Vygotsky’s Sociocultural theory:
Children = Social Creatures
- Develop ways of thinking and understanding primarily through SOCIAL INTERACTION not their private exploration
- First theorist to emphasize the following: children do not strive alone; their efforts are embedded in a social context
Apprentice in Thinking:
- Young child’s intellectual growth is stimulated and directed by older/skilled members of a society.
- learn scaffolding
- then ZPD
Vygotsky: Children’s Thinking is Guided in Numerous Ways -
What is guided participation? (Vygotsky)
Guided Participation: the process by which young children, with the help of mentors, learn to think by having social experiences and by exploring their universe
What is Zone of Proximal Development (Vygotsky)?
Vygotsky’s term for tasks that are too difficult for children to master alone but can be mastered with assistance from adults or more skilled children
Terms:
- The INNER CIRCLE of the ZPD is the level of skill reached by the child working independently
- The OUTER CIRCLE is the level of additional responsibility the child can accept with the assistance of an able instructor
What is scaffolding?
Children’s learning of new cognitive skills is guided by an adult, who structures the child’s learning experience- a process called scaffolding
How to create scaffolding?
To create an appropriate scaffold, the adult must:
- gain and keep the child’s attention
- model the best strategy
- adapt the whole process to the child’s developmental level or zone of proximal development
What is the scaffolding process?
Scaffolding is a gradual process
- greater at the beginning of the new skill and decreases as the skill is close to being mastered
Vygotsky - language and thoughts
Vygotsky Language Internal and external
children who use more private speech are more socially competent (represent early transition in becoming more social)
What is Piaget’s theory?
Piaget’s Assumptions About Children
Piaget’s schemas:
How did Piaget proposed the process to explain how children get from built in schemes?
Assimilation and Accommodation
What is assimilation?
Ex: Baby - grasps a toy is assimilating it to its grasping scheme
What is accommodation?
Ex: Baby grasps a square object - accommodate their grasping scheme; so the next time they reach for a square object, their hand will be more appropriately bent to grasp it
What is the sensorimotor stage?
Birth to 2 Years
- The baby understands the world through their senses and their motor actions; begins to use simple symbols, such as single words and pretend play, near the end of the period
Children begin to represent the world with words, images, and drawings
What is the sensorimotor substages?
Substage 1: Birth to 1 Month
Building knowledge through reflexes (grasping, sucking)
Substage 2: 1 to 4 Months
Reflexes are organized into larger, integrated behaviors (grasping a rattle and bringing it to the mouth to suck)
Substage 3: 4 to 8 Months
Repetition of actions on the environment that bring out pleasing or interesting results (banging a rattle)
Substage 4: 8 to 12 Months
Mentally representing objects when objects can no longer be seen, thus achieving “object permanence”
Substage 5: 12 to 18 Months
Actively exploring the possible uses to which objects can be put: Banging a spoon or cup on high chair to make different sounds, get attention.
Substage 6: 18 to 24 Months
Able to form enduring mental representations
What happens in the pre-operational stage?
2-7 Years
By age 2, the child can use symbols both to think and to communicate, develop the ability to take others’ points of view, classify objects, and use simple logic by the end of this stage.
What are the 2 key characteristics of the pre-operational stage?
1) Symbolic Representations: the ability to make one thing - a word or an object- stand for something other than itself
Ex: Pretend Play
2) Egocentrism: Looking at the world from one’s own point of view
What happens in the concrete operational stage?
Ages: 7-11
concrete = conservation
What is the formal operational stage?
12 Years and Up
What are the criticisms of Piaget’s Theory?
What is Montessori’s theory of principles?
Independence (Montessori)