COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT Flashcards
What is meant by Cognitive Development
A general term describing the development of all mental processes. In particular, thinking, reasoning and our understanding of the world. Cognitive development continues throughout the life span but psychologists have been particularly concerned with how thinking and reasoning develops through childhood.
What is meant by schemas
Contains our understanding of an object, person or idea. Schemas become increasingly complex during development as we acquire more information about each object or idea. A mental framework of beliefs and expectations that influence cognitive processing. they are developed from experience
What is meant by Assimilation
A form of learning that takes place when we acquire new information or a more advanced understanding of an object, person or idea. When new information does no radically change our understanding of the topic, we can incorporate (assimilate) it into an existing schema.
What is meant by Accomodation
A form of learning that takes place when we acquire new information that changes our understanding of a topic to the extent that we need to form one or more new schemas and/or radically change existing schemas in order to deal with the new understanding
What is meant by Equilibration
Takes place when we have encountered new information and built it into our understanding of a topic, either by assimilating it into an existing schema or accommodating it by form a new one. everything is again balanced and we have escaped the unpleasant experience of a lack of balance - disequilibrium
What is meant by Stages of intellectual development
Piaget identified four stages of interlletual development. Each stage is characterised by a different level of reasoning ability. Although the exact ages vary from child to child, all children develop through the same sequence of stages
What is meant by object permanence
The ability to realise that an object still exists when it passes out of tthe visual fild. Piaget believed that this ability appears at around eight month of age. Prior to this, cchildren lose interest in an object once they can’t see it and presumably are no longer aware of its existence
What is meant by Conservation
The ability to realise that quanitity remians the same even when the appearance of an object or group of objects changes. For example, the volume of liquid stays the same when poured between vessels of different shapes.
What is meant by Egocentrism
The child’s tendency to only be able to see the world from their own point of view. This applis to both physical obkects - demondtsrated in the three mountain task- and arguemtns in which a child can onyl appreciate their own perspective
What is meant by Class inclusion
A n advanced classification skill in which we recognise that classes of objects have subsets and are themselves subsets of larger classes. Preoperational children usually struggle to place things in more than one class.
What is meant by Zone of proximal development? (ZPD)
The gap between a child’s current level of development, defined by the cognitive tasks that they can perform unaided, and what they can potentially do with the right help from a more expert other, who may be an adult or a more advanced child.
What is meant by Scaffolding
The process of helping a learner cross the zone of proximal development nd advance as much as they can, given their stage of development. typically the level of help given in scaffolding declines as the learner cross the zone of proximal development (ZPD)
What is meant by knowledge of the physical world
Refers to the extent to which we understand how the physical world works. An example of this knowledge is object permanence, the understand that objects continue to exist whey they leave the visual field. there is a debate concerning the ages at which children develop this kind of knowledge
What is meant by Violation of expectation research
An approach to investigating infant knowledge of the world. the idea is that if children understand how the physical world operates then they will expect certain things to happen in particular situations. If these do not occur and children react accordingly, this suggests that they have an intact knowledge of that aspect of the world.
What is meant by Social cognition
Describes the mental processes we make use of when engaged in social interaction. for example, we make decisions on how to behave based on our understanding of social situation. Both the understanding and the decision making are cognitive processes
What is meant by Perspective-taking
Our ability to appreciate a social situation from the perspective (point of view) of other people. this cognitive ability underlies much of our normal social interaction