Ch.8 - Cognitive Development Flashcards

1
Q

Accommodation is

A

Modifying existing schemes

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2
Q

How many sensorimotor stages did Piaget identify?

A

6

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3
Q

Sensorimotor stage 1 is characterised by

A

Birth reflexes (sneezing, blinking, looking, grasping etc.)

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4
Q

Sensorimotor stage 2 is characterised by

A

Primary circular reactions

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5
Q

Sensorimotor stage 3 is characterised by

A

Secondary circular reactions

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6
Q

Sensorimotor stage 4 is characterised by

A

Intentionally using schemes or events to make another occur. Still trial and error

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7
Q

Sensorimotor stage 5 is characterised by

A

Active experimentation: deliberately varying schemes for interesting results

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8
Q

Sensorimotor stage 6 is characterised by

A

First symbols - leading in to preoperational. Can manipulate objects to find other objects. No longer bound by trial and error, can begin mental manipulation

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9
Q

True object permanence requires the child to

A

Physically move to participate in the test

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10
Q

What is a more modern approach to demonstrate object permanence?

A

Visual search

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11
Q

What can impact on object permanence test results?

A

Motor skill and memory performance

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12
Q

Sensorimotor activities are superseded by

A

Symbolic representations

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13
Q

What is the most important symbolic representation?

A

Language

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14
Q

A single word can represent

A

Many individual but single-category objects (eg. train)

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15
Q

Two examples of pre-operational limitations are

A

Do not have conservation and do not fully understand the concept of numbers

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16
Q

Three principles needed for conservation are

A

Identity, concentration, reversibility

17
Q

What is an example of egocentrism

A

If I can’t see you, you can’t see me

18
Q

What is a criticism of original lack of egocentrism stage

A

4 year olds can modulate their speech complexity when talking to a two year old

19
Q

What are three capabilities of concrete operations

A

Conservation, seriation (ordering different length sticks) and spatial reasoning (mountain test of egocentrism)

20
Q

What are two capabilities typical of formal operations?

A

Hypothetico-deductive reasoning and propositional reasoning

21
Q

What is an example of hypothetico-deductive reasoning?

A

Pendulum task

22
Q

How is propositional reasoning operationalised?

A

Logic not facts: cat>sports cars>family sedans=cats>family sedans

23
Q

What was the term for abilities being acquired before the relevant stage?

A

Horizontal decalage

24
Q

Neo-Piagetian theory is characterised by

A

A focus on specific cognitive achievements

25
Q

The 5th cognitive stage is

A

Problem finding, generating questions about one’s self

26
Q

Assimilation is

A

Incorporating new information with existing schemes