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    Piaget’s Conservation Task Experiment In my experiment I chose to do the water glasses. I gave the test to my little brother and sister. My sister is eleven and my brother is nine. I also gave it to my next door neighbor’s kids and one is five and the other one is two. The results of the experiment were that the older kids guessed right and they were harder to trick and both the little kids got the test wrong. I think that Piaget’s Theory is fairly accurate based on my experiment because

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    Jean Piaget‚ a Swiss psychologist‚ made substantial findings in intellectual development. His Cognitive Theory influenced both the fields of education and psychology. Piaget identified four major periods of cognitive development: the sensorimotor stage‚ the preoperational stage‚ the concrete operations stage‚ and the stage of formal operations. The preoperational stage includes children two to four years of age and is characterized by the development and refinement of schemes for symbolic representation

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    Jean Piaget Andrea Smith ECE 353 Instructor Raimondi July 1‚ 2013 Jean Piaget Stage Theory Jean Piaget was a well-known developmental theorist. He attempted to answer the question “how doe knowledge evolve?” He was interested in intelligence. Piaget viewed intelligence as the ability to adapt to all aspects of reality. He also believed that within a person’s lifetime‚ intelligence evolves through a series of qualitatively distinct stages. Jean Piaget believed that all children progress through

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    one being Jean Piaget’s theory on cognitive development. Piaget’s theory of development is divided into four different stages; sensorimotor‚ preoperational‚ concrete‚ and formal operations. Jenna and I conducted an experiment in which we questioned two children‚ testing which Piaget stage they were in‚ and using our knowledge in psychology to place them in the correct stage in development. The first stage is the sensorimotor stage which occurs during early childhood between birth and approximately

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    Jean Piaget was a cognitive scientist who was academically trained in biology. He was hired to validate a standardised test of intelligence and from this became very interested in human thought. He was employed to take the age of which children answered each question correctly perfecting the norms for the IQ test. Although the wrong answers took Piagets attention and came to a conclusion that the way children think is a lot more revealing than what they know. Piaget used the methods of scientific

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    Jean Piaget (1896-1980) His view of how children’s minds work and develop has been enormously influential‚ particularly in educational theory. His particular insight was the role of maturation in children’s increasing capacity to understand their world: they cannot undertake certain tasks until they are psychologically mature enough to do so. He proposed that children’s thinking does not develop entirely smoothly: instead‚ there are certain points at which it “takes off” and moves into completely

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    Jean Piaget. After receiving his doctoral degree at age 22‚ Jean Piaget began a career that would have a profound impact on both psychology and education. Through his work with Alfred Binet. Piaget developed an interest in the intellectual development of children. Based upon his observations‚ he concluded that children are not less intelligent than adults‚ they simply think differently. Albert Einstein called Piaget’s discovery "so simple only a genius could have thought of it." Piaget created

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    the way that individuals progress through stages. The stages are sequential and you must understand all the concepts in one stage before you progress to the next. You have just engaged in assimilation! This is a key concept of Piaget’s theory. Piaget believes that when we are confronted with new information we need to adapt.

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    Jean Piaget was a theorist who studied child development; one of the many aspects of early childhood Piaget studied was preoperational thinking. Preoperational thinking usually occurs from ages 2 through 7 according to Piaget. It’s when a child is not able to think logically and perform activities that require logic. In other words‚ a child is not yet ready at this stage‚ to reason many situations. Piaget created many experiments that could help educators observe and detect the stages and levels

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    educational principles derived from Piaget’s theory. According to Piaget‚ appropriate learning experiences build on children’s current level of cognitive functioning‚ however‚ only when teachers appreciate children’s methods of arriving at particular conclusions are they in a position to provide such experiences. (Educational Implications of Piaget’s Theories. Page 41). For these reasons‚ in a classroom‚ in accordance with Piaget‚ the focus should be on children’s thinking‚ not just its products

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