Wednesday, March 22, 2017

THEORIES OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
Piaget’s Stage Theory of Cognitive Development
Swiss biologist and psychologist Jean Piaget (1896-1980) observed his children (and their process of making sense of the world around them) and eventually developed a four-stage model of how the mind processes new information encountered. According to Piaget, children are born with a very basic mental structure (genetically inherited and evolved) on which all subsequent learning and knowledge is based. He posited that children progress through 4 stages and that they all do so in the same order. These four stages are:
  • Sensorimotor stage (Birth to 2 years old). The infant builds an understanding of himself or herself and reality (and how things work) through interactions with the environment. It is able to differentiate between itself and other objects. Learning takes place via assimilation (the organization of information and absorbing it into existing schema) and accommodation (when an object cannot be assimilated and the schemata have to be modified to include the object.
  • Preoperational stage (ages 2 to 4). The child is not yet able to conceptualize abstractly and needs concrete physical situations. Objects are classified in simple ways, especially by important features.
  • Concrete operations (ages 7 to 11). As physical experience accumulates, accomodation is increased. The child begins to think abstractly and conceptualize, creating logical structures that explain his or her physical experiences.
  • Formal operations (beginning at ages 11 to 15). Cognition reaches its final form. By this stage, the person no longer requires concrete objects to make rational judgements. He or she is capable of deductive and hypothetical reasoning. His or her ability for abstract thinking is very similar to an adult.
Vygotsky’s theory of cognitive development
As stated above, Vygotsky believed children’s thinking is affected by their knowledge of the social community (which is learnt from either technical or psychological cultural tools). He also suggested that language is the most important tool for gaining this social knowledge; the child can be taught this from other people via language. He defined intelligence as “the capacity to learn from instruction”, which emphasises the fact there is a requirement for a more knowledgable other person or ‘teacher’. He referred to them as just that: the More Knowledgable Other (MKO). MKO’s can be parents, adults, teachers, coaches, experts/professionals – but also things you might not first expect, such as children, friends and computers.
He described something known as the zone of proximal development (ZPD), which is a key feature of his theory. There are two levels of attainment for the ZPD:
·         Level 1 – the ‘present level of development’. This describes what the child is capable of doing without any help from others.
·         Level 2 – the ‘potential level of development’. This means what the child could potentially be capable of with help from other people or ‘teachers’.
·         The gap between level 1 and 2 (the present and potential development) is what Vygotsky described as this zone of proximal development. He believed that through help from other, more knowledgable people, the child can potentially gain knowledge already held by them. However, the knowledge must be appropriate for the child’s level of comprehension. Anything that is too complicated for the child to learn that isn’t in their ZPD cannot be learnt at all until there is a shift in the ZPD. When a child does attain their potential, this shift occurs and the child can continue learning more complex, higher level material.
Woods and Middleton (1975) studied the influence of instruction with their experiment. They provided 3-4 year olds with a puzzle which was beyond their comprehension on their own. The mother then provided different levels of assistance for the child:
·         L1 – General verbal instruction (“Very good! Now try that again.”)
·         L2 – Specific verbal instruction (“Get four big blocks”)
·         L3 – Mother indicates material (“You need this block here”)
·         L4 – Mother provides material and prepares it for assembly
·         L5 – Mother demonstrates the operation

Criticisms of Piaget’s Theory
Sociocultural approach:
• Children’s thinking is affected by social interactions
                -Russian psychologist Lev Vygotsky portrayed children as social beings intertwined with other people who were eager to help them learn and gain skills.
Core Knowledge approach:
• Infants and young children have and use a lot of innate mental machinery for complex abstract thought
                -Child as Primate Scientist
o   Children have innate cognitive capabilities that are the product of human evolutionary processes.
o   Focus on human universals (e.g., language, social cognition, biological categorization, using numbers)
o   Children are much more advanced in their thinking than Piaget suggested.
Information processing approach:
• Children’s thinking is a computational process
• Children’s thinking is not as consistent as the stages suggest.
Child as Computer
• Concerned with the development of domain-general processes learning, memory, and problem-solving skills.
• Provides detailed description of the steps involved in thinking (like a computer program)



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