Piaget Lecture Flashcards

1
Q

What are Piaget’s four stages of cognitive development? Ages, features

A

Sensori-motor: Birth-2years: relationship b/w sensation & motor behaviour
Pre-operational: 2-6years: use of symbols-internal representation
Concrete operations: 7-12 years: mastery of logic & rational thinking
Formal operations: 12 years+: abstract, hypothetical thinking

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2
Q

What causes movement from one stage to the next?

A
  • maturation
  • experience interacting with environment
  • social interaction
  • equilibrium
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3
Q

What is equilibrium?

A

process of searching for balance bw schemas and environment

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4
Q

What is disequilibrium (cognitive discomfort)?

A

when current understanding of the world is inadequate to explain experiences - requires adaption

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5
Q

What are the six substages of the sensori-motor stage and what do they mean?

A
  1. reflexive schemes (0-1 mth): suck, grasp etc.
  2. primary circular reactions (1-4 mths): repetition of actions centred on infants on body, accidentally engages in an action with an interesting outcome & repeats this action e.g. thumbsucking, playing with own hands
  3. secondary circular reactions (4-8 mths): highchair - dropping objects, repetition of actions = interesting outcome outside of own body e.g. shaking rattle
  4. co-ordination of secondary circular reactions (8-12 mths): emergence of goal directed behaviour - pushes obstacle away to grab a toy
  5. tertiary circular reactions (12-18 mths): trial & error exploration, problem solving, cause & effect
  6. symbolic or representational thought (18-24 mths): can imagine & solve problems in head
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6
Q

What is object permanence?

A

The understanding that objects do not cease to exist when they are out of sight

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7
Q

Discuss the development of object permanence

A

0-4 mths: only aware of objects in immediate perceptual field (out of site out of mind)
4-8 mths: babies can search for partially hidden objects
8-12 mths: babies search for completely hidden objects BUT search in the place where they last found object - can’t separate the object’s existence from their actions upon it
12-18 mths: babies look for object where it was last seen, not based on past search actions
18-24 mths: fully mastered object permanence - mentally represent the object and invisible movements

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8
Q

What are clinical applications of Piaget’s theory?

A

-help children with sensorimotor problems

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9
Q

Discuss pre operational stage

A
Ages 2-6
-gains in mental representation
-make believe play
-symbols: real-world relations
limitations in thinking: pre-logical
-egocentrism
-centration
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10
Q

What is conservation in the pre operational stage?

A

The understanding that physical properties of an object/substance do not change when their outward appearance is altered - liquids in wide/tall glass

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11
Q

What are three ways that Piaget said children reason the inner world?

A

Animism - mistaken belief that non living things are alive or have attributes of people
Realism - attributing tangible qualities to events of the mind e.g. dreaming = movie in your head
artificialism - the belief that all natural phenomena are products of human engineering

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12
Q

What are some questions about semi-logical reasoning? 5 years

A
  • What makes you grow yup?
  • What makes you stop growing?
  • How do people get dead?
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13
Q

Discuss concrete operational thought

A

can use operations
can use conservation
logical reasoning replaces intuitive reasoning - but only in concrete circumstances
not abstract e.g. can add up & subtract in head but not solve theoretical problems e.g. algebra
classification skills

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14
Q

Discuss formal operations

A

> 12 years
logical mental actions performed on thought/symbols as opposed to objects
abstract, idealistic and logical thinking
hypothetical deductive reasoning
thinking about thinking
reflection & questioning e.g. meaning of life, religion, hypocrisy

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15
Q

What are some critiques of the Formal operations stage

A
70% of USA adults fail Piagets formal operation tasks
inconsistent across domains
culture differences
basic intelligence?
formal schooling?
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16
Q

Discuss Adolescent Egocentrism

A

belief that others are as interested in them as they are in themselves
sense of personal uniqueness & invincibilty

17
Q

Discuss Post-Formal Thought

A

less abstract
less absolute- more contextual
more flexible
more dialectical - integrating one’s beliefs

18
Q

What are some limitations for Piaget?

A
  • inadequate support for stage notion
  • stages are less coherent than Piaget suggested, but useful points of reference
  • children can be trained to reason at higher levels
  • confounding competence and performance - what children can demonstrate they understand compared with what they actually can understand