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    Jean Piaget

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    Jean Piaget Born: 9-Aug-1896 Birthplace: Neuchâtel‚ Switzerland Died: 17-Sep-1980 Location of death: Geneva‚ Switzerland Cause of death: unspecified Remains: Buried‚ Cimetière des Plainpalais‚ Geneva‚ Switzerland Gender: Male Race or Ethnicity: White Sexual orientation: Straight Occupation: Psychologist Nationality: Switzerland Executive summary: Elaborated the stages of childhood Jean Piaget was a Swiss biologist‚ philosopher‚ and psychologist best known for his work

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    Erik Erikson

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    Erik Erikson A description of the theory and how or why it was established Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development is one of the best-known theories of personality in psychology. Main elements – ego identity (definition: Ego identity is the conscious sense of self that we develop through social interaction.) According to Erikson‚ our ego identity is constantly changing due to new experience and information we acquire in our daily interactions with others. He organized life

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    Erik Erikson

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    Erikson’s theory of psychosocial development can provide parents and preschool teachers a better understanding of children’s behavior. Erikson was a follower of Sigmund Freud’s theory of psychosexual development; however‚ Erikson believed that less emphasis should be placed on the idea of sexual tensions as the guiding force of personality development. Erikson believed that the “social environment in which a person lives‚ primarily focusing on relationships with other people”‚ is more influential

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    Erik Erikson

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    Erik Erikson Erik Erikson is possibly the best known of Sigmund Freud’s many followers. He grew up in Europe and spent his young adult life under the direction of Freud. In 1933 when Hitler was in power of Germany‚ Erikson immigrated to the U.S. and began teaching at Harvard University. His clinical work and studies were based on children‚ college students‚ and victims of combat fatigue during WWII‚ civil rights workers‚ and American Indians. It was these studies that led Erikson to believe

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    Erik Erikson

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    of them being Erik Erikson. Erikson was born on June 15‚ 1905 in Frankfurt‚ Germany and died May 12‚ 1994 of old age.He was an only child raised by a Jewish mother and his stepfather. He married Joan Erikson and had three kids named Kai T. Erikson‚ who now is a noted American sociologist‚ Jon Erikson‚ an American long distance swimmer‚ and Sue Erikson ‚ who is a psychotherapist in private practice. His wife‚ Joan Erikson‚ was also a psychologist

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    Erik Erikson

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    Erik Erikson Erik Erikson was born June 15‚ 1902 in Frankfurt‚ Germany. His interest in identity developed early based upon his own experiences in school. At his temple school the other children teased him for being Nordic because he was tall‚ blonde‚ and blue-eyed. At grammar school he was rejected because of his Jewish background. Thus having such a profound background led Erikson to study and focus on psychoanalysis. He utilized the knowledge he gained of cultural‚ environment‚ and social

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    Piaget

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    Irena Israilova Understanding Children’s Development The functional and structural approaches to play are very interesting because they did not have exact definition for the functional approach to play. It being said‚ the functional approach to play would be considered a child trying to evoke an action‚ but it is not then considered play‚ therefore the concept was difficult to let on. The structural approach to play was a lot more understandable‚ that if a child expresses an action in repetition

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    Erik Erikson

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    Erik Erikson ------------------------------------------------- Erikson was born on June 15‚ 1902 in Germany‚ and he died in 1994. His father is a Danish man who left his mother even before he was born. His mother is Karla Abrahamsen‚ was a young Jewish woman who raised him alone in the first three years of his life. Later‚ his mother married a German doctor‚ Theodore Homburger. They moved to Karlsruhe in southern Germany. During his childhood to his early adulthood‚ he was Erik Homburger

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    and development throughout time. In chapter four of our text‚ Introduction to Early Childhood Education‚ six prominent psychologists‚ Erikson‚ Maslow‚ PiagetVygotsky‚ Skinner and Bandura‚ are introduced and discussed. I would like to compare these theorists’ similarities and differences and address their views on early childhood development and learning. Erikson and Maslow’s theories are similar in that they both focus on social and personality development‚ as well as a child’s motivation to learn

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    Vygotsky Learning Theory

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    Lev Semyonovich Vygotsky developed a learning theory for education based on one’s culture in the 1920s and 1930s. Even without a psychology background‚ he became fascinated by the subject. During his short life‚ he was influenced by the great social and political upheaval of the Marxist Revolution. After his death in 1934‚ his ideas were rejected by the U.S.S.R. and only resurfaced after the Cold War ended in 1991. Vygotsky’s theory has exceedingly influenced education in Russia and in other countries

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