Jean Piaget (1896 - 1980) Background  Jean Piaget (August 9, 1896 - September 16, 1980), a professor of psychology at the University.

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Transcript Jean Piaget (1896 - 1980) Background  Jean Piaget (August 9, 1896 - September 16, 1980), a professor of psychology at the University.

Jean Piaget (1896 - 1980)
Background
 Jean Piaget (August 9, 1896 - September 16,
1980), a professor of psychology at the
University of Geneva from 1929 to 1954
 was a French Swiss developmental psychologist
who is most well known for organizing
cognitive development into a series of stages
 is famous for constructing a highly influential
model of child development and learning
Background Cont’d…
 Piaget explored the implications of his theory
to all aspects of cognition, intelligence and
moral development
 Many of Piaget's experiments were focused on
the development of mathematical and logical
concepts
 His theory has been applied extensively to
teaching practice and curriculum design in
elementary education
Theories
 Piaget's theory is based on the idea that the
developing child builds cognitive structures
 Used mental "maps" or schemas for
understanding and responding to physical their
environment
 Showed that a child's cognitive structure
increases in sophistication with development,
moving from a few natural reflexes such as
crying and sucking to highly complex mental
activities
 Piaget's theory supposes that people develop
schemas (conceptual models) by either
assimilating or accommodating new
information
Piaget’s Stages
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)
The child builds a set of concepts about reality
and how it works through physical interaction
with their environment. This is the stage
where a child does not know that physical
objects remain in existence even when out of
sight
2. Preoperational stage (ages 2-7)
The child is not yet able to think abstractly
and needs concrete physical situations.
Stages Cont’d…
3. Concrete operations (ages 7-11)
As physical experience accumulate, the child
starts to conceptualize, creating logical
structures that explain their physical
experiences. Abstract problem solving is also
possible at this stage. For example, arithmetic
equations can be solved with numbers, not
just with objects.
4. 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.
How does Knowledge Grow?
 An essential element of Piaget's developmental
theory of learning and thinking is that both
involve the participation of the learner
 Knowledge is not merely transmitted verbally
but must be constructed and reconstructed by
the learner
 Piaget asserted that for a child to know and
construct knowledge of the world, the child
must act on objects and it is this action which
provides knowledge of those object
 The learner must be active; he is not a vessel to
be filled with facts
Piaget’s Readiness Theory
 Piaget's approach to learning is a readiness
approach
 Readiness approaches in developmental
psychology emphasize that children cannot
learn something until maturation gives them
certain prerequisites
 The ability to learn any cognitive content is
always related to their stage of intellectual
development
 Children who are at a certain stage cannot be
taught the concepts of a higher stage
Intellectual Growth
 Intellectual growth involves three fundamental
processes: assimilation, accommodation, and
equilibration
 Assimilation: involves the incorporation of new
events into pre-existing cognitive structures
 Accommodation: existing structures change to
accommodate to the new information. This
dual process, assimilation-accommodation,
enables the child to form schema.
 Equilibration: involves the person striking a
balance between them self and the
environment, between assimilation and
accommodation.
Intellectual Growth Cont’d…
 When a child experiences a new event, disequilibrium sets in until they are able to
assimilate and accommodate the new
information and thus attain equilibrium
 There are many types of equilibrium between
assimilation and accommodation that vary with
the levels of development and the problems to
be solved
 For Piaget, equilibration is the major factor in
explaining why some children advance more
quickly in the development of logical
intelligence than do others
Principles
 Piaget outlined several principles for building
cognitive structures
 During all development stages, the child
experiences their environment using whatever
mental maps he or she has constructed so far
 If the experience is a repeated one, it fits easily
into the child's cognitive structure so that he or
she maintains mental balance
 If the experience is different or new, the child
loses balance, and alters his or her cognitive
structure to accommodate the new conditions
 This way, the child establishes more and more
sufficient cognitive structures
Principles Cont’d…
 1. Children will offer different explanations of
reality at different stages of cognitive
development
 2. Cognitive development is made possible by
providing activities or situations that connect
learners and require adaptation (i.e.
assimilation and accommodation).
 3. Learning materials and activities should
involve the appropriate level of motor or
mental operations for a child of given age;
avoid asking students to perform tasks that are
beyond their current cognitive capabilities.
 4. Use teaching methods that actively involve
students and present challenges.
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
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.
Conclusion
 Piaget's work is known all over the world
and is still an inspiration in fields like
psychology, sociology, education,
epistemology, economics and law as
witnessed in the annual catalogues of the
Jean Piaget Archives
 He was awarded numerous prizes and
honorary degrees all over the world
Works Cited
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http://tip.psychology.org/piaget.html
http://www.piaget.org/biography/biog.html
http://www.crystalinks.com/piaget.html
http://www.sk.com.br/sk-piage.html
http://www.funderstanding.com/piaget.cfm
Thank You! 