Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development
Piaget's theory argues that we have to conquer four stages of cognitive development. First, the sensory-motor stage. Second, the pre-operational stage. Third the concrete operational stage and fourth the formal operational stage. Only once we have gone through all the stages, at what age can vary, we are able to reach full human intelligence.
One, the sensory-motor stage, ages birth
to 2.
In the sensory-motor
stage, we develop through experiences and movement our five senses. Our brain
wants to see, hear, smell, taste and touch as much as possible. First, we start
with simple reflexes and soon after we develop our first habits. From four
months old, we become aware of things beyond our own body and then as we get
older, we learn to do things intentionally. A key milestone is the development
of working memory or in Piaget terms 'Our realization of object permanence'. Before
that, our mom can show and then hide a teddy and we would think is gone. After
we understand that objects continue to exist even when we can't see them. We
start becoming curious about everything. We want to smell flowers, taste food, listen
to sounds and talk to strangers. To explore more, we move, we learn to sit,
crawl, stand, walk and even to run. This increased physical mobility consequently
leads to increased cognitive development, but we remain egocentric - meaning we
can perceive the world only from our own point of view.
Two: The pre-operational stage, Ages 2 to
7.
Our thinking is mainly
categorized for symbolic functions and intuitive thoughts. We have lots of
fantasies and believe objects are alive. As we are not able to apply specific
cognitive operations, Piaget calls this stage 'pre-operational'. We learn to
speak and understand that words, images, and gestures are symbols for something
else. When we draw our family, we are not concerned about drawing each person
to scale but rather with their symbolic meanings. We love to play pretend,
which allows us to experience something new and learn a lot. At around age 4,
most of us become very curious and ask many questions. We want to know
everything. We can call it the birth of primitive reasoning. Piaget calls it
'the intuitive age' because while we realize that we have a vast amount of
knowledge, we have no idea how we acquired it. Our thinking in this stage is
still pretty egocentric. We think others see the world like we do and still
don't understand that they see it differently.
Three: The concrete operational stage -age
is 7 to 11.
We finally discover logic,
and we develop concrete cognitive operations, such as sorting objects in a
certain order. One example of this is inductive reasoning, which means that if
we see someone eating a cookie, we can draw a conclusion and then make a
generalization and we now get the concept of conservation. We understand that
if we pour orange juice from a normal glass to a taller one the amount stays
the same. Our younger sister will pick the taller glass thinking she gets more.
By the same logic, we only now can understand that if 3 plus 5 equals 8, then 8
minus 3 must equal 5. Our brain learns to rearrange our thoughts to classify
and build concrete operational mental structures. For example, we now know that
we can reverse an action by doing the opposite. Excited by our new mental
abilities, we apply them in conversations, activities, when we learn to write,
and in school. As a result, we get to know ourselves better. We begin to
understand that our thoughts and feelings are unique and not necessarily those
of others. That means that we learn to put ourselves in someone else's shoes.
Four: The formal operational stage - Age
12 plus.
Once we become teenagers,
we become formally operational. We now have the ability to think more rationally
about abstract concepts and hypothetical events. Our advanced cognitive
abilities allow us to understand abstract concepts such as success and failure,
love and hate. We form a deeper understanding of our own identity and our
morality. We now also think that we understand why people behave the way they
behave and as a result can become more compassionate. Our brain can now do
deductive reasoning, which means we can compare two statements and reach a
logical generalization. Our new mental skills allow us to plan our life
systematically and prioritize and we can make assumptions about events that
have no necessary relation to reality. We can now also philosophize and just
think about thinking itself. Our new sense for our identity now also creates
egocentric thoughts and some start to see an imaginary audience watching them
all the time. Piaget believed in lifelong learning but insisted that the formal
operational stage is the final stage of our cognitive development.
Jean Piaget's first
interests were animals, and he published his first scientific paper on albino
sparrows in 1907, when he was just 11 years old. In 1920, he began working with
standardized intelligence tests. He realized that younger children consistently
make types of mistakes that older children do not. He concluded that they must
think differently and spent the rest of his life studying the intellectual
development of children.
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