Quiz 2 Flashcards
Assimilation
Incorporate new information or experience into existing knowledge schemes.
Accommodation
Adjust existing schemes to take in new information and experience.
Organization
Grouping isolated behaviors into higher-order cognitive system. Undergoes continual refinement and cognitive organization of experiences.
Disequilibrium
Cognitive conflict motivation for change.
Equilibrium
Explanation of cognitive shift (qualitative) from one stage of thought to next.
Theory
Unifies experiences and biological maturation to explain cognitive development. Motivation is internal search for equilibrium.
Sensorimotor Stage
Infants coordinate sensory experiences with motor actions. Object permanence.
Preoperational Stage
Second stage. Children represent world with words, images and drawings. Not ready to perform operations.
Intuitive Thought
Substage of Preoperational. Use of primitive thinking, seeks answers to all sorts of questions.
Symbolic Function
Substage of Preoperational. Gain ability to mentally represent an object that’s not present.
Egocentrism
Inability to distinguish own view from another’s view.
Animism
Lifelike qualities given to inanimate objects.
Centration
Focusing attention on one characteristic to exclusion of all others.
Conservation
Object or substance amount stays same regardless of changing appearance; lacking in preoperational stage.
Concrete Operational Stage
7-11 years. Logical reasoning replaces intuitive reasoning if applied to specific examples. Understands who is father, mother, brother.
Seriation
Involves stimuli along quantitative dimension.
Transitivity
Relationships between objects.
Formal Operational Stage
11-15. Abstract logical way. Solving ability increases.
Hypothetical- deductive reasoning
Cognitive ability to develop hypothesis and systematically find best way to solve problem.
Imaginary Audience
Others are interested in them as they are. Desire to be noticed, visible.
Personal Fable
Adolescents sense of uniqueness and invincibility.
Piaget’s Theory
Vision of children as active and constructive thinkers.
Vygoysky’s Theory
Proposed that children learn through their surrounding culture and interactions.
Zone of proximal development
Difference between what a learner can do without help and what he or she can do with help. Range of tasks too difficult for child to master alone.