back into a liquid, • growing older with age, • a seed into a plant, • dough into bread

  9. REVERSAL • Building or doing and then undoing it • Example • Zip and unzip, • build a sand castle and wreck it, • block tower and wreck it, • tie and untie

  10. CONSERVATION • Understanding that an objects physical dimensions and amounts remain the same even though its appearance changes • Example • Pouring liquid from one cup into another shaped cup. Smashing a cookie dough ball or playdough, 2 different shaped cookies or containers of food

  11. SEQUENCING • Step by step pattern of event put into correct order. • Example • Directions in cooking, a story, • a snowman being built and then melting into water, • following correct order to performing a task • Your class schedule or job responsibilities

  12. PREOPERATIONAL THINKING

  13. Words learned Child asking Concepts learning Caregiver asking E V E R D A Y L E A R N I N G

  14. Cognitive Terms • Group 1: Terms 1-9 • Group 2: Terms 10-18 • Find the answers in your groups and we will share as a class in 15 minutes!

  15. This is what you should be doing. . . • Teaching/Observing/Prep • Finish Preschool Labs (LAST DAY) • Doing Book Evaluation(BOOKS ON FRONT DESK) • Color Brown Bear

More Related