5: theories in Cog. Dev Flashcards
socio-cultural theory overview
- child as a product of their social/ cultural environment
- dev. occurs in social interaction
- Cognition advances when infants/children interact with others who are more mature through “internalization of socially shared processes”:
- language and other cultural tools shape and support cog. dev.
zone of proximal development
The difference between what a novice can do with and without help from a more experienced guide/social partner
scaffolding
- The support provided by an expert to a novice to help the novice gradually increase their knowledge and understanding
- Sensitive instruction that is just enough to help novice achieve the next level of understanding
- Instruction/guidance are contingent on the novice’s performance
intermental knowledge
Knowledge/understanding that exists BETWEEN the child and a social partner
intramental knowledge
Knowledge/understanding that exists WITHIN the individual child
- child hears parent’s instructions in her head
- no longer needs the external support
role of language …Thierry et al., 2009
-language shapes cognition and the brain
The Greek language has specific words for different ‘deviants’ of blue (e.g., the lighter and darker shade) whereas the English language just has one word. This difference in language is associated with differences in cognition:
Native Greek speakers can perceptually discriminate (perceive the difference between) these two colors faster compared to Native English speakers
Native Greek speakers have a greater brain response when perceiving less canonical (more deviant) shades of blue compared to Native English speakers
role of cultural tools in cognitive developing according to Soc-Cul theory
-Different cultures have different psychological ‘tools’ that shape thinking in different ways
E.g., Language, maps, objects
These cultural tools organize knowledge, and critically also adjust the way we think and what we know
how does cog. dev. actually occur according to the Soc-Cul theory
- Social interaction (scaffolding, intermental-intramental progression)
- Cultural tools
- Cultural norms (opportunities for learning)
- Abilities that faciliate social learning
how does Dynamic Systems and Gene-by-environment pull from prior theories
- Development arises from the multiple continuous interactions of all levels of the organism from the genetic/molecular level to the cultural level
- these cross-level influences are bi-directional
- This is a constructive process, in which a given developmental achievement represents a combination of prior genetic and environmental influences
nativist believe environment or genes are responsible ?
genes
-The unfolding or triggering of information contained in the genes
empiricist believe environment or genes responsible?
environment (nature)
-Identifying statistical regularities and contingencies in the environment to shape understanding/expectations about the self, others, and the world
constructivism
- nature and nurture
- mind and brain emerge from interactions btw genes and environment
- Dynamic interactions between genes and environment in which each developmental step represents a combination of the factors that influenced it.
how do “levels of organism” interact in Dynamic systems theories
- genetic activity, neural activity, cognition/behavior, environment (physical, social, and cultural) = continuous interactions of all levels
- bi-directional
how do genes and environment interact in Gene-by-environment theories
- parent’s genotype
- child’s genotype
- child’s cognition/behavior/ temperament
- child’s rearing environment