1 / 18

Piaget and Vygotsky

Piaget and Vygotsky. Piaget: Cognitive Psychologist. Development Precedes Learning. Three principles of Development. 1. It occurs at different rates. 2. It occurs in an orderly fashion. 3. It occurs gradually. How We Learn. Schemes: We put things into patterns to learn.

thao
Download Presentation

Piaget and Vygotsky

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Piaget and Vygotsky

  2. Piaget: Cognitive Psychologist Development Precedes Learning

  3. Three principles of Development 1. It occurs at different rates. 2. It occurs in an orderly fashion. 3. It occurs gradually.

  4. How We Learn Schemes: We put things into patterns to learn. Adaptation: We try to fit new information into existing schemes. (Disequilibrium or Cognitive Dissonance) Accommodation: We have to change our thinking

  5. Constructivist Thinking Need disequilibrium to grow! Therefore, we need to give students curriculum that is developmentally appropriate (DAP). It means teaching through activities that lead to discovery.

  6. Children must create and construct their own understanding. Therefore, it is important to teach children knowledge and skills when the children are developmentally ready and willing and able.

  7. Piaget’s Four Stages of Intellect

  8. Sensorimoter: 0-2 years Nothing exists unless visible. By age 2, object permanence. Able to use symbols to replace visuals.

  9. Preoperational: 2-7 years • Primitive thinking and egocentric. Not able to think in reverse.

  10. Concrete Operational: 7-11 years. Think logically if concrete situation. Can think in reverse. Less egocentric. Understand sequence.

  11. Formal Operational Stage: 11-adulthood. Think abstractly. Can shift what might be (hypothetical). Capable of inductive reasoning. Able to use observations to identify general principles. Adolescent egocentrism. Focused on own ideas and beliefs. Elkind’s imaginary audience.

  12. Activity: Part 1 • Select an event in which you experienced a “disequilibrating event.” Describe the event. • How did you respond to the event? Characterize your response in terms of Piaget’s ideas about accommodation and assimilation.

  13. Activity: Part 2 • Describe alternative ways in which you could have responded, Characterize those alternatives in terms of Piaget’s theory. • How would working with peers assist a student to experience disequilibrium and re-quilibrium?

  14. Vygotsky Learning Precedes Development

  15. We learn continuously, sometimes simultaneously and almost always through social interaction.

  16. Important Words of Vygotsky • Private Speech: our way of making shared language personal. • Zone of Proximal Development: capable of learning with help (Bruner). • Self-Regulation: ability to think and solve problems with the help of others. • Scaffolding: giving support so that students can succeed in their zone of proximal development

  17. How to Provide Scaffolding: • Cooperative learning • Peer tutoring • Sociocultural Interaction • Assessing beyond recall and comprehension

  18. Activity • Form a content-area group and try the activity on page 59 of your textbook: • “Reflecting on the Chapter” • Junior High and High School • First Activity

More Related