Chapter 6 - Cognitive Development Approaches Flashcards

1
Q

Schemes

A

Actions or mental representations that organize knowledge

Piaget

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2
Q

Assimilation

A

Incorporation of new information into existing knowledge

Piaget

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3
Q

Accommodation

A

Adjusting schemes to fit new information and experiences

Piaget

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4
Q

Organization

A

Grouping isolated behaviours into a higher-order, more smoothly functioning cognitive system; the grouping or arranging of items into categories

Piaget

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5
Q

Equilibration

A

Explains how children shift from 1 stage of thought to the next. The shift occurs as children experience cognitive conflict, or disequilibrium, in trying to understand the world. Eventually, they resolve the conflict and reach a balance, or equilibrium, of thought

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6
Q

6 substages of sensorimotor stage

A
  1. Simple reflexes
  2. First habits and primary circular reactions
  3. Secondary circular reactions
  4. Coordination of secondary circular reactions
  5. Tertiary circular reactions, novelty, curiosity
  6. Internalization of schemes
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7
Q

Object Permanence

A

Understanding that objects and events continue to exist even when they cannot be directly seen, heard, or touched

Piaget

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8
Q

A-not-B error

A

When infants make the mistake of selecting the familiar hiding place (A) to locate an object, rather than looking in the new hiding place (B), as they progress into sub stage 4 in Piaget’s sensorimotor stage

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9
Q

Core Knowledge Approach

A

Infants are born with domain-specific innate knowledge systems, such as those involving space, number sense, object permanence, and language

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10
Q

Operations

A

Internalized actions that allow children to do mentally what before they had done only physically. Operations also are reversible mental actions

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11
Q

2 substages of the preoperational stage

A

The symbolic function substages, and the intuitive thought substage

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12
Q

Symbolic Function Substage

A

Occurring roughly between the ages of 2 and 4. The young child gains the ability to represent mentally an object that is not present

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13
Q

Egocentrism

A

The inability to distinguish between one’s own and someone else’s perspective

Important feature of preoperational thought

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14
Q

Animism

A

The belief that inanimate objects have lifelike qualities and are capable of action

Facet of preoperational thought

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15
Q

Intuitive Thought Substage

A

2nd preoperational substage

4-7 years old

When children begin to use primitive reasoning and want to know answers to all sorts of questions

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16
Q

Centration

A

Focusing attention on one characteristic to the exclusion of all others

17
Q

Conservation

A

The realization that altering an object’s or substance’s appearance does not change its basic properties

(Liquid in glass)

18
Q

Horizontal Decalage

A

Similar abilities do not appear at the same time within a stage of development

Piaget

19
Q

Seriation

A

The concrete operation that involves ordering stimuli along a quantitative dimension (such as length)

20
Q

Transitivity

A

If a relation holds between a first object and a second object, and hold between the second object and the third object, then it holds between the first object and the third object.

Understanding of transitivity is a characteristic of concrete operational thought

21
Q

Adolescent Egocentrism

A

The heightened self-consciousness of adolescents, which is reflected in adolescents’ beliefs that others are as interested in them as they are in themselves, and in adolescents’ sense of personal uniqueness and invulnerability.

Elkind argued that adolescent egocentrism can be dissected into 2 types of social thinking—imaginary audience and personal fable.

22
Q

Imaginary Audience

A

The aspect of adolescent egocentrism that involves attention-getting behavior motivated by a desire to be noticed, visible, and “onstage.”

Involves feeling one is the center of everyone’s attention and sensing that one is on stage.

An adolescent boy might think that others are as aware of a few hairs that are out of place as he is. An adolescent girl walks into her classroom and thinks that all eyes are riveted on her complexion. Adolescents especially sense that they are “on stage” in early adolescence, believing they are the main actors and all others are the audience.

23
Q

Personal Fable

A

The part of adolescent egocentrism that involves an adolescent’s sense of uniqueness and invincibility

Adolescents’ sense of personal uniqueness makes them feel that no one can understand how they really feel. For example, an adolescent girl thinks that her mother cannot possibly sense the hurt she feels because her boyfriend has broken up with her. As part of their eff ort to retain a sense of personal uniqueness, adolescents might craft stories about themselves that are filled with fantasy, immersing themselves in a world that is far removed from reality. Personal fables frequently show up in adolescent diaries.

24
Q

neo-Piagetians

A

Developmentalists who have elaborated on Piaget’s theory, believing that children’s cognitive development is more specific in many respects than Piaget thought and giving more emphasis to how children use memory, attention, and strategies to process information.

25
Q

Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)

A

Vygotsky’s term for tasks that are too difficult for children to master alone but can be mastered with assistance from adults or more-skilled children.

26
Q

Scaffolding

A

The practice of changing the level of support provided over the course of a teaching session, with the more-skilled person adjusting guidance to fit the child’s current performance level.

Vygotsky

27
Q

Social Constructivist Approach

A

An emphasis on the social contexts of learning and the construction of knowledge through social interaction. Vygotsky’s theory reflects this approach.