World of Children. 1st ed. Chapter 8:Cognitive Development in Early Childhood

Similar documents
10 Tips For Using Your Ipad as An AAC Device. A practical guide for parents and professionals

Piaget s Cognitive Development

CLASSIFICATION OF PROGRAM Critical Elements Analysis 1. High Priority Items Phonemic Awareness Instruction

CDA Renewal 1: Professionalism-Beliefs, Knowledge, Action

NAME: East Carolina University PSYC Developmental Psychology Dr. Eppler & Dr. Ironsmith

Literacy THE KEYS TO SUCCESS. Tips for Elementary School Parents (grades K-2)

Rover Races Grades: 3-5 Prep Time: ~45 Minutes Lesson Time: ~105 minutes

Cognitive Development Facilitator s Guide

Stages of Literacy Ros Lugg

SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDIES (Edgewood Campus) BACHELOR OF EDUCATION (B.ED) EXAMINATIONS - NOVEMBER 2010

ELA/ELD Standards Correlation Matrix for ELD Materials Grade 1 Reading

J j W w. Write. Name. Max Takes the Train. Handwriting Letters Jj, Ww: Words with j, w 321

Critical Thinking in Everyday Life: 9 Strategies

Age Effects on Syntactic Control in. Second Language Learning

Criterion Met? Primary Supporting Y N Reading Street Comprehensive. Publisher Citations

YMCA SCHOOL AGE CHILD CARE PROGRAM PLAN

Publisher Citations. Program Description. Primary Supporting Y N Universal Access: Teacher s Editions Adjust on the Fly all grades:

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

Wonderworks Tier 2 Resources Third Grade 12/03/13

Monitoring Metacognitive abilities in children: A comparison of children between the ages of 5 to 7 years and 8 to 11 years

SOFTWARE EVALUATION TOOL

Richardson, J., The Next Step in Guided Writing, Ohio Literacy Conference, 2010

Temper Tamer s Handbook

Chapter 4 - Fractions

AGENDA LEARNING THEORIES LEARNING THEORIES. Advanced Learning Theories 2/22/2016

1. READING ENGAGEMENT 2. ORAL READING FLUENCY

Finding the Sweet Spot: The Intersection of Interests and Meaningful Challenges

Table of Contents. Introduction Choral Reading How to Use This Book...5. Cloze Activities Correlation to TESOL Standards...

Formulaic Language and Fluency: ESL Teaching Applications

Build on students informal understanding of sharing and proportionality to develop initial fraction concepts.

Genevieve L. Hartman, Ph.D.

The Effects of Super Speed 100 on Reading Fluency. Jennifer Thorne. University of New England

Effective Instruction for Struggling Readers

Language Development: The Components of Language. How Children Develop. Chapter 6

Fluency YES. an important idea! F.009 Phrases. Objective The student will gain speed and accuracy in reading phrases.

Students will be able to describe how it feels to be part of a group of similar peers.

DIBELS Next BENCHMARK ASSESSMENTS

g to onsultant t Learners rkshop o W tional C ces.net I Appealin eren Nancy Mikhail esour Educa Diff Curriculum Resources CurriculumR

Fountas-Pinnell Level P Informational Text

Understanding and Supporting Dyslexia Godstone Village School. January 2017

GOLD Objectives for Development & Learning: Birth Through Third Grade

Loughton School s curriculum evening. 28 th February 2017

2 months: Social and Emotional Begins to smile at people Can briefly calm self (may bring hands to mouth and suck on hand) Tries to look at parent

UNDERSTANDING DECISION-MAKING IN RUGBY By. Dave Hadfield Sport Psychologist & Coaching Consultant Wellington and Hurricanes Rugby.

"Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter and

Ohio s Learning Standards-Clear Learning Targets

Common Core State Standards

Characteristics of the Text Genre Realistic fi ction Text Structure

Description of this session. Midyear Entry Spring Success! Why this topic? Why now?

Unit Lesson Plan: Native Americans 4th grade (SS and ELA)

Fountas-Pinnell Level M Realistic Fiction

Tracy Dudek & Jenifer Russell Trinity Services, Inc. *Copyright 2008, Mark L. Sundberg

Objectives. Comprehensive. Susan Hepburn, PhD CANDO Presentation 6/13/14 1. Today we ll discuss 4 ways to individualize interventions

The Use of Drama and Dramatic Activities in English Language Teaching

Patricia Velasco, Ed.D. Bilingual Education Program Queens College, CUNY November 1, 2016

Developing a College-level Speed and Accuracy Test

Psychology and Language

Using Proportions to Solve Percentage Problems I

Grade 5 + DIGITAL. EL Strategies. DOK 1-4 RTI Tiers 1-3. Flexible Supplemental K-8 ELA & Math Online & Print

Welcome to ACT Brain Boot Camp

Guided Reading with A SPECIAL DAY written and illustrated by Anne Sibley O Brien

THE HEAD START CHILD OUTCOMES FRAMEWORK

Organizing Comprehensive Literacy Assessment: How to Get Started

EDEXCEL FUNCTIONAL SKILLS PILOT TEACHER S NOTES. Maths Level 2. Chapter 4. Working with measures

Author: Justyna Kowalczys Stowarzyszenie Angielski w Medycynie (PL) Feb 2015

Elizabeth R. Crais, Ph.D., CCC-SLP

PART C: ENERGIZERS & TEAM-BUILDING ACTIVITIES TO SUPPORT YOUTH-ADULT PARTNERSHIPS

SLINGERLAND: A Multisensory Structured Language Instructional Approach

Creating and Thinking critically

Large Kindergarten Centers Icons

GCSE Mathematics B (Linear) Mark Scheme for November Component J567/04: Mathematics Paper 4 (Higher) General Certificate of Secondary Education

Backwards Numbers: A Study of Place Value. Catherine Perez

About this unit. Lesson one

PREVIEW LEADER S GUIDE IT S ABOUT RESPECT CONTENTS. Recognizing Harassment in a Diverse Workplace

WHAT ARE VIRTUAL MANIPULATIVES?

University of Groningen. Systemen, planning, netwerken Bosman, Aart

Extending Place Value with Whole Numbers to 1,000,000

CEFR Overall Illustrative English Proficiency Scales

First Grade Standards

Providing student writers with pre-text feedback

Program Matrix - Reading English 6-12 (DOE Code 398) University of Florida. Reading

INSTRUCTIONAL FOCUS DOCUMENT Grade 5/Science

Assessing Functional Relations: The Utility of the Standard Celeration Chart

9.85 Cognition in Infancy and Early Childhood. Lecture 7: Number

Universal Design for Learning Lesson Plan

ASSISTIVE COMMUNICATION

PolicePrep Comprehensive Guide to Canadian Police Officer Exams

Mastering Team Skills and Interpersonal Communication. Copyright 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall.

University of Pittsburgh Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures. Russian 0015: Russian for Heritage Learners 2 MoWe 3:00PM - 4:15PM G13 CL

PREP S SPEAKER LISTENER TECHNIQUE COACHING MANUAL

Unraveling symbolic number processing and the implications for its association with mathematics. Delphine Sasanguie

The Impact of the Multi-sensory Program Alfabeto on the Development of Literacy Skills of Third Stage Pre-school Children

LEGO MINDSTORMS Education EV3 Coding Activities

Scholastic Leveled Bookroom

Full text of O L O W Science As Inquiry conference. Science as Inquiry

LA1 - High School English Language Development 1 Curriculum Essentials Document

Merry-Go-Round. Science and Technology Grade 4: Understanding Structures and Mechanisms Pulleys and Gears. Language Grades 4-5: Oral Communication

Introductory Topic for Kindergarten: Questions, puzzlement and what is okay

Number Line Moves Dash -- 1st Grade. Michelle Eckstein

The New York City Department of Education. Grade 5 Mathematics Benchmark Assessment. Teacher Guide Spring 2013

Transcription:

World of Children 1st ed Chapter 8:Cognitive Development in Early Childhood Piaget s Pre-operational Thought Vygotsky s Sociocultural View Information Processing Language Development Early Childhood Education Kindergarten Readiness

Piaget s Theory 2nd stage (ages 2 to 7) Preoperational thought children use mental representations for objects and events that are not physically available to see, hear and touch. Operations logical processes that can be reversed example: pouring liquid into a container Children at this age do not think with operations thus, preoperational

Use of mental representation in language Average 2 yr old knows 200 words Average 6 yr old knows 10,000 words Language development is based on children s mental representational abilities. Increased vocabulary gives children the ability to talk about things that are not present.

Use of mental representation in art Increased complexity in art work

Use of mental representation in play Symbolic play children use one object to stand for another At 18 months, children can pretend to talk on a phone if they have a play phone At age 2, they can use a banana as a phone At age 5, they can use almost anything as a phone object does not have to look anything like a phone

Beginning of Intuitive Thought Intuitive thought : reasoning based on personal experience rather than formal logic Children reason on what seems like ex: pg 258

Evidence of Intuitive thought Egocentrism: inability to take another person s perspective

Evidence of Intuitive Thought Animism : inanimate objects have feelings ex: sun is shining b/c it s happy. ex: putting pencil down b/c it s tired. Artificialism : natural events are under people s control ex: sun went down b/c someone switched it off. ex: moon isn t shining b/c someone blew it out. As children have more experiences, they move towards logical thought.

Piaget s research Conservation : the idea that certain properties of an object remain the same even if physical appearance changes Piaget analyzed children s responses to conservation problems to understand preoperational thought

Piaget s research

Piaget s Theory Why do preoperational children give incorrect answers? Centration : focus on one aspect of a situation height of liquid Static endpoints : focus on beginning and end, not process in the middle Lack of reversibility : cannot visualize reversing the process

Piaget s legacy Piaget influenced education in many ways the development of interactive and hands-on materials for active learners guidelines for when to introduce topics based on cognitive development challenges to children s existing cognitive structures to help them grow in understanding

Vygotsky s Theory Lev Vygotsky (1896 1934) born in what would be part of Soviet Union firm believer in Marxism equality for all wrote several books and articles before death from tuberculosis at age 38 most of his work was not published until long after his death

Vygotsky s Theory Central idea children develop cognitive structures from their culture and their social interactions, mainly by listening to the language that is around them Children listen to social speech what is said to them, and turn it into private speech the speech they say out loud to themselves

Vygotsky s Theory ex: girl learning to draw a circle Start your mark going around like this, then bring it all the way around until the marks meet each other. Almost all children use private speech When learning a new or difficult task, children rely on private speech Children who use private speech the most do better in difficult tasks.

Vygotsky s Theory internalization : the process of taking external speech and making it internal and mental. as children master a concept they need less private speech eventually they internalize the concept as silent inner speech.

Vygotsky s Theory Mediation : the introduction of concepts, knowledge, skills and strategies to the child Adults may break down the task into smaller steps, give hints on how to accomplish it, provide tips on what to look for, etc. Successful mediation depends on making sure it is appropriate to the child s level of understanding and ability.

Mediation example How would an adult mediate to a child on how to do a difficult puzzle?

Vygotsky s theory Zone of proximal development : the range of problems that the child can solve with some assistance The cognitive structures in this zone are ones that the child has started to internalize but have not been completely internalized.

Zone of Proximal Development

Vygotsky s Theory Effective instruction involves giving child challenges, along with help in solving them. Adults provide scaffolding temporary support for child while cognitive structure is being developed Scaffolding takes place during mediation. Doing part of the task Simplifying difficult tasks Talking the child trough the task Giving reminders

Peers also provide instruction and support during collaborative learning. Help each other solve problems Share their knowledge & skills Discuss strategies & knowledge

Piaget and Vygotsky Piaget pride in autonomy and independence believed that children construct their own cognitive structures as they adapt to environment Vygotsky cultures and society change over time and how that change influences cognitive development believed that children adopt cognitive structures of people around them

Information Processing Theory Central idea - that humans receive, process, sort, store and retrieve information similar to the way computers do = Key assumption humans are limited in capacity to process information We can only do so much!!!!!!

Information Processing Theory

Changes in cognitive processes Older children are able to process more information, process it faster, and control attention span better then young children. Processing capacity amount of information that a person can remember or think about at one time increased flexibility of thought

Changes in cognitive processes 1. 2. Processing efficiency speed and accuracy of processing information. Operating space Storage space Older children have better memories.

Changes in cognitive processes Automaticity : ability to perform task with little conscious effort increased complexity of thought Important for increasing processing efficiency. frees up more cognitive capacity for other tasks. Learning to read 1. recognizing letters 2. forming words 3. reading sentences 4. reading with expression, comprehension, what will happen next? 5. Compare and contrast w/ other books

Changes in cognitive processes Attention : ability to focus on specific information without being distracted by other stimuli increased accuracy as children get older 1. maintain focus for longer periods of time 2. ignore distracting information

Metacognition Metacognition:the understanding that people have about their own thought processes and memory Includes knowledge of Tasks- long list of words more difficult to remember than short list Strategies- repeating telephone # will help you remember it for a short time People- limits to what a person can remember

Metacognition Rapid improvement after age 5 young children are optimistic about their own memory abilities more accurate when estimating how much a peer can remember How is overestimating their abilities good for children?

Theory of the Mind Theory of the Mind : an integrated understanding of what the mind is, how it works, and why it works that way. Research on children s theory of mind has looked at: 1. What children know about thinking in general 2. How well they understand the thoughts of people

Theory of the Mind 3 year olds know: -that mental objects are different from real objects. - it is possible to carry out mental activities that could not happen in the real world - dreams are not real life - many believe that different people have the same dream

Theory of the Mind Young children are still dev. their understanding of mental actvitties Indicator of theory of mind appearancereality distinction young children do not understand the difference between how something appears to be, and how it really is

Theory of the Mind Ex: Cat named Maynard had a dog s mask put on his face. Children thought that Maynard was a dog. Change in appearance changed reality

Mastering Theory of the Mind Children must learn that Other people have thoughts different from theirs All people have different thought processes Talking to children about thinking, feeling, memory, etc. helps in the development of a theory of the mind

Language Development From age 2 to age 6, children learn approximately 7 new words every day. How? Fast-mapping : the ability to learn a word after only one exposure Syntactical bootstrapping : using what is known about grammar to figure out meanings of new words ex: Nina is pidding her food. action Nina threw her pid. object Imitation Reinforcement from adults

Learning grammar Children learn how to combine words and form sentences gradually where Daddy? where Daddy is? where is Daddy?

Learning grammar Around age 3, children begin to add word endings such as s, -ing, -ed Overregularization : applying rules of grammar and producing incorrect forms of words foots go-ed

Learning social rules of language Social rules of discourse: conventions (rules) that people use in conversation with others turn taking answer-obviousness if answer to question is obvious, the question is actually a request or demand do you have to yell in the house?

Learning social rules of language Rules of language differ between cultures African Americans don t use question demands How might an African American child interpret, Must you jump on the bed? Must take their turn and hold audiences attention rather than waiting for someone to finish and they are given their turn

More than one language Bilingual : fluent in two languages Additive bilingualism : second language is learned while first language is maintained Subtractive bilingualism : second language is learned while fluency in first language is lost Simultaneous bilingualism : two languages are learned at the same time, starting in infancy Sequential bilingualism : one language is learned, and then 2nd language is learned.

More than one language Children who begin learning 2nd language before age 3 are usually just as fluent in both languages. Older learners have trouble with accent, but learn vocabulary and grammar faster

More than one language In early stages, children may mix words from both languages frequency decreases as each language gets stronger Children understand the difference between the two languages and may restrict use of each to specific situations, but learn to switch back and forth easily

Early Childhood Education Project Head Start : federally funded program begun in 1965 to improve achievement in young children Abecedarian Project : program to assess impact of full time high quality intervention beginning in infancy High/Scope Perry Preschool : high quality part-day intervention during school year for 3 to 5 yr olds

Effects of Early Education Programs immediate gain in IQ which fades during elementary school higher scores on reading and math tests fewer students placed in special ed classes higher graduation rates better overall health

Effects of Early Education Programs Adapted with permission from L.J. Schweinhart, H.V. Barnes, & D.P. Weikart. (1993). Significant benefits: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 27 (Monographs of the High/Scope Educational Research Foundation, Number 10); pp. xvi-xvii. Ypsilanti, MI: The High/Scope Press.)