Cognitive Development:

    Cards (38)

    • What are the four stages of cognitive development according to Piaget?
      1. Sensori-motor (0-2 years)
      2. Pre-operational (2-7 years)
      3. Concrete operational (7-12 years)
      4. Formal operational (12+ years)
    • What is the developmental period for the sensori-motor stage?
      0-2 years: infancy
    • What is a characteristic of the sensori-motor stage?
      Failure to differentiate between self and surroundings
    • What is the developmental period for the pre-operational stage?
      2-7 years: early childhood
    • What is a key characteristic of the pre-operational stage?
      Mental imagery without principled thought
    • What is the developmental period for the concrete operational stage?
      7-12 years: middle childhood
    • What is a characteristic of the concrete operational stage?
      Principled thought is confined to real-life issues
    • What is the developmental period for the formal operational stage?
      12+ years: adolescence and adulthood
    • What is a key characteristic of the formal operational stage?
      Principled thought applied to abstract problems
    • What does lack of mental imagery in the sensori-motor stage imply?
      The ability to imagine the existence of things not directly accessible to the senses
    • What is solipsism in the context of cognitive development?
      The failure to distinguish between the self and the rest of the universe
    • What does not having object permanence mean?
      Not understanding that things continue to exist even when they can't be sensed directly
    • In the sensori-motor stage, how is perception related to action?
      Perception is subordinate to action
    • What cognitive ability does an infant develop by 18-24 months?
      The ability to conceive the existence of an object independently of self
    • What does the infant learn about the self and the world during cognitive development?
      There is a “self” and there is the “world” through the acquisition of mental imagery
    • What are the characteristics of the pre-operational stage of development?
      • Mental imagery without principled thought
      • Egocentrism: difficulty taking another person’s perspective
      • Operational intelligence: solving problems through logical processes
      • Failure to decenter: fixating on one issue rather than considering multiple aspects
    • What is conservation in cognitive development?
      Understanding that changing the form or location of an object doesn’t change its mass, volume, or amount
    • What do children often provide when asked to reason logically?
      An intuitive answer rather than a correct response based on operational thought
    • What is class inclusion in cognitive development?
      The ability to understand that objects can belong to multiple categories
    • What is necessary for a child to overcome egocentrism?
      Operational intelligence
    • What are the characteristics of the concrete operational stage (7-12 years)?
      • Correct answers in conservation tasks
      • Ability to provide logical justifications for answers
      • Confined to real-life issues
      • Struggles to apply principled thought to abstract problems
    • What are the justifications children use in conservation tasks?
      Compensation, inversion, and identity
    • What is a key characteristic of the formal operational stage?
      Systematic logical thinking and reasoning
    • What type of thinking is emphasized in the formal operational stage?
      Abstract thinking
    • What are the main issues with Piaget’s stage theory?
      • Alternative theory: social constructivism
      • Challenges to Piaget’s findings
      • Piagetian tasks may not make “human sense”
      • Children can pass conservation tasks earlier than Piaget suggested
    • Who challenged Piaget’s theory and findings?
      Margaret Donaldson
    • What was Donaldson's argument regarding Piagetian tasks?
      They didn’t make “human sense”
    • What is the name of the experiment conducted by McGarrigle & Donaldson?
      Naughty Teddy experiment
    • What did McGarrigle & Donaldson modify in their experiments?
      They modified a number of Piagetian tasks
    • What did Rai and Mitchell (2006) find regarding 4-year-olds?
      They found evidence that even 4-year-olds can reason logically
    • What do 4-year-olds appreciate according to the study?
      That an unfamiliar name belongs to an unfamiliar character
    • What concept did Russel (1982) introduce?
      Inter-cognitive conflict
    • What are the key ideas of Vygotsky's theory?
      • Emphasizes the role of the environment in development
      • Cognitive abilities are socially constructed
      • Learning is motivated by the need to interact with others
      • Culture and language are fundamental for development
    • How does Vygotsky view the relationship between thinking and language?
      Thinking is a function of language
    • What is the zone of proximal development?
      The child needs to be cognitively ready to learn something
    • What is scaffolding in the context of learning?
      Support structures created by parents to help children's learning
    • How do Piaget's and Vygotsky's views on cognitive development differ?
      • Piaget: cognitive constructivism, internal control of development, personal discovery
      • Vygotsky: social constructivism, external influences, social construction processes
    • What are the strengths and limitations of Piaget's theory?
      Strengths:
      • Comprehensive account of development
      • Strong educational emphasis
      • Focus on process over end result

      Limitations:
      • Little emphasis on social/emotional factors
      • May underestimate children's abilities
      • Relies on subjective interpretation
      • Tasks may be too arbitrary and out of context