Lesson 4 - PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE OF THE SELF PART 1 Flashcards
“Self is the sense of personal
identity and of who we are as
individuals.
”
Jhagiani and Tarry,
is the scientific study of human
behavior and mental process.
PSYCHOLOGY
Four goals of psychology:
- Describe
- Explain
- Predict
- Modify
what the person is doing
Describe
why is she/he doing that
Explain
what is he going to do
Predict
how can we change the behavior
Modify
Deals with the nature of knowledge itself and how
humans come to acquire it.
Theory of Cognitive Development
observed how children processed and
made sense of the world around them and eventually
developed a four-stage model of how the mind processes
the information encountered.
JEAN PIAGET
the building blocks of knowledge; mental
organizations that individuals use to understand their
environments.
SCHEMA
how a child’s learning process meets
the situational demands
ADAPTATION
reflects the increasing
sophistication of the child’s thought processes.
STAGES OF Cognitive Dev’t
Basic Concepts of Cognitive Dev.
Theories
- ASSIMILATION:
- ACCOMMODATION:
the application of previous concepts
to new concepts
ASSIMILATION
when existing ideas are
challenged; correct your thinking so that your thought
process would adapt
ACCOMMODATION
- knowledge is through senses (tasting, seeing, smelling, touching, hearing)
- object permanence develops between 4 and 9 months
- 0-2 approximate age
Sensorimotor Stage
- Verbal and egocentric thinking develop
- can do mentally what once could only do physically
- conservation of shape, number, liquid not yet possible
- 6-11 approximate age
Preoperational Stage
- Abstract Reasoning
- Systemic problem solving is now possible (no longer just trial and error)
- Ability to think about and reflect upon one’s thinking (metacognition)
- Scientific reasoning
Formal Operational Stage
Principles and ideals develop
Abstract Reasoning
The ability to realize that objects still exist when
they are not being sensed.
OBJECT PERMANENCE
Believing that inanimate objects are alive
Animistic Thinking
not being capable of seeing things from another
person’s perspectives
Egocentrism