babies leaning activities 1 THE ASHGABAT TIMES

PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS IN COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

04.04.2025

Cognition  refers  to  thinking  and  memory  process, and  cognitive  development  refers  to  long – term  changes  in  these  processes. One  of  the  most  widely  known  perspectives  about  cognitive  development  is  the  cognitive  stage  theory  of  a  Swiss  psychologist  named  Jean  Piaget. Piaget  studied  how  children  and  youth  gradually  become  able  to  think  logically  and  scientifically.

Key  words:

  • Psychologist 
  • Long – term 
  • Cognition 
  • Staircase 
  • Sensorimotor
  • Preoperational

Piaget  believed  that  learning  was  proceeded  by  the  interplay  of  assimilation  (adjusting  new  experience  to  fit  prior  concepts)  and  accommodation  (adjusting  concepts  to  fit  new  experiences). The  to – and – for  of  these  two  processes  leads  not  only  to  short – term  learning, but  also  to  long – term  developmental  change. The  long – term  developments  are  really  the  main  focus  of  Piaget’s  cognitive  theory.

After  observing  children  closely, Piaget  proposed  that  cognition  developed  through  distinct  stages  from  birth  through  the  end  of  adolescence. By  stages  he  meant  a  sequence  of  thinking  patterns  with  four  key  features:

  1. The  stages  always  happen  in  the  same  order.
  2. No  stage  is  ever  skipped.
  3. Each  stage  is  a  significant  transformation  of  the  stage  before  it.
  4. Each  later  stage  incorporates  the  earlier  stages.

Basically, this is a  staircase  model  of  development. Piaget proposed four more stages of cognitive development, and called them:

  1. Sensorimotor  intelligence 
  2. Preoperational  thinking 
  3. Concrete  operational  thinking
  4. Formal  operational  thinking 

Each  stage  is  correlated  with  an  age  period  of  childhood, but  only  approximately.

In  Piaget’s  theory, the  sensorimotor  stage  occurs  first, and  is  defined  as  the  period  when  infants  think  by  means  of  their  senses  and  motor  actions. As  every  new  parent  will  attest, infants  continually  touch, manipulate, look, listen  to, and  even  bite  and  chew  objects. According  to  Piaget, these  actions  allow  children  to  learn  about  the  world  and  are  crucial  to  their  early  cognitive  development.

The  infant’s  actions  allow  the  child  to  represent  objects  and  events. A  toy  animal  may  be  just  a  confusing  array  of  sensations  at  first, but  by  looking, feeling, and  manipulating  it  repeatedly, the  child  gradually  organizes  her  sensations  and  actions  into  a  stable  concept. The  representation  acquires  a  permanence  lacking  in  the  individual  experiences  of  the  object, which  are  constantly  changing. Because  the  representation  is  stable, the  child  knows  or  at  least  believes  that  toy  animal  exists  even  if  the  actual  toy  animal  is  temporarily  out  of  sight. Piaget  called  this  sense  of  stability  object  permanence, a  belief  that  objects  exist  whether  or  not  they  are  actually  present.

During  much  of  infancy, a  child  can  only  barely  talk, so  sensorimotor  development  initially  happens  without  the  support  of  language. It  might  therefore  seem  hard  to  know  what  infants  are  thinking. Piaget  devised  several  simple, but  clever  experiments  to  get  around  their  lack  of  language, and  these  experiments  suggest  that  infants  do  indeed  represent  objects  even  without  being  able  to  talk.

In  the  preoperational  stage, children  use  their  new  ability  to  represent  objects  in  a  wide  variety  of  activities, but  they  do  not  yet  do  it  in  ways  that  are  organized  or  fully  logical.

As  children  continue  into  elementary  school, they  become  able  to  represent  ideas  and  events  more  flexibly  and  logically. Their  rules  of  thinking  still  seem  very  basic  by  adult  standards  and  usually  operate  unconsciously, but  they  allow  children  to  solve  problems  more  systematically  than  before, and  therefore  to  be  successful  with  many  academic  tasks.

In  the  concrete  operational  stage  the  child  may  unconsciously  follow  the  rule: ‘’if  nothing  is  added  or  taken  away, then  the  amount  of  something  stays  the  same’’.

This  simple  principle  helps  children  understand  certain  arithmetic  tasks  as  well  as  perform  certain  classroom  science  experiments.      Piaget  called  this  period  the  concrete  operational  stage  because  children  mentally  operate  on  concrete  objects  and  events. They  are  not  yet  able, however, to  operate  systematically  about  representations  of  objects  or  events. Manipulating  representations  is  more  abstract  skill  that  develops  later, during  adolescence.

For  the  conclusion, the  last  stage  in  Piaget’s  theory  is  really  about  a  particular  kind  of  formal  thinking: the  kind  needed  to  solve  scientific  problems  and  devise  scientific  experiments. Since  many  people  do  not  normally  deal  with  such  problems  in  the  normal  course  of  their  lives, it  should  be  no  surprise  that  research  finds  that  many  people  never  achieve  or  use  formal  thinking  fully  or  consistently, or  that  they  use  it  only  in  selected  areas  with  which  they  are  very  familiar. For  teachers, the  limitations  of  Piaget’s  ideas  suggest  a  need  for  additional  theories  about  development – ones  that  focus  more  directly  on  the  social  and  interpersonal  issues  of  childhood  and  adolescence.

Aylar Tangrykulyyeva.
Instructor of Oguz han Engineering and Technology
University of Turkmenistan

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