CLA: Cognitivism Flashcards
1
Q
Cognitivism
A
Children need to be cognitively adept to talk about things, they cannot express what they don’t understand.
2
Q
Piaget
A
- Argues that until children learn the rule of object permanence (that things still exist when you can’t see them), they struggle to name things.
- This explains why children’s language starts to be acquired properly at around a year.
- Stages of cognitive development which are present before displayed.
- Sensori-motor stage – 0 to 24 months – object permanence.
- Pre-operational stage – 2 to 7 yrs – symbolic thought.
- Concrete operational stage – 7 to 11 yrs – logical thought.
- Formal operational stage – 11+ yrs – scientific reasoning.
3
Q
Vygotsky
A
Can also be applied as a cognitivist – believes children have a cognitive deficiency which the caregiver / more knowledgeable other fills for them.
4
Q
Eve Clark
A
- Overextension – where a child may use a word more broadly e.g garden for everywhere outside.
- Analogical overextension – making links between different objects based on similar properties e.g everything circular is a ball.
- Categorical overextension – all objects within the same category e.g all types of clothing are a dress.
- Developing cognitive understanding of the world to develop language acquisition.
5
Q
Katherine Nelson’s study of first word utterences
A
- Categorised the words (naming things / actions / events / personal)
- Found that the first words tend to be naming things.
- Studied 18 children.
6
Q
A