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Theorist: Jean Piaget

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Theorist: Jean Piaget. Katie Ross. Background. “Piaget’s theory described stages that children pass thought in the d evelopment of intelligence and formal thought processes.” . Born August 9, 1896 Died September 16, 1980 At a young age he became interested in research - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Katie Ross THEORIST: JEAN PIAGET
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Page 1: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Katie Ross

THEORIST:JEAN PIAGET

Page 2: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Background• Born August 9, 1896• Died September 16, 1980• At a young age he

became interested in research

• Earned his Ph. D in Zoology from the University of Neuchatel

• Developed his theories by studying the intellectual development of his own three children

• “Provided support for the idea that children think differently than adults.”

References:http://psychology.about.com/od/profilesofmajorthinkers/p/piaget.htm

“Piaget’s theory described stages thatchildren pass thought in the

development of intelligence and formal thought processes.”

Page 3: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Name of Piaget’s Theory

THE FOUR STAGES OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

Page 4: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Background Information About Piaget’s Theory

Page 5: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Four Factors that Influence Changes in Thinking

•Biological Maturation: The unfolding of the biological changes that are genetically programmed.•Activity: Acting on the environment and learning from it.•Social Experiences: Learning from others.•Equilibration: Search for mental balance between cognitive schemes and information from the environment.

References: Woolfolk, 2010, p. 32

Page 6: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Two Basic Tendencies in Thinking• The combining, arranging,

recombining, and rearranging of behaviors and thoughts into coherent systems.(Woolfolk, 2010, p. 32)• Piaget says humans are born with a

tendency to organize thinking processes into psychological structures (these structures are for understanding and interacting with the world). (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 32)• These structures are schemes.• Piaget defines schemes as,

organized patterns of thought and behavior used in particular situations (Papalia, 2009, p. 147)

• Adjustment to the environment. (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 33)• Humans adapt by assimilation and

accommodation in order to achieve equilibration.• Assimilation: Fitting new

information into existing schemes• Accommodation: Altering existing

schemes or creating new ones in response to new information.• Equilibration: Search for mental

balance between cognitive schemes and information from the environment.(Woolfolk, 2010, p. 33)

Organization Adaptation

Page 7: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Importance of Equilibration

• Piaget’s theory is based around this principle• “…the actual changes in thinking

take place through the process of equilibration.” (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 33)• Process:• We relate a certain scheme to an event

and it works, than it is in equilibration. If not, then disequilibrium occurs and this causes humans to search “for a solution assimilation and accommodation” therefore thinking changes. (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 33)

Page 8: Theorist: Jean Piaget

The Four Stages of Cognitive Development

Page 9: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Sensorimotor Stage• Infancy (age 0-2)• Infants learn, “about themselves and their world through their developing sensory and motor activity” (Papalia, 2009, p. 146)• Schemes remain tied to physical actions• Thinking at this stage involves: seeing, hearing, moving, touching, and asking• Accomplishments:• Ability to mentally represent objects and actions in memory• Start to recognize that objects still exist even if they are

removed from sight• They move from reflex actions to goal-directed activity

Page 10: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Preoperational Stage• Ages 2-7• Tend to be egocentric• Egocentric: Assuming that others experience the world the same way they do

(Woolfolk, 2010, p. 35)• Expansion of symbolic thought• Symbolic Thought: Ability to use mental representations (words, numbers, or

images) to which a child has attached meaning (Papalia, 2009, p. 229)• Good at one way logic but have difficulty thinking backwards• Can do simple categorization• Difficulty with conservation and decentering• Conservation: Some characteristics of an object remain the same despite

changes in appearance (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 35)• Decentering: Focusing on more than one aspect at a time (Woolfolk, 2010, p.

35)

Page 11: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Concrete-Operational Stage• Ages 7-11• Use reasoning to solve actual problems • Understanding of conservation, knowledge that things can change or be transformed and still conserve its original characteristics• Thinking is limited to real situations (the here and now), they cannot reason hypothetically or solve abstract problems• Education/Learning Affects:• Master classification• Categorizes well• Number and mathematics sense grow• Understanding of maps, models, distance, and time grow• Use only inductive reasoning

Page 12: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Formal Operations• Ages 11 to Adulthood• Biggest part of this stage: Ability to think ABSTRACTLY!• Thinking shifts from what is, to what might be• Emotional Affects:• Adolescent Egocentrism- they know that others have different

opinions and beliefs but are focused on their own ideas (Woolfolk, 2010, p. 39)• The possible and ideal start captivating the mind and feelings

(Papalia, 2009, p. 372)• Education/Learning Affects:• Use symbols to represent other symbols (x stands for an unknown

number), which is used in Algebra and Calculus• Better understand metaphor and allegory in Language Arts• Capable of hypothetical-deductive reasoning and inductive reasoning

Page 13: Theorist: Jean Piaget

IMPLICATIONS FOR

TEACHING AND LEARNING

Page 14: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Cognitive Development in the Classroom• “There are at least two aspects of Piaget’s work that we believe are important parts of any course dealing with children’s learning and development: the logical problem developed by Piaget to demonstrate children’s thinking processes and the clinical method used to administer these problems.” (Ormrod, 1985, p. 216)• Educator’s can perform the clinical methods on students through already set-up logical problems to figure out what stage of development the child is at.• Different Experiments used: reverse seriation, conservation of substance, conservation of area, conservation of displaced volume, combinatorial logic, separation and control of variables, and proportional reasoning. (Ormrod, 1985, p. 216)

Page 15: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Teaching Children at Different Levels• Use props and visual aids • Make instructions as short as

possible • Help students gain the ability to

see things from another's point of view• Understand that students might

have different meanings for the same word• Hands-on practice is a must • Provide a wide range of

experiences to help build children’s schemas

• Use props and visual aids• Allow children to manipulate

and test material• Instruction time needs to still

remain brief and organized• When explaining complex

ideas use familiar examples• Allow time for classification

and grouping• Give children logical

problems to think about and solve

Preoperational Concrete-Operational

References: Woolfolk, 2010, p.36-38

Page 16: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Formal Operations• “…only 30% to 40% of high

school students can do Piaget’s formal-operational tasks” (as cited in Woolfolk, 2010, p.39)• It is questioned whether all

adults ever get to this stage and at what age this occurs

• Allow students to experiment • Allow them to think

hypothetically• Teach broad concepts, not

just specific facts and relate the material to their own life’s

References: Woolfolk, 2010, p. 40

Fostering Formal-operational Thinking

Page 17: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Bottom Line with Cognitive Development and Teaching• Piaget’s theory gives educators one way of figuring out how students think differently • A teacher needs to understand that they could and probably will have all types of learners, who are in different stages, trying to learn in their classroom• Materials need to be set up to benefit concrete thinkers but also formal thinkers• Instruction, tasks, and presentations need to be set up to satisfy all the levels of learners and thinkers • The Cognitive Development logical problems and clinical methods can be used by teachers as they plan • The specific teaching advice discussed previously can help teachers set up their instruction based on what age group they are teaching in order to provide the best education

Page 18: Theorist: Jean Piaget

Teacher’s need to remember that there is no one size fits all education for all age groups!

Younger children learn and think differentlythen older children!

Page 19: Theorist: Jean Piaget

References

Cherry, K. (n.d.). About.com: Psychology. Jean

Piaget biography. Retrieved March 14, 2012,

from http://psychology.about.com/

od/profilesofmajorthinkers/p/piaget.htm

Ormrod, J.E., & Carter, K.R. (1985). Systematizing

the piagetian clinical interview for classroom use

[Electronic Version]. Teaching of Psychology,

Vol. 12, No. 4, 216-219.

Papalia, D.E., Olds, S.W., & Feldman, R.D. (2009).

Human development (11 t h ed.) New York: McGraw-

Hill Companies.

Woolfolk, A. (2010). Educational psychology (11 t h

ed.) New Jersey: Merrill , Pearson.


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