Jean Piaget’s Theory of
Cognitive Development
Jean Piaget stressed that
children actively construct their own cognitive worlds
and information is not just poured into their mind from the environment.
There is difference between the
Psychoanalytic theories and Cognitive theories.
Psychoanalytic theories stress
the importance of the unconscious thoughts
of the children, while cognitive theories emphasize their conscious thoughts. In fact, cognitive theory in other
words is a theory of knowledge.
This is also a collective term
for philosophical theories, which seek to explain
the nature, mechanisms and value of cognition by studying the general relationship between subject and object, thought
and world. There are two important cognitive
theories:
•THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
•INFORMATION PROCESSING
First :THE Theory of Cognitive
Development
Jean Piaget believed that
all children pass through a series of distinct stages
in intellectual development. Many of his ideas came from the observations of his own children as they solved various
thought problems.
Piaget’s observations convinced
him that intellect grows through processes
of assimilation and accommodation.
The intellect of children is
fundamentally different from the grownups.
It is this assumption that is
central to Piaget’s theory of cognitive development
that children undertake.
Piaget believed that children
adapt their thinking to include new ideas because
additional information furthers understanding.
He saw mental processes,
especially intelligence, as apparatuses for interaction
with the world.
Piaget also believed that we all
go through four stages in understanding the
world.
He also believed that each of the
stage is age-related and consisted of distinct
ways of thinking.
(1) Motor or Individual Stage :
(Birth to 2 years)
In this stage, motor habits
assume a ritual character or he responds according
to his own desires.
(2) Co-operative Stage : (2
to 7 years of age)
In this stage, the child’s
play is with a disregard for rules.
(3)
Codification of Rules Stage : (7 to 11 years of age)
In this stage, rules are respected through the notion of
them is vague.
(4) Egocentric Stage : (11
to 12 years of age)
In this stage, the child
observes the society’s rules, customs, etc.
In this way, Piaget classified
the four stages whereby the child proceeds from
the mechanical, motor stage to egocentric individual to social stage of cognitive development.
In the social co-operative stage,
rules for very young are sacred realities,
while they are matters of mutual agreement for grown-up youth.
For the moral judgment of
children, the social facts such as, constraint and
unilateral respect is very important in the life of children.
And for moral facts co-operation
and mutual respect is very important for
their development.
In this regard, Piaget wrote:
"The sense of justice,
though naturally capable of being reinforced by the
precepts and the practical examples of the adult, is largely independent of these influences, and requires nothing
more for its development than the mutual
respect and solidarity which holds among children
themselves."
In Piaget’s theory on moral
development, we can observe that it distinguishes
between the morality of younger children and the autonomous morality of older children.
Piaget’s ideas on formal
operational are thought to have implications for understanding adolescent’s moral development.