Piaget
Definition
Swiss biologist and psychologist Jean Piaget (1896-1980) is renowned for
constructing a highly influential model of child development and learning.
Piaget's theory is based on the idea that the developing child builds
cognitive structures--in other words, mental "maps," schemes, or networked
concepts for understanding and responding to physical experiences within his
or her environment. Piaget further attested that a child's cognitive structure
increases in sophistication with development, moving from a few innate
reflexes such as crying and sucking to highly complex mental activities.
Discussion
Piaget's theory identifies four developmental stages and the processes by
which children progress through them. The four stages are:
- Sensorimotor stage (birth - 2 years old)--The
child, through physical interaction with his or her environment, builds a
set of concepts about reality and how it works. This is the stage where a
child does not know that physical objects remain in existence even when out
of sight (object permanence).
- Preoperational stage (ages 2-7)--The child is
not yet able to conceptualize abstractly and needs concrete physical
situations.
- Concrete operations (ages 7-11)--As physical
experience accumulates, the child starts to conceptualize, creating logical
structures that explain his or her physical experiences. Abstract problem
solving is also possible at this stage. For example, arithmetic equations
can be solved with numbers, not just with objects.
- Formal operations (beginning at ages 11-15)--By
this point, the child's cognitive structures are like those of an adult and
include conceptual reasoning.
Piaget outlined several principles for building cognitive structures.
During all development stages, the child experiences his or her environment
using whatever mental maps he or she has constructed so far. If the experience
is a repeated one, it fits easily--or is assimilated--into the child's
cognitive structure so that he or she maintains mental "equilibrium." If the
experience is different or new, the child loses equilibrium, and alters his or
her cognitive structure to accommodate the new conditions. This way, the child
erects more and more adequate cognitive structures.
How Piaget's Theory Impacts Learning
Curriculum--Educators must plan a developmentally appropriate
curriculum that enhances their students' logical and conceptual growth.
Instruction--Teachers must emphasize the critical role that
experiences--or interactions with the surrounding environment--play in student
learning. For example, instructors have to take into account the role that
fundamental concepts, such as the permanence of objects, play in establishing
cognitive structures.
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Purpose Associates.