and Lev Vygotsky.
Jean Piaget Cognitive Development Theory
According to Piaget theory, sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operations, and formal operations are the four universal and consecutive stages through which a child’s cognitive development is formed from infant to young adult stage. By universal, Piaget believed that this concept is the same everywhere and works the same way in every child. Sensorimotor developmental stage is between the ages zero to two. Piaget called this stage sensorimotor because it is the stage of infancy which a child “uses senses and motor abilities to understand the world” (Boeree 1999).… Continue Reading...
psychological lens, as well as others such as social learning theory andPiaget’s childhood cognitive development theory, I am able to clearly explain certain facets of my behavior and personality traits.
The crux of Bronfenbreener’s ecological systems theory is that there are a number of subtle layers to the overall ecology which influences people as they mature and age. The first of these is the immediate environment in which they live, which is termed the microsystem or micro level (Neal and Neal, 2013, p. 722). My microsystem was largely stable and included a home with my brother and parents—all of whom were older than… Continue Reading...
Cognitive Development
One theory is the Cognitive Development Theory. This theory was developed by Jean Piaget, and it lays emphasis on predictable cognitive stages. In particular, Piaget asserted that cognition was dissimilar in the course of every stage of development. This theory includes four stages, which include the sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete, and formal operations stages. To begin with, the sensorimotor stage occurs between birth and two years of age and in this phase the child utilizes all his or her senses to discover and learn. In this manner, experiences of the different senses and motor development… Continue Reading...