Week 3 - Chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Why do we use theories of development?

A

They provide a framework for understanding important phenomenon
They raise crucial questions about human nature
They give us a better understanding of children

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2
Q

Piaget’s theory

A

Cognitive development involves 4 stages - sensorimotor, pre operational, concrete operational, formal operational
Infancy to adulthood
Examines conceptualization of time, space, distance, number, language use, memory, understanding others perspectives, problem solving, scientific reasoning

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3
Q

Views of children’s nature

A

Piaget - mentally active from moment of birth
Children may learn important lessons on their own
Children are intrinsically motivated to learn and do not need rewards to do so

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4
Q

Constructivist approach

A

Depicts children as constructing knowledge for themselves in response to their experiences - generating hypotheses, performing experiences, drawing conclusions
Action based approach to understanding world

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5
Q

Central development issues - nature and nurture

A

Interact to produce cognitive development
Nurture includes every experience of the child
Nature includes the child’s brain, ability to perceive, act, learn from experience

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6
Q

Sources of continuity

A

Assimilation, accommodation, equilibration

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7
Q

Assimilation

A

Incorporating information into concepts they already understand - saw a man that looked like a clown (had the hair) and decided he was a clown

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8
Q

Accommodation

A

Improve current understanding in response to new experiences - told kid he wasn’t a clown as he was missing other parts of being a clown

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9
Q

Equilibration

A

Balancing assimilation and accommodation to create stable understanding

Equilibrium - people are satisfied with their understanding of a particular phenomenon
Disequilibrium - new information leaves them to perceive their understanding is inadequate
More advanced equilibrium - develop a more sophisticated understanding within which a broader range of observations can be understood

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10
Q

Sources of discontinuity - central properties

A

Qualitative change - children think differently qualitatively at different ages - early conceives morality in terms of consequence, later as intent

Broad applicability - type of thinking applies across diverse topics

Brief transitions - in between stages fluctuate between new and old thinking

Invariant sequence - everyone progresses through stages at same order without skipping any

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11
Q

Sensorimotor stage

A

Birth to age 2
Early sensory and motor activity - reflexes are components of more complex behaviours
6 months - repeated actions that are interesting
Late first year - search for objects that disappear - object permanence
1 year - start to explore how objects can be used
18-24 months - enduring mental representations - repeating peoples behaviour way after it happened

Overall - activities centre on own bodies, early goals concrete, later are more abstract, form ability to from mental representations

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12
Q

A not B error

A

Infant sees object be placed under A many times and then B, but will still reach for A

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13
Q

Pre operational stage

A

Age 2-7
Symbolic representations - one object can stand for another - as they age symbols get more conventional
Egocentrism - perceive world from their own POV, talk past someone
Centration - focus on one feature of an object - ignore distance from fulcrum and focus on weight - conservation of liquid

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14
Q

Concrete operational stage

A

7-12
Understand the conservation of objects properties
Design basic experiments but no conclusions can be drawn - don’t consider that multiple factors (strong size, weight of object) can all contribute to a hypothesis - pendulum problem

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15
Q

Formal operational stage

A

Age 12 up
See that any variable might influence something and that each variable needs to be tested
Not all adolescents or adults reach this stage

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16
Q

Piaget’s weaknesses

A

Theory is vague about mechanisms that give rise to children’s thinking and that produce cognitive growth - doesn’t emphasize process that changes thinking

Infants and young children are more cognitively competent than Piaget recognized - without a delay a 3 months old can pass the A not B test

Theory understates social world impacting cognitive development
Stage model depicts children’s thinking being more consistent than it is

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17
Q

Sociocultural theories

A

Emphasize that other people and the surrounding culture contribute to children’s development

Cognitive development takes place in interactions with other people

Cultural tools - symbols systems, manufactured objects, skills, values

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18
Q

Guided participation

A

More knowledgeable people organize activities for less knowledgeable

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19
Q

Social scaffolding

A

More competent people provide a framework that supports children’s thinking at a higher level

Done in zone of proximal development

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20
Q

View of children’s nature - Vygotsky’s theory

A

Social learning intertwined with others, intent of participation in activities prevalence in the specific time and place they live
Gradual continuous changes
Language and thought - internalized speech process
1 - behaviour controlled by other peoples statements, children’s behaviour controlled by their own speech, then by private internalized speech

21
Q

Children as teachers and learners

A

Inclination to teach others in the same species
Inclination to attend to and learn from teaching

22
Q

Products of culture

A

Processes that produce development are the same but the content learned is different

23
Q

Central development issues - socio cultural

A

Intersubjectivty - communication requires participants to focus on same topic as well as others reaction to that topic
Joint attention - infants and social partners focus on a common referent in the external environment

24
Q

Dynamic systems theories

A

Development of actions in complex systems over varying time periods - fractions of seconds up to years

Individual differences impact how fast children develop

Development is a process of constant change - dynamic

Each child is a system in which subsystems (perception, action, attention, memory etc..) work together

25
Q

View on children’s nature - dynamic systems

A

Children innate motivation to explore - Piaget
Precise analysis of problem solving activity - information processing
Formative influence of other people - socio cultural
Infants and toddlers are capable- core knowledge

26
Q

Motivators of development

A

Children internally motivated to learn about world - persist in practicing new skills
Infants attend to faces instead of anything else
Observing others, imitating actions, attracting attention

27
Q

Centrality of action

A

Actions contribute to development
Reaching for objects helps infer goals of other peoples reaches
Action influences categorization - children will group objects together based on easily they move
Action effects vocabulary acquisition and generalization

28
Q

Central development issues- dynamic systems

A

Self organization, mechanism of change

29
Q

Self organization

A

Integrating attention, memory, emotions, actions as needed to adapt to a changing environment - soft assembly

A not B - previous reaches produce a habit of reaching there, tapping before selection drawn an infants attention there

30
Q

Mechanisms of change - Dynamic systems

A

Changes occur through mechanisms of variation and selection that are analogous to those that produce biological evolution
Variation - different behaviours to produce same goal
Selection - frequent choice of behaviours that are effective in meeting goals
Relative success - as children gain experience they rely on approaches that produce desired outcomes - rely on efficiency, but there’s always novelty of trying something new

31
Q

Core knowledge theories

A

View children as having innate knowledge in areas of evolutionary importance
Domain specific learning mechanisms help us acquire additional information for those domains

32
Q

Core knowledge vs Piaget

A

Core - specialized abilities, children are evolutionary products

Piaget - general ability, active child

33
Q

View of children’s nature - core knowledge

A

Nativism
Infants have innate knowledge in evolutionary important domains
- language, spatial layout, numbers, telling difference between inanimate and biological objects

Core knowledge constructivism
- children have specialized learning abilities that are built upon - this knowldge is rudimentary
Children have simple core theories about people and biological processes that are built upon with age and experience

34
Q

How change occurs - socio cultural

A

Guided participation - collaborative
Social scaffolding - teaches
Joint attention

35
Q

Socio cultural theory vs Piaget

A

Socio - learn with other people, learn what is prevalent in a time and place, gradual and continuous changes, thought and language intertwined

Piaget - learn on own, master specific subjects, abrupt qualitative changes, thoughts and language separate

36
Q

Information processing theories

A

theories that focus on the structure of the cognitive system and the mental activities used to deploy attention and memory to solve problems
• Task analysis - identifying goals needed to perform a task, obstacles preventing the goal, prior knowledge, potential strategies
• Emphasis on thinking as a process that occurs over time

37
Q

View of children’s nature- information processing

A

development is continuous in small increments

38
Q

Central development issues
Development of memory

A
  • working memory
    • actively attending to, maintaining and processing information
    • Limited in capacity and in length of time for which it can maintain information without updating

Long term memory
• knowledge accumulated over the lifetime
• Factual knowledge, conceptual knowledge, procedural knowledge, attitudes

39
Q

Executive function

A

control behaviour and thought processes
• Inhibition - resisting temptations
• Enhancement of working memory - through use of strategies
• Cognitive flexibility - imagining someone else’s perspective
• ability of executive functions to control thinking and action - enabling appropriate responding instead of impulsivity increases during preschool and early elementary years - increased flexibility in shifting goals

40
Q

Explanations of memory development

A

Basic processes
Strategies

41
Q

Basic processes

A

associating events with one another, recognizing objects, recalling facts and procedures, generalizing from one instance to another
• Encoding - the representation in memory of specific features of objects and events - people in code information that draws their attention
• Improved speed of processing plays a key role in the development of memory, problem solving and learning - myelination and increased connectivity in brain

42
Q

Strategies

A

between ages 5-8 children start to use memory strategies
• Rehearsal - repeating of information multiple times
• Selective attention - intentionally focusing on information that is most relevant to the current goal
• Content knowledge - increased general knowledge improves recall of new material - improved encoding if you already know about the subject

43
Q

Development of problem solving

A

Overlapping waves theory
Planning

44
Q

Overlapping waves theory

A

• individual children use a variety of approaches to solve a problem
• 5 years - show use of 3 strategies - will sometimes reason the longer row has more, sometimes know that the number of objects doesn’t change, sometimes counts them
• At younger ages children use more simple strategies more often
• Cognitive growth evident in single digit addition - children
will learn better strategies and use different strategies for
different difficulties of addition

45
Q

Planning

A

• children often fail to plan in situations that would help their
problem solving
• requires inhibiting desire to solve problem immediately vs
waiting to try the best strategy
• children tend to be overly optimistic about their abilities

46
Q

Object permanence

A

Knowledge that objects continue to exist even when you cannot see them

47
Q

Core knowledge vs Piaget

A

Piaget - children enter world with general learning abilities, child is an active scientist contributing to their own development

Core knowledge - enter enter world equipped with specialized learning, children are products of evolution

48
Q

Socio cultural theory vs Piaget

A

Socio cultural - children are social learners intertwined with others, participant in activities that are prevalent in a specific time and place, gradual and continuous changes, thought and language are intertwined

Piaget - children understand world on their own, intent on mastering physical, mathematical, logical concepts, abrupt qualitative changes in thinking, thought and language as separate