Jean Piaget Theory Of Cognitive Development

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Jean Piagets’ Theory of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget is best known for his cognitive development. Piaget had three children of his own, and through them he started making observations on his own children which eventually became the basis of his many future theories. In the 1920’s, he began to observe every day actions of infants and children to draw inferences about the thinking children do and underline their behaviors and why they act the way they do. Piagets’ theory went deeper than any psychologists or philosophers before him, and his theory is what shaped how we look and see children still in today’s time. Piaget discovered the fact that children have trouble learning new concepts when just being told or instructed, but do better …show more content…

Piaget was not only interested in the nature of thought but in how it develops and understanding how genetics impacted the process. The influence of cognitive development are biological maturation, experiences with the physical and social environments, and equilibration. Equilibration is the balancing act between applying previous knowledge and changing behavior to account for new knowledge. Piagets’ stages of development require mastery of each stage before progressing onto the next, and although stages are fixed, the age at which one may be in a particular stage may …show more content…

“The current state of knowledge is a moment in history, changing just rapidly as the state of knowledge in the past has ever changed and, in many instances, more rapidly. Scientific thought, then, is not momentary; it is not a static instance; it is a process. More specifically, it is a process of continual construction and recognition.” (Brooks, 1993, pg. 25). I believe that Piaget wanted to understand children, and wanted other people to understand children so that they could have a better upbringing. Children could be taught well and listened to in a way that didn’t brush off how a child is feeling or what they are struggling with. Despite the flaws in Piagets’ theory of cognitive development for children, it changed the face of the way that people look at children forever through history. Adults used to always look at children like they were tiny human adults that didn’t understand how anything worked in an adult world, but when Piagets’ theory came to surface people, parents, and teachers began to understand and think more of

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