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    the theories of Lev Vygotsky as I believe his work has become the foundation for a lot of our modern day theories and concepts in regard to a child’s cognitive development. Lev Vygotsky was born in Russia in 1896 during the Russian Revolution and his works only came to the attention of the western world when they were published in 1962. Vygotsky died quite young and a lot of his research was unfinished however his work was continued by his students and followers alike. Vygotskys theory of Socio-cultural

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    Jean Piaget

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    Change occurs through maturation. Biological readiness is prerequisite for the change. This makes the Piagets theory a biological theory. Piaget came up with the four stage of cognitive development. First stage is sensorimotor‚ during the age of 0-2 years the child will illustrate some sort of egocentrism which shows that the infant only knows the world through its immediate

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    enhance the words I spoke. My teacher liked it. I liked doing it. And‚ I think my wife still likes me after doing it too. The assignment‚ in both the way it was given and how I went about doing it‚ reflects two ways that embody my personal educational philosophy. The first way was in the assignment itself. The professor instructed us to write about something we enjoyed or that gave us pleasure. I thought this sounded easy enough‚ but then he asked us to use music to match the feelings we were trying

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    Educational Theories

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    Educational Theories As with all theories‚ educational theories have developed and changed over time. Many of these theories built on each other as researchers learned more about behavior and learning. Additionally‚ despite the fact most of these theories were developed several decades ago‚ they are still relevant and applicable to current learning situations‚ which is why they are still studied. One of the early educational theories was the theory of classical conditioning‚ which was made popular

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    Vygotsky: The Social Connection Vygotsky’s concept of the zone of proximal development is based on the idea that development is defined both by what a child can do independently and by what the child can do when assisted by an adult or more competent peer. According to Vygotsky‚ for the curriculum to be developmentally appropriate‚ the teacher must plan activities that encompass not only what children are capable of doing on their own but what they can learn with the help of others. For example

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    Jean Piaget

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    Jean Piaget was a theorist who studied child development; one of the many aspects of early childhood Piaget studied was preoperational thinking. Preoperational thinking usually occurs from ages 2 through 7 according to Piaget. It’s when a child is not able to think logically and perform activities that require logic. In other words‚ a child is not yet ready at this stage‚ to reason many situations. Piaget created many experiments that could help educators observe and detect the stages and levels

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    Kholberg and Piaget

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    studies the role of peers and parents in facilitating moral development‚ the role of conscience and values‚ socialization and cultural influences‚ empathy and altruism‚ and positive development. The interest in morality spans many disciplines (e.g.‚ philosophy‚ economics‚ biology‚ and political science) and specializations within psychology (e.g.‚ social‚ cognitive‚ and cultural). Moral developmental psychology research focuses on questions of origins and change in morality across the lifespan. Kohlberg

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    Piaget Reflective Journal

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    Development: An Advanced Textbook. New York: Psychology Press McLeod‚ S. A. (2010). Preoperational Stage. Retrieved from http://www.simplypsychology.org/preoperational.html  McLeod‚ S. A. (2012). Jean Piaget. Retrieved from http://www.simplypsychology.org/piaget.html McLeod‚ S. A. (2014). Lev Vygotsky. Retrieved from http://www.simplypsychology.org/vygotsky.html

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    theory‚ which is the children cognitive development‚ is through four single stages for testing all children commonly. This is used to recognize the ways of development factors that affect children’s grief. Before developing the children cognitively‚ Piaget uses three common ways to question the children (Chaplin & Krawiec‚ 1988). The first way is to ask the question about his or her relation to another people‚ to expected occurrences and to setting object. For example‚ “where do you come from?”

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    Cognitive theory maintains that how one thinks largely determines how one feels and behaves. This relates to and incorporates to all forms of knowing‚ including memory‚ psycholinguistics‚ thinking‚ comprehension‚ motivation‚ and perception. Before Piaget revolutionized our understanding of children’s development‚ psychology was dominated by the influence of the two diametrically opposed theoretical views of behaviorism and psychoanalysis. They share one essential feature‚ which is that the child is

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