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Page 1: ed psych Development2009

What is Development?

• How people grow, How people grow, adapt and change adapt and change during their lives during their lives – Physical DevelopmentPhysical Development– Personality DevelopmentPersonality Development– Socioemotional Socioemotional

DevelopmentDevelopment– Cognitive DevelopmentCognitive Development

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History of Development

• Hall was First President of APA• Contents of Children’s Minds (1883)

– Ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny• Ontogeny is the growth (size change) and

development (shape change) of an individual organism; phylogeny is the evolutionary history of a species

– Children develop in regular stages– Deterministic

• Cultural Epochs Curriculum– Epochs of human history provide scope

and sequence of the curriculum– Differentiated curriculum

• Prepare boys for the world of work• Prepare girls for marriage and

motherhood

G. Stanley Hall

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Contemporary Principles of Development

• Development is OrderlyDevelopment is Orderly• Development is Development is

GradualGradual• Nature - NurtureNature - Nurture

– Learning changes the Learning changes the physical structure of the physical structure of the brainbrain

– Different parts of the Different parts of the brain are ready to learn brain are ready to learn at different timesat different times

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Piagetian Development

• Maturation• Activity• Social

Experience• Equilibration• Blog

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Piagetian Terminology

• Schemes• Adaptation

– Assimilation– Accommodatio

n

• Equilibration• Constructivism

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Assimilation/Accommodation

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Stages of Cognitive Development

• Sensorimotor• Pre-operational• Concrete

operations• Formal

operations

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Sensorimotor Stage: Ages 0-2

• Learning through 5 senses• Object permanence• Trial & Error• Reflexes

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Preoperational Stage: 2-7

• Egocentrism• One-way logic• Conservation• Language Development• Focus on states, not processes

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Preoperational

Researcher- Are Dreams true?Child- No, they are pictures we see.Researcher- Are your eyes open or shut when you dream?Child- Shut.Researcher- Could I see your dream?Child- No, you would be too far away.Researcher- Could your mother see it?Child- Yes, but she turns on the light.

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Preoperational

Researcher- If you stuck a pin in this stone, would it feel it? Child- No Researcher- Why not? Child- Because it is hard. Researcher- If you put it in the fire, would it feel that? Child- Yes, because it would get burnt Researcher-Is the sun alive? Child- Yes, because it gives light. Researcher- Is a candle alive? Child- No- Well, I guess it is when it is giving light. Researcher- Is a bicycle alive? Child- No, when it doesn’t go it isn’t alive!

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Conservation

The child agrees that each container holds the same amount of liquid

The child believes the tall container holds more.

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Conservation of Liquid

Preschoolers ignore the pouring process and focus only on the beginning state and the end state

Blog

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Concrete Operational Stage: 7-11

• Hands-on Thinking

• Two way logic• Transivity• Classification• Seriation

Blog

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Formal Operational Stage: 11-15

• Hypothetico-deductive reasoning

• Systematic reasoning

• Adolescent egocentrism

• Monitored reasoningBlog

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Applications of Piaget

• Awareness of student thinking• Individuals “construct” knowledge• Match teaching to cognitive stage

– presentation strategies– illustrations & examples– assignments

• Use disequilibrium to motivate

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Limitations of Piaget

• Stage theory inconsistencies• Under estimation of

children’s abilities• It overlooks cultural and

social influences (Development depends upon task and prior experiences)

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Vygotsky: A sociocultural Perspective

• Role of language & private speech

• Social transmission• self-talk & learning• Scaffolding & assisted

learning• Zone of Proximal

Development• Importance of

conversations

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Implementing Vygotsky’s Theory

• Imitiative Learning• Instructed Learning• Assisted Learning• Cooperative Learning• Alternative

Assessments

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Teaching Model Based Upon Vygotsky

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Limitations of Vygotsky

• Learning may be effected by:– knowledge base– existing thinking skills

• Environmental influences– transmission model of most American

schools– authoritarian environments and

unwillingness to allow socially transmitted learning