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CHAPTER 7 COGNITION

CHAPTER 7 COGNITION. Chapter 7: Cognition. Cognition : The activity of knowing and processing through which knowledge is acquired and problems are solved. Typical of humans throughout lifespan Changes across the lifespan Piaget and Vygotsky. Piaget. How do we come to know reality?

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CHAPTER 7 COGNITION

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  1. CHAPTER 7COGNITION

  2. Chapter 7: Cognition • Cognition: The activity of knowing and processing through which knowledge is acquired and problems are solved. • Typical of humans throughout lifespan • Changes across the lifespan • Piaget and Vygotsky

  3. Piaget How do we come to know reality? • Clinical Method • Observation • Question and answer technique • Used to discover how children reason • Intelligence: How well we adapt • Schemes/cognitive structures • Represent reality

  4. Piaget—Basic Issues • Schemas • A structured cluster of pre-conceived ideas. • An organized pattern of thought or behavior. • A specific knowledge structure or cognitive representation of the self. • A mental framework centering around a specific theme, that helps us to organize social information. • Structures that organize our knowledge and assumptions about something and are used for interpreting and processing information.

  5. Piaget • Assimilation • Using existing schemes to interpret new experiences • e.g., Birds are things that fly • Accommodation • Modifyingexisting schemes to fit new experience • e.g., Butterflies are different than birds even though they both fly

  6. Piaget • Adaptation • Adjusting to the environment • Using assimilation and accommodation • Intelligence = Adaptation • Constructivism • Children construct own reality • Use their experiences (schemes)

  7. Piaget • Four stages/changes in ability to reason • Sensorimotor: birth to 2 years • Preoperational: 2 to 7 years • Concrete operations: 7 to 11 years • Formal operations: 12+ years • At each new stage, children think in a qualitativelydifferent way • Rates may vary, but children do not skip stages • Requires maturation and experience

  8. Piaget • Sensorimotor Stage • Newborn uses reflexes to understand world (sensory & motoric intelligence) • Outcome of Stage • Mental representation • Evidence:Object Permanence • A not B error • Study with SMA children • Symbolic Capacity • Evidence: Language

  9. Preoperational Stage • Ages 2–7: Preschool • May have imaginary companions • Egocentric Thinkers • Flavell et. al (1981) • Animism • Problem Solving Limited • Classification and seriation problems • Lack Conservation • Perceptual salience, Irreversible thinking • Centration—only focus on one dimension • DCCS

  10. Some common tests of the child’s ability to conserve.

  11. Concrete Operations • Age 7-11 • Can Conserve • Decentration • Reversible thinking • Logical thinking (limited to reality) • Concrete (literal) thinking • Seriation and classification • Transitive thinking: • “ If J is taller than M, and M is taller than S, who is taller – J or S?”

  12. Formal Operations • Adolescence/Puberty • Logical Thinking About Ideas • Hypothetical and abstract thinking • Hypothetical-deductive reasoning • Decontextual Thinking • Ability to separate prior knowledge/beliefs from new evidence to the contrary

  13. Formal Operations 2 • Adolescent Egocentrism (Elkind) • Differentiating own thoughts from others’ • Imaginary audience • Also, learning to present themselves to a real audience • Personal fable • “No one has ever felt like this before!” • “I drive better when I’m drunk!”

  14. Cognition in Adulthood • Formal Operations Require • Normal intelligence • Higher education (scientific thinking) • Lower Performance on Formal Operations • Why? Use only in field of expertise • Postformal Thought (Highest Level) • Relativistic thinking – knowledge depends on CONTEXT • : Labouvie-Vief (page 230) • No absolute answer in many situations

  15. Piaget • Contributions • Stimulated much research • Correct about cognitive development • Challenges • Underestimated competencies • Focused on performance not competence • Domain growth rather than stages • Social influences left out

  16. Vygotsky • Emphasized the SocioculturalContext • Culture effects how and what we think • Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) • Accomplishment with guidance • Where lessons should be aimed • Guided Participation Learning • Private Speech Guides Behavior • (3&4 yr olds)

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