Summary Of Chapter Three Flashcards
Explain the principles of Piaget’s theory of cognitive development, including mental structures, maturation, schemes, assimilation, and accommodation.
Piaget believed that cognitive development proceeds in distinct stages. Each stage
involves a different way of thinking about the world. The idea of cognitive stages means
that each person’s cognitive abilities are organized into a coherent mental structure.
The driving force behind development from one stage to the next is maturation. Piaget
proposed that the active construction of reality takes place through the use of schemes,
which are structures for organizing and interpreting information. The two processes
involved in the use of schemes are assimilation and accommodation. Assimilation
occurs when new information is altered to fit an existing scheme, whereas
accommodation entails changing the scheme to adapt to the new information.
Outline piaget’s first three stages of cognitive development
Piaget termed the first 2 years of life the sensorimotor stage. Cognitive development in
this stage involves learning how to coordinate the activities of the senses with motor
activities. From about age 2 to about age 7 is the preoperational stage. Here the child
becomes capable of representing the world symbolically. Concrete operations is the
next stage, lasting from about age 7 to about age 11. During this stage, children
become more adept at using mental operations.
Explain how formal operations is different from concrete operations
Piaget’s stage of formal operations begins at about age 11 and reaches completion
between ages 15 and 20. Children in concrete operations can perform simple tasks that
require logical and systematic thinking, but formal operations allows adolescents to
reason about complex tasks and problems involving multiple variables.
Describe how thinking in adolescence becomes more abstract
and complex, using metacognition, metaphor, and sarcasm as
examples.
The problems Piaget used to assess the attainment of formal operations were scientific
ones. However, a number of other aspects of formal operations focus less on scientific
thinking and more on logical or applied reasoning, including the development of
capacities for abstract thinking and thinking about thinking (called metacognition), as
well as the capacity for complex thinking. Metaphor and sarcasm require complex
thinking because they involve multiple meanings that have to be interpreted.
Summarize the major critiques of Piaget’s theory, and Piaget’s responses
Research has shown that not all persons in all cultures reach formal operations, and
most people do not use formal operations in all aspects of their lives. Although he
acknowledged some degree of individual differences, especially in the timing of
transitions from one stage to the next, Piaget asserted that most people proceed
through the same stages at about the same ages because they experience the same
maturational processes.
Describe pragmatism and how it affects thinking from adolescence to adulthood
Pragmatism involves adapting logical thinking to the practical constraints of real-life
situations. According to Labouvie-Vief, cognitive development in emerging adulthood is
distinguished from adolescent thinking by a greater recognition of practical limitations to
logical thinking. Michael Basseches views cognitive development in emerging
adulthood as involving a recognition that formal logic can rarely be applied to the
problems most people face in their daily lives. Dialectical thought is Basseches’s term
for the kind of thinking that develops in emerging adulthood
Describe reflective judgement and the difference between dualistic thinking and multiple thinking
Reflective judgment is the capacity to evaluate the accuracy and logical coherence of
evidence and arguments. Dualistic thinking refers to seeing situations and issues in
polarized terms–an act is either right or wrong, with no in-between. In contrast,
multiple thinking refers to thinking that there are two or more sides to every story. In this
stage, people tend to value all points of view equally.
Identify how the information-processing approach differs from Piaget’s cognitive-developmental approach
The information-processing approach focuses on separating cognitive functioning into
different components, including attention, various aspects of processing information,
and various aspects of memory. Rather than viewing cognitive development as
discontinuous, that is, as separated into distinct stages, the information-processing
approach views cognitive change as continuous, meaning gradual and steady
Compare and contrast selective attention and divided attention
Selective attention refers to the ability to focus on relevant information while screening
out information that is irrelevant. Adolescents tend to be better than preadolescent
children at tasks that require selective attention, and emerging adults are generally
better than adolescents. Adolescents are also more adept than preadolescents at tasks
that require divided attention - reading a book and listening to music at the same time,
for example - but even for adolescents, divided attention may result in less efficient
learning than if attention were focused entirely on one thing.
Distinguish between short-term, long-term and working memory, and explain how adolescence use mnenomic devices
Short-term memory is memory for information that is currently the focus of your
attention. It has a limited capacity and retains information for only about 30 seconds or
less. Long-term memory is memory for information that is committed to longer-term
storage, so that you can draw on it again after a period when your attention has not
been focused on it. Working memory is a “mental workbench” where you keep
information as you are working on it. Mnemonic devices are memory strategies, such as
organizing information into coherent patterns, and adolescents use mnemonic devices
more than younger children do.
Give an example of automaticity, and explain how executive functioning develops in adolescentce
Automaticity refers to the reduced effort required to process information for tasks that
are highly familiar. Executive functioning refers to the ability to control and manage our
cognitive processes. Improvements in executive functioning allow adolescents to
perform many cognitive tasks that young children cannot.
Sunrise critiques of the information-processing approach
According to the critics, information-processing theorists and researchers are guilty of
reductionism, breaking up a phenomenon into separate parts to such an extent that the
meaning and coherence of the phenomenon as a whole become lost. In addition,
according to some scholars, emotions must be taken into account when considering
cognitive functioning.
Describe the features of critical thinking and adolescence and how it can be best promoted in schools
Adolescents reach the potential for critical thinking, but teaching techniques in many
secondary schools rarely bring out this potential; colleges and universities have more
success with emerging adults. The promotion of critical thinking requires small classes
and a classroom environment in which focused discourse between teachers and
students is the norm
Explain how decision-making abilities change in the course of adolescence, including with respect to judging risks
From early adolescence through emerging adulthood, there is an increasing capacity to
evaluate information and anticipate the possible consequences of a range of choices. In
laboratory experiments, adolescents take more risks than adults do on “hot tasks” that
provide immediate feedback on rewards and losses. Studies indicate that adolescents’
risk judgments are more influenced by emotions and the presence of friends than
adults’ judgments are.
Explain what social cognition is and what it means to stay cognitive development functions as an “organizational core”
Social cognition is the term for the way we think about other people, social
relationships, and social institutions. Cognitive development in adolescence functions
as an organizational core that affects all areas of thinking, no matter what the topic.