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Cognitive Development

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Cognitive Development

According to Jon Piaget’s theory of cognitive development, there are four stages of cognitive development. These stages are all assigned to a specific age where Piaget, after observing and interviewing both his own children and other children as well,he concluded these stages were to begin and end. These four stages begin with the sensorimotor stage that begins at birth until about age two. During this stage an infant observes his or her environment through his or her mouth, primarily by sucking. Through placing an object in his or her mouth, an infant learns about their different sizes, textures and shapes. It is also in this developmental stage that infant learns to coordinate these reflexive and instinctive actions with their senses of sight and hearing. This is how the infant and toddler become more familiar and aware of their environment.

The second stage is the preoperational stage. This stage spans from about the age of two until about the age of seven. “In this stage, children begin to represent the world with words, images, and drawings. Symbolic thought goes beyond simple connections of sensory information and physical action. Stable concepts are formed, mental reasoning emerges, egocentrism is present, and magical beliefs are constructed.”(Santrock, 2004, chap. 6).

The third stage is the concrete operational stage. This stage begins at around age seven and ends at around age 11. It is during this third stage that children begin to think and reason about concrete events logically. “Children can perform concrete operations (operations that involve concrete objects) and logical reasoning replaces intuitive reasoning as long as the reasoning can be applied to specific or concrete examples.”

The fourth and final stage in Piaget’s theory of cognitive development is the formal operational stage. This stage begins about age 11 or 15 and continues throughout adulthood. “During this stage, more logical, deductive, abstract and hypothetical thinking begins. As part of thinking more abstractly, adolescents develop images of ideal circumstances.”(Santrock, 2004, chap. 6).

I have observed my own progression in cognitive development as well as the progress of my own two daughters. I have observed them since birth, of course, because I am their mother, and as many new mothers do, I would watch their every move in awe. I observed them as newborns when they could barely see, but still knew exactly who their mother was, even if they could not truly see me. I observe them still, as toddlers, exploring this great big world through touch, sight, and mainly by trial and error. It is obvious that their reasoning skills are limited as is their ability to apply logic to simple problem-solving tasks.

My oldest daughter,

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