Born in 1896, died in 1980. He was an epistemologist who studied children’s intellectual...

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Cognitive Development across the Lifespan of Human Development By: Shadra Tomei Sparling CEPD 8102 Dr. Hayes

Transcript of Born in 1896, died in 1980. He was an epistemologist who studied children’s intellectual...

Cognitive Development across the Lifespan of Human Development

By: Shadra Tomei SparlingCEPD 8102

Dr. Hayes

Jean Piaget

Born in 1896, died in 1980. He was an epistemologist who studied

children’s intellectual development. Developed a theory of cognitive development.

“He posited that children progress through 4 stages and that they all do so in the same order” (Learning Theories Knowledgebase, 2010). It consists of four stages of intellectual development: Sensorimotor stage, Preoperational stage, Concrete Operational stage, and the Formal Operational stage.

Intelligence changes throughout our lifespan…here

are the stages and the theories:•Infancy: Sensory and Perceptual Development, Sensorimotor stage.•Early Childhood: Preoperational stage.•Middle/Late Childhood: Concrete Operational stage.•Adolescence: Formal Operational stage.•Early Adulthood: Postformal Thought. •Middle Adulthood: Crystallized and Fluid intelligence.•Late Adulthood: Sensory/Motor and Speed-of-Processing dimensions of cognition.

Maturation“The term maturation refers to a

uniform progressionof changes in brain organization

and function ininfants growing in any reasonably

natural environment” (Kagan, 2008).

Processes of Development

Schemes: actions or representations that organize knowledge.

Assimilation: use of existing schemes to deal with new information.

Accommodation: adjustment of schemes to take in new information.

Organization: groupings of behaviors and thoughts into a higher-order system.

Equilibration: moving from one stage of cognitive development to the next.

Cognitive Development in Infancy (Birth to age two)

Sensorimotor Stage. Object Permanence: Is an object there? Sensory Input: Touching a toy. Motoric Action: protruding the tongue.

Cognitive Development in Early Childhood (Ages 2-7)

Preoperational Stage. Egocentrism: Is that you or me? Intuitive Thought Substage: Let’s play

20 questions. Centration: Piaget’s Conservation Task.

Cognitive Development in Middle/Late Childhood (Ages 7-11)

•Concrete Operational Stage.•Classification: putting things into groups.•Seriation: ordering stimuli by dimension.•Transitivity: Logically combine relations to understand conclusions.

Cognitive Development in Adolescence (Ages10-22)

Formal Operational Stage. Abstract Thinking: Thinking about

thought itself. Logical Thinking: Does this make

sense? Idealistic Thinking: The world is perfect. Hypothetical-deductive reasoning:

creating a hypotheis, and deducing implications (testing it).

Cognitive Development in Early Adulthood (Ages 18-25)

Postformal thought. Pragmatic thinking: Applying

knowledge in their work. Reflective/Relativistic thinking: Being

able to view other perspectives and opinions (mutual respect).

Creativity: What can I invent?

Cognitive Development in Middle Adulthood (Ages 40-65)

Fluid Intelligence: Abstract reasoning declines.

Crystalized Intelligence: a person’s accumulated information and verbal skills increases.

Cognitive Development in Late Adulthood (Ages 60-death)

Sensory/Motor: Declines with age. Speed-of-Processing: Declines due to a

decline in brain functioning. Attention: Selected, Divided, or

Sustained. Memory: Health, education, and

socioeconomic status affect this. Wisdom: Expert knowledge about

practical aspects of life.

References

Kagan, J. (2008). In Defense of Qualitative Changes in Development. Child Development, 79(6), 1606-1624. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8624.2008.01211.x.

Learning Theories Knowledgebase (2010, October). Stage Theory of Cognitive Development (Piaget) at Learning-Theories.com. Retrieved October 20th, 2010 from http://www.learning-theories.com/piagets-stage-theory-of-cognitive-development.html

Newkirk, Ella. (2008). Piaget’s Cognitive Development Theory. Retrieved from http://www.slideshare.net/newkirker/Piagets-Cognitive-Development-Theory

Psaltis, C., Duveen, G., & Perret-Clermont, A. (2009). The Social and the Psychological: Structure and Context in Intellectual Development. Human Development (0018716X), 52(5), 291-312. doi:10.1159/000233261.

Santrock, John W. (2008). Essentials of Life-Span Development. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.