Piaget's Theory Of Cognitive Development

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1.0 INTRODUCTION According to Papalia, Olds and Feldman (2009), aspects of physical development included bodily growth and change, brain development, and motor skills. In early childhood, children become easily slim down and shoot up. They also like to do activities like running, jumping, and throwing balls. Cognitive development involved Piagetian approach, the preoperational child, and young children have their own theories of mind. In processing-information approach, children have their own basic process and capacities, recognition and recall, forming and retaining childhood memories. Factor of intelligence is affecting the strength of children’s early cognition. Based on the requirement of Human Development Psychology, our group observed…show more content…
According to Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive Development (1952), human’s thinking process change gradually from birth until maturity. Four stages in cognitive development were identified which are sensorimotor stage, preoperational stage, concrete operational stage, formal operational stage (Papalia, Olds, & Feldman, 2009). Adam is now undergoing the preoperational stage where at this stage; he is still unable to understand the process of transformation, reversibility and…show more content…
Examination of “potato chips and candy” Small experiment we did is similar to the “crayon candle case” that conducted by psychologists before. First, we put some candy into an empty potato chips box. We show the box to Adam and ask him what the thing inside the box is. His answer was potatoes. We showed to him the candy by pour them out. After that we put the candy back and ask Adam what his sister will say what contain in the box if we ask his sister. Adam said candy for many times. Jean Piaget’s cognitive (1952) states that under preoperational stage, children begin to represent the world mentally but their thought is egocentric. Egocentrism is a characteristic of young child thought in which children can’t consider other person’s point of view (Rathus, 2006). Egocentric may lead to false beliefs; in which children will have high possibilities have a thinking of everyone know what they do, what they think and their mind set are the same (Papalia et al., 2009). This happen because children have their theory of mind which have insufficient understanding about the reality such as emotion, desires, cognitive and feelings (Flavell, 2004; Coon & Mitterer,
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