Module 5: Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development Flashcards
animism
the belief that inanimate objects are capable of actions and have lifelike qualities
artificialism
the belief that environmental characteristics can be attributed to human actions or interventions
centration
the act of focusing all attention on one characteristic or dimension of a situation, while disregarding all others
egocentrism
the tendency of young children to think that everyone sees things in the same way as the child
irreversibility
when a person is unable to mentally reverse a sequence of events
preoperational stage
the second stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development; describes the development in children ages 2-7
operations
the term used by Piaget to mean the logical rules that children develop with time
syncretism
the tendency to think that if two events occur simultaneously, one caused the other
transductive reasoning
a failure in understanding cause and effect relationships which happens when a child reasons from specific to specific; drawing a relationship between two separate events that are otherwise unrelated