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1st year - 1st semester
Developmental Psychology
Cognitive Development:
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Created by
Natasha Hess
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Cards (38)
What are the four stages of cognitive development according to Piaget?
Sensori-motor
(0-2 years)
Pre-operational
(2-7 years)
Concrete operational
(7-12 years)
Formal operational
(12+ years)
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What is the developmental period for the sensori-motor stage?
0-2 years
:
infancy
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What is a characteristic of the sensori-motor stage?
Failure to
differentiate
between
self
and
surroundings
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What is the developmental period for the pre-operational stage?
2-7 years
: early childhood
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What is a key characteristic of the pre-operational stage?
Mental imagery
without principled thought
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What is the developmental period for the concrete operational stage?
7-12 years
: middle childhood
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What is a characteristic of the concrete operational stage?
Principled thought
is confined to real-life issues
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What is the developmental period for the formal operational stage?
12+
years: adolescence and adulthood
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What is a key characteristic of the formal operational stage?
Principled thought
applied to
abstract problems
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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
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What is solipsism in the context of cognitive development?
The failure to distinguish between the
self
and the rest of the
universe
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What does not having object permanence mean?
Not
understanding
that
things
continue
to
exist
even
when
they
can't
be
sensed
directly
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In the sensori-motor stage, how is perception related to action?
Perception
is subordinate to action
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What cognitive ability does an infant develop by 18-24 months?
The ability to conceive the existence of an
object
independently of self
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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
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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
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What is conservation in cognitive development?
Understanding that changing the form or location of an object doesn’t change its
mass
,
volume
, or amount
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What do children often provide when asked to reason logically?
An
intuitive
answer rather than a correct response based on
operational thought
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What is class inclusion in cognitive development?
The ability to understand that objects can belong to multiple
categories
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What is necessary for a child to overcome egocentrism?
Operational intelligence
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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
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What are the justifications children use in conservation tasks?
Compensation
,
inversion
, and identity
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What is a key characteristic of the formal operational stage?
Systematic
logical thinking
and reasoning
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What type of thinking is emphasized in the formal operational stage?
Abstract thinking
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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
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Who challenged Piaget’s theory and findings?
Margaret Donaldson
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What was Donaldson's argument regarding Piagetian tasks?
They didn’t
make
“human
sense”
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What is the name of the experiment conducted by McGarrigle & Donaldson?
Naughty Teddy
experiment
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What did McGarrigle & Donaldson modify in their experiments?
They modified a number of
Piagetian
tasks
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What did Rai and Mitchell (2006) find regarding 4-year-olds?
They found evidence that even 4-year-olds can reason
logically
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What do 4-year-olds appreciate according to the study?
That an
unfamiliar
name belongs to an unfamiliar character
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What concept did Russel (1982) introduce?
Inter-cognitive conflict
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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
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How does Vygotsky view the relationship between thinking and language?
Thinking is a function of
language
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What is the zone of proximal development?
The child needs to be
cognitively
ready to learn something
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What is scaffolding in the context of learning?
Support structures created by parents to help
children's
learning
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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
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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
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