Cards (24)

  • According to Piaget, how do children develop language?
    By matching the correct words to their existing knowledge of the world
  • What happens after a child understands a concept?
    They then learn how to express their understanding of it using language
  • What is the main concept of Piaget's theory?
    Language depends on thought/ thought precedes language.
  • What did Piaget believe lead to the growth of language?
    Cognitive development
  • Piaget believed we can only use lavaguage at a level that matches our...
    Cognitive development
  • What do children typically do when they hear others use new vocabulary/ words?
    Copy it
  • What did Piaget believe a child couldn't do until they understand a concept?
    Use that vocabulary to communicate
  • How did Piaget believe children develop their ability to use language?
    In stages
  • In the sensorimotor stage, what are babies learning? What do they begin to do?
    What their bodies can do + making vocal sounds + copy the sounds that they hear others making
  • What are children able to do in the preoperational stage? What is limited?
    Voice their internal thoughts, but limited use of language for communicating with people
  • How do children use language in the concrete operational stage?
    Language has developed but can only talk about actual, concrete things
  • How can language be used in the formal operational stage?
    To talk about abstract, theoretical ideas
  • What is a schema?
    A mental framework that influences Cognitive processing, containing all the information we have about one aspect of the world
  • What is an example of a strength of Piaget's theory in relation to languge?
    Early languge is not random
  • How does the fact that children's early language consists of two-word phrases provide evidence for. Piaget's theory?
    Shows that they have some understanding of the two words being connected
  • What is a weakness of Piaget's theory in relation to schemas?
    It is not possible to scientifically measure when a child has developed a schema
  • Why is Piaget's theory not reliable?
    Very little evidence to support t more research to support other theories
  • What may have Piaget underestimated about children?
    Misjudged the degree to which children use language to ask questions and learn about the world
  • What did Piaget neglect about language?
    The social function
  • What is Piaget's theory based on?
    Data from his own research, a lot of which was carried out on his own children
  • What is a strength of collecting dates from his own children?
    The behaviour he was observing was very natural → his children were unlikely to realise anything unusual was happening
  • Why may his findings lack objectivity or decreased validity?
    Data maybe flawed may have allowed his personal biases about his children affect his judgement
  • Why is Piaget's theory not representative?
    He developed his theory using a small sample of middle-class children- class from Switzerland → findings may not tell us about the use of language of children from different social classes or cultures
  • When did Piaget say children would start learning new words or using grammatical structures?
    When they are cognitively ready