Wiley 2017 ch 12

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Cognitive Development in Middle and Late Childhood Chapter 12

Transcript of Wiley 2017 ch 12

Cognitive Development in Middle and Late ChildhoodChapter 12

Piagets Theory and Concrete Operational ThoughtConcrete operations Piagets term to describe the thinking of 7 to 11year-old children; logical thinking about physical, concrete objectsCognitive operations internalized mental operations

Key question 1: What are the characteristics of childrens thinking during the concrete operational stage, according to Piaget?

Formal Operations

Intelligence and Thinking1904 Binet ScaleIntelligence quotient (IQ): measure of intelligence based on an intelligence test. It is constructed from a ratio of a childs mental age to chronological age multiplied by 100. IQ = MA/CA x 1001916 Lewis Terman revised the Binet Scale and called it the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale.

Key question 4: What are some different perspectives on intelligence?

The Normal Curve and Stanford-Binet IQ Scores

Extremes of IntelligenceGiftednessAbove-average intelligence (IQ over 130) and superior talent for somethingPrecocityMarch to their own drummerPassion to master

Learning DisabilitiesLearning disability includes:A minimum IQ level (i.e at least IQ of 80)A significant difficulty in a school-related areaExclusion of other conditionsBoys classified 3 times more than girlsDiagnosis difficult

Extremes of IntelligenceMental RetardationCondition of limited mental abilitySeveral IQ classificationsCausesOrganic: genetic or brain disorderCultural-familial: no causal evidence found

Extremes of IntelligenceIQClassification%Limitations 55-70Mild 89Difficulty adapting to daily life40-54Moderate 6Can work, support oneself25-39Severe 3.5Can talk, do simple tasks, require extensive supervision0-24Profoundly 1Require constant supervision

IQ Classifications of Mental Retardation

http://www.cc.com/video-clips/jur0u9/the-colbert-report-the-word---meducation

DyslexiaDyslexia may cause children to focus on letter-sound combinations at the beginnings of words. Yet they have difficulty with those same combinations in other positions in words. Example: Stop and past

Gardners Theory of Multiple IntelligencesTheory of multiple intelligences: Gardners theory is that people have eight (possibly nine) separate intelligences: linguistic, musical, logical-mathematical, spatial, bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, intrapersonal, naturalistic, and (possibly) existential.

Creative thinking Ability to think in novel or unusual waysDifferent from intelligenceConvergent thinking intelligence reflected on conventional tests; produce one correct answerDivergent thinking creativity; produce many answers for one question

Creativity