Cognitive Development And Jean Piaget's Theory Of Cognitive Development

735 Words2 Pages

1. Concepts learned or new to understanding and their importance
I am new to Jean Piaget’s theory of cognitive development as I have never heard of this individual before, however I found it interesting that he states that there are actually four stages: sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete and formal operation. I like how the text explains development by stating “one gifted professor of psychology suggested to me that stages of a child development are like a rainbow: we can see that t6here are different colors in a rainbow, but it’s not possible to see exactly where one color stops and the next begins” (Lahey, 2012). Our bipedalism is indirectly responsible for our position as apex predators, while human infants are virtually helpless after birth and required constant care by their parent’s in order to survive this can be seen both as a vantage and disadvantage. Our brains respond to stimulus by making more neural connections and growing more powerful with each generation. It is this natural phenomena which allowed us to …show more content…

I have always thought of human intelligence as the ability to basically comprehend and understand our environment and our ability to make these situations better for ourselves. Yet it seems as though there are numerous theories that can rationally explain and predict human intelligence and that there is no universally accepted definition of intelligence. Our own book states “Other psychologists have argues that intelligence is not a single general factor but a collection of many separate specific abilities” (Lahey, 2012). Yet here in chapter 10 we are faced with another factor to affect our intelligence; age. Since aging is not solely a biological fact but one which also affects our psychological aspects, it is also not experienced by all individuals in the exact same way, depending on both physically and psychological

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