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iaget ea n J

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Page 1: P iaget

Piagetean

J

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BACKGROUNDJEAN PIAGET

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Jean Piaget• Father of PSYCHOLOGY• Began at age 11 - paper on albino

sparrow• Wrote 60 books and over 100

articles• His last 60 years - research on

mental development.• Brought forth the theory of how

intelligence works

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• Thought of as a child psychologist and educator

• Prefers to be called genetic epistemologist

• Contributed in field of computer science and AI; were used to develop LOGO

• Most important contribution: Theory of Cognitive Development

Jean Piaget

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"The principle goal of education in the

schools should be creating men and women who are

capable of doing new things, not simply

repeating what other generations have

done.” – Jean Piaget

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THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

JEAN PIAGET

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Theory of Cognitive Development

• humans cannot be "given" information; must “construct” own knowledge

• Build knowledge through EXPERIENCE

• Schema - mental models - made sophisticated through assimilation and accommodation

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FOUR STAGESJEAN PIAGET

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The Sensorimotor Stage (Birth to 2 years old)

• behavior is primarily sensory and motor

• recognizes self as agent of action and begins to act intentionally

• achieves object permanence

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Stage

Approximate Age

Level of Schemes Object Knowledge

Motor Developme

nt

I 0 – 1 Reflexes None None

II 1 – 4 Primary circular reactionsSpontaneous movements Repeated for the sake of bodily satisfactione.g., thumb – sucking

Objects are images linked to the infant’s activities

Holding head up, smiling

III 4 – 8 Secondary circular reactionsMaking interesting sights lastBeginnings of intentional activity

Search for partially hidden objects

Sitting up

6 Periods

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Stage

Approximate Age

Level of Schemes Object Knowledge

Motor Developm

ent

IV 8 – 12 Coordination of schemesPutting together schemes used separately in the paste.g., coordination of cover removal and grasping, goal oriented

Search for fully hidden objectsA-not-B error

Sitting up

V 12 – 18 Tertiary circular reactionsInventing new means

Cannot take account of invisible displacements

Crawling

VI 18 – 24 Mental representationInsight

Full object permanence

WalkingBrings about detour problems

6 Periods

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The Preoperational Stage (ages 2 to 4)

• need of concrete physical situations• objects classified in simple ways

especially by important features.• thinking is still egocentric

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• As physical experience accumulates, accommodation is increased

• Can think logically about objects and events 

• Achieves conservation of number (age 6), mass (age 7), and weight (age 9) 

• Classifies objects according to several features such as size.

The Concrete Operational Stage

(ages 7 to 11)

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• Cognition reaches its final form

• capable of deductive and hypothetical reasoning

• Can think logically about abstract propositions and test hypotheses systematically. 

• Becomes concerned with the hypothetical, the future, and ideological problems.

The Formal Operational Stage

(ages 11 to 15)

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KEY PIAGETIAN PRINCIPLES

JEAN PIAGET

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Learning is anactive

process

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How is information presented?

Learning is an active process

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Learning should bewhole,

and “real”authentic

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Learning should be whole, authentic, and "real"

How is meaning constructed?

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