Show How One Theory of Development Addresses the Major Issues That Arise In Developmental Psychology.

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Nancy Duncan                 Page

SHOW HOW ONE THEORY OF DEVELOPMENT ADDRESSES THE MAJOR ISSUES THAT ARISE IN DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY.

Developmental psychology is a field in which there are many conflicting opinions and theories. Fore example the theories of Piaget (1897-1980) to this day remain an area of great ambiguity and discussion amongst psychologists.  However, no one can deny that Piaget’s theory was revolutionary of its time and changed the traditional view of the child as passive, therefore stimulating an enormous amount of research.  Although this research later proved much of Piaget’s theories to be incorrect, unclear or incomplete.  

The essence of Piaget’s theory can be divided into a biological approach and a structural approach. Piaget was first and foremost a biologist and his conclusions in this aspect were that cognitive development is mainly a consequence of maturation.  On the other hand his structural approach holds the theory that intelligence is a matter of inherent structures for acquiring and holding knowledge.  On top of these two themes Piaget also that there were qualitative differences  between child and adult thinking and that language was the outcome of a generalised cognitive ability.  Piaget’s theory of genetic epistemology asserts that cognitive development is mainly a consequence of maturation.  

At the centre of Piaget’s theory is his model of what he believed to be four stages in cognitive development, which all children pass through invariantly.  Sensorimotor (0-2 years) is the name given to the first of these four stages; during which the child learns to master its movements and understand physical impact on its immediate surroundings.  It is also marks the start of  language and symbolic thought.  Piaget believed that during the first few months a child’s mental life consists of nothing more than a “succession of transient, disconnected sensory impressions and motor reactions.  There is no differentiation between ‘me’ and ‘not me’.” (Gleitman) Piaget’s experimentations, involving hiding an object from a child, proved also that lack of object permanence was also evident at this stage; therefore when an object can no longer be seen it ceases to exist in the mind of a child at this stage.  However it has now been suggested that such experiments might have confused the children, namely his object permanence experiment which was proved by Bower and Wishart (1972). With the modern use of infra-red light they proved that if a baby is watched after the lights have been turned out they found that the baby continues to look for the object.  Thus proving that how an object is made to disappear greatly affects the child’s response. Therefore Piaget’s conclusion of ‘out of sight, out of mind’ may not be entirely valid.

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The Pre-operational stage (2-7 years) follows and it is here that the child starts to organise mental representations e.g. signs and symbols, although concepts are not fully formed and there are no logical principles or operations.  Piaget’s tumbler experiment proved that they are unable to conserve quantity and therefore lack abstract thoughts.  Anther feature of this stage is egocentrism due to the child’s belief that how they view the world is how the world is.  They are therefore unable to appreciate that an adult might view the world differently.  

From seven to eleven the child is in the ...

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