Cognitive Develpment Flashcards
___________________ is based on the premise that people actively construct higher levels of knowledge from elements contributed by both biological maturation and the environment.
Piaget’s theory of cognitive development
For Piaget, the motivation for cognitive development comes from a drive toward ____ ____. Development occurs when a ____ of _____ is brought on by a discrepancy between reality and the person’s current understanding of the world (repertoire of cognitive schemas) and is resolved through _____, which entails two complementary processes: _____ and _____.
Cognitive Equilibrium (Equilibration); State of Disequilibrium; Adaptation; Assimilation and Accommodation
_____ is the incorporation of new knowledge into existing cognitive schemas, while _____ is the modification of existing schemas to incorporate new knowledge. When given a toy for the first time, a young child will treat it as she would any new object and will probably bang it, hit it, throw it, and taste it. In other words, the child will attempt to understand the toy by _____ it into their current repetoire of _____. As the child begins to recognize the toy’s unique properties, they will _____ (modify) their _____ _____ and, as a result, develop new ways of ____ with the toy.
Assimilation; Accommodation; Assimilating; Schemas; Accommodate their Existing Schemas; Interacting
Piaget described _____ _____ of _____ _____, which he considered to be both invariant and universal.
Four Stages of Cognitive Development
During the _____ _____, a child learns about objects and other people through the sensory information they provide (how they look, feel, and taste) and the actions that can be performed on them (sucking, grasping, hitting, etc.). Piaget proposed that the predominant type of learning during this phase is the result of _____ _____, which are actions that are performed to reproduce events that initially occurred by chance. Piaget described the changes that occur in these reactions in terms of six substages.
Sensorimotor Stage (Birth to 2 Years); Circular Reactions
The infant exercises his/her reflexes.
Substage 1 — Reflexive Schemes (birth to 1 month):
The infant attempts to repeat pleasurable events involving his/her own body (e.g., thumbsucking).
Substage 2 — Primary Circular Reactions (1 to 4 months)
The infant attempts to reproduce pleasurable events involving other people or objects (e.g., shakes a rattle).
Substage 3 — Secondary Circular Reactions (4 to 8 months)
The infant combines secondary circular reactions (schemes) into new, more complex action sequences (e.g., uncovers an object and then it).
Substage 4 — Coordinated Secondary Circular Reactions (8 to 12 months)
The infant deliberately varies an action or action sequence to discover the consequences of doing so (e.g., drops a toy from different heights).
Substage 5 — Tertiary Circular Reactions (12 to 18 months)
The infant develops representational (symbolic) thought, which involves forming internal representations that allow them to think about absent objects and past events and to anticipate the consequences of an action.
Substage 6 — Mental Representation (18 to 24 months)
An important accomplishment of the sensorimotor stage is the development of ____ ____ (the “object concept “), which begins in ____ _ and allows the child to recognize that objects and people continue to exist when they are out of sight.
Object Permanence; Substage 4
Other important accomplishments are the beginning of an understanding of ____ (recognition that certain events cause other events) and the emergence of ____ ____ (imitating another person’s behavior hours or days after the behavior occurred) and ____-____ (symbolic) play.
Causality; Deferred Imitation; Make-Believe
A key characteristic of the ____ ____ is the ____ (____) ____, which is an extension of representational though and permits the child to learn using language, mental images, and other symbols. As a result of this capacity, preoperational children engage in ____ ____ ____ ____ (e.g., by adopting the roles of other people and using Objects symbolically) and can ____ ____ ____. Despite the emergence of these important abilities, the preoperational stage is limited by several factors.
Preoperational Stage (2 to 7 Years); Symbolic (Semiotic) Function; Sophisticated Symbolic Play; Solve Problems Mentally
Children in the preoperational stage exhibit ____ (____) ____, which reflects an incomplete understanding of cause and effect.
Precausal (Transductive) Reasoning
One manifestation of precausal reasoning is ____ ____, or the belief that thinking about something causes it to occur (e.g., thinking bad thoughts about Dad will cause something bad to happen to him).
Magical Thinking
Another manifestation of precausal reasoning is ____, which is – the tendency to attribute human characteristics to inanimate objects. A child is exhibiting ____ when she says her doll gets lonely if it’s not played with often enough.
Animism; Animism
____ refers to the child’s inability to separate his/her perspective from that of others. Because of their egocentrism, preoperational children are unable to imagine another ____ ____ of ____.
Egocentrism; Person’s Point of View
Children in the preoperational stage do not recognize that ____ can be ____ (____), and they focus on the ____ ____ ____ of ____ (____). Consequently, these children are unable to ____, or ____ that changing one dimension of an object does not change its other dimensions. When a preoperational child watches a liquid being poured from a short fat glass into a tall thin one, for example, he is likely to say there is more liquid in the second glass.
Actions can be Reversed (Irreversibility); Most Noticeable Features of Objects (Centration); Conserve, or Understand
Children in the ____ ____ ____ are capable of ____ ____, which are logical rules for transforming and manipulating information. As a result, they can classify in more ____ ____ (e.g., solve class inclusion problems), ____ (order items in terms of length or other quantitative dimensions), understand ____ -____ ____ in ____ ____ (e.g., bigger, lighter), and ____.
Concrete Operational Stage (7 to 11 or 12 Years); Mental Operations; Sophisticated Ways; Seriate; Part-Whole Relationships in Relational Terms, Conserve
____ depends on the operations of reversibility and decentration and develops with ____ of ____ occurring first, followed by ____ of ____, ____, ____, and then ____ ____.
Conservation; Conservation of Number; Conservation of Liquid, Length, Weight; Displacement Volume
Piaget used the term ____ ____ to describe the gradual acquisition of conservation abilities and other abilities within a specific stage of development.
Horizontal Decalage
A person in the ____ ____ ____ can think abstractly and is capable of ____ -____ ____, which means that he or she can identify competing hypotheses about a problem and strategies for systematically testing those hypotheses. In adolescence, there is a ____ ____, which involves an inability to separate one’s own abstract thoughts from the thoughts of others.
Formal Operational Stage (11 or 12+ Years); Hypothetico-Deductive Reasoning; Renewed Egocentrism
Elkind (1984) extended Piaget’s work by identifying the specific characteristics of ____ ____. These include the ____ ____ (the belief that one is unique and not subject to the natural laws that govern others) and the ____ ____ (the belief that one is always the center of attention).
Adolescent Egocentrism; Personal Fable; Imaginary Audience
Research evaluating Piaget’s theory has generally confirmed that cognitive development occurs in a ____ ____ of ____ and that a stage is ____ ____. Cross-cultural studies suggest, however, that the ages at which children reach each stage ____ ____. It also appears that young children may be more competent ____ than their performance on Piagetian tasks suggests.
Predictable Sequence; Never Skipped; May Vary; Cognitively; Suggets