An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition) - Chapter 10
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Piaget proposed that the basic unit of understanding was a scheme, which is a mental representation of actions and knowledge. Infants start out with three basic schemes, sucking, looking and grasping. Operations are internal mental representations. Mental representations not based on physical activity.
Children modify their schemes using two processes: organisation and adaptation. Organisation is organising several schemes into a bigger scheme. Adaptation consists of assimilation and accommodation. Assimilation is incorporating new information into a pre-existing scheme. Accommodation is modifying the pre-existing schemes (or generating a new one) in order to fit new information.
Equilibration is the state in which children’s schemes are in balance and are undisturbed by conflict. When there are too many conflicts that cannot be solved by either assimilation or accommodation, a change of thinking is required and this is a stage shift. A stage shift is a qualitative shift in a child’s way of thinking.
The sensorimotor stage is characterised by thinking is doing and it lasts from birth to approximately two years. It consists of several substages:
The main criticism for these stages is that object permanence and deferred imitation occur much earlier in the development than Piaget suggested. The preoperational stage is a stage that is characterised by an increase in mental representations and it subdivides into two different substages:
There are also things the preoperational child cannot do. There are two main limitations of the preoperational stage:
Transitive interference is the ability to seriate mentally between entities that can be organised into an ordinal series (e.g: A>B, B>C, so A>C). Children can do this, as long as they can remember the premises, although Piaget believed that children found these tasks very difficult. Failure of this during the preoperational stage occurs because of the inability to remember all the relevant information. Class inclusion is the ability to coordinate and reason about parts and wholes simultaneously in recognising relations between classes and subclasses. This explains children’s failure in the conservation task. Criticism for this comes from research that showed children’s ability to draw inferences about category membership based on non-observable characteristics.
Piaget proposed that the preoperational child’s inability to conserve is characterised by three main limitations:
The age at which children attain conservation varies across culture and depends on the substances and concept they are asked to conserve. Horizontal decalage refers to age differences in solving problems which appear to require the same cognitive processes. Different type of conservation tasks requires different degrees of abstraction. There is evidence that children have knowledge of conservation before Piaget stated that they did. Vertical decalage is where what the child understands at one level or stage must be reconstructed at a later age on a different level of understanding.
Piaget believed that young children tend to focus exclusively on the perceptual features of objects. This tendency makes it difficult for children to pass the appearance-reality task. Young children make phenomenism errors or realism errors. A possible explanation is that young children are not good at dual encoding and they are unable to represent an object in more than one way at the same time. Failure on the appearance-reality distinction might arise because of the difficulties of putting the relationship between the objects in words.
The concrete operations stage is characterised by a change in thought processes. Children develop a new set of strategies called concrete operations. It is called concrete because the thought is more logical and flexible, it is still tied to concrete situations. The objects necessary for the problem-solution need to be physically present. Children in this stage are highly dependent on the context of the situation to solve a problem. Culture and context play an important role in children acquiring the forms of logic required to pass classical Piagetian tasks.
Case interpreted cognitive changes occurring as a series of four stages: sensorimotor stage (0-2), interrelational stage (2-8), dimensional stage (5-11) and the vectorial stage (11-19), but adopted an information processing approach. He attributes the changes within each stage and across stages to increases in central processing speed and working memory capacity. The increased working memory capacity arose because of brain development, automatization and the formation of central conceptual structures. Case argues that when children form a new conceptual structure they move to the next stage of development. Conservation tasks vary in their processing demands, with those tasks which require more working memory capacity being acquired later.
Siegler suggests that when attempting to solve tasks, children may generate a variety of strategies. Children are most likely to use multiple strategies which compete with each other. Over time, less efficient strategies are replaced by more effective ones.
Vygotsky viewed the child as an active seeker of knowledge. Children’s thinking is influenced by social and cultural contexts. Psychological tools are acquired through social and cultural interactions. The most important psychological tool is language. As children master language, they can use internal, self-directed speech to guide their thinking and planning, instead of talking aloud. Scaffolding is the simplifying of the environment by adults for the children, in order to assist them with learning. Each domain has its own zone of proximal development. Pretend play assists children in developing symbolic skills and social rules and cultural norms.
The theory of core knowledge proposes that humans are endowed with a small number of domain-specific systems of core knowledge at birth and that this core knowledge becomes elaborated with experience. There are five systems of core knowledge:
These systems support knowledge acquisition in children.
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This bundle contains a summary for the course "Developmental Psychology" taught at the University of Amsterdam. This contains the book: "An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition)" and several articles.
The following
...This bundle makes use of the book: "An Introduction to Developmental psychology by A. Slater and G. Bremner (third edition)" and several articles.
The following chapters of the book are used:
- 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9 , 10, 11, 12, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21.
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Nice! Roos Heeringa contributed on 04-03-2021 15:07
Hey Jesper! Very nice of you to post a clear en informative summary of chapter 9! I think you have handled all the relevant topics that we should know from the chapter, is this correct?
Reply to Roos Heeringa JesperN contributed on 04-03-2021 20:39
Hi Roos. Thank you for your kind words. It indeed contains all the relevant information from this chapter!
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