UNIT 1 CHCFC301A Support the development of children v Support the development of children v Support the physical development of children v Support the social development of children v Support the emotional and psychological development of children of the same age v Support the language development of children v Support the creative development of children v Support the cognitive development of children This unit describes the knowledge and skills required by Early Childhood Educators
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Adolescents Development Theories The first psychologist to make a systematic study of cognitive development was Jean Piaget in the 1920’s. “Piaget believed that human beings organize new information in two ways: through assimilation and through accommodation” (Rathus 241). He showed that children think in dramatically different ways than adults. There are three basic components to Piaget’s Cognitive Theory are schemas‚ the processes of adaption‚ and four stages of development. Piaget described schemas
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Cognitive Development Preschool children ages 3 - 5: Cognitive development refers to the acquisition and use of thinking skills. It a child’s increasing ability to think and reason‚ they are active participants in the learning process‚ they are learning how to learn. Like scientists preschool children are curious about what they observe‚ they ask questions‚ make predictions about what will happen and test their ideas‚ they recall past experiences and apply what they know to
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Parenting Styles and Development CheckPoint 3. The Sexual Response Cycle Stage of Development | Physical Development | Cognitive Development | Social/Personality Development | Adolescence | Growth spurts‚ for two to three years they will grow 8 to 12 inches | | | Young Adulthood | | | | Middle Adulthood | | | | Late Adulthood | | | | Physical‚ Cognitive‚ Social‚ and Personality Individuals experience many changes to the physical body‚ cognitive abilities‚ social
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Describe Beck’s (1976) Schema theory and the predictions it would make about the cognitive biases of depressed and/or anxious individuals. Discuss at least two pieces of research that have examined cognitive biases in such individuals‚ and explain whether the findings are consistent with Beck’s predictions. Beck’s (1976) traditional model proposes unidirectional effects from cognitive constructs on depressive symptoms (Pössel‚ 2011). He identified three mechanisms (Beck and Alford‚ 2009) that
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Piaget’s theory in ‘Where are we going‚ Dad?’ programme Recently‚ a Chinese reality show of Hunan Television‚ ‘Where are we going‚ Dad? Season 2’ has taken Mainland by storm. The programme mainly focus on five male celebrities and their children as they travel to different rural places in China or even overseas. They are Francis Ng and six years old son‚ Feynman; Huang Lei and eight years old daughter‚ Christine; Lu Yi and five years old daughter‚ Belle; Gary Chaw and six years old son‚ Joe‚ four
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Promoting Cognitive Development Argosy University Holly Frazier PSYCH260 Introduction Children are a mixture of many parts which intertwine in different ways and change over time. A very crucial aspect of their development is their cognitive development. Cognitive development “is change or stability in mental abilities such as learning‚ attention‚ memory‚ language‚ thinking‚ reasoning and creativity and psycho-social development which
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University of Phoenix Material Piaget Worksheet Directions: Review Module 26 of Psychology and Your Life. Complete the matrix below and answer the questions that follow. Cognitive Stage | Age Range | Major Characteristics | Sensorimotor | Birth-2 years | Development of object permanence‚ development of motor skills‚ little or no capacity for symbolic representation (Feidman‚ 2010‚ p. 19). | Preoperational | 2-7 years | Development of language and symbolic thinking‚ egocentric thinking
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Consider applications to education (16 marks) AO2 Piaget believed in the progress of a child’s cognitive development through schooling and has an individualist approach in the way in which the child is an active participant and is responsible for their own learning. According to Piaget‚ cognitive development occurs as the result of maturation. You cannot teach a child certain activities before they are biologically ready‚ for example trying to reach a pre-operationalized child to perform abstract
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in Piaget’s preoperational stage‚ which can go on until about seven years old. His thought has not yet become more logical‚ flexible‚ or organized like children who have entered the concrete operational stage (Shaffer & Kipp‚ 2010). Jack’s cognitive development is gradually progressing as he continues through middle childhood. When presented with examples of conservation‚ Jack has trouble recognizing that even if you change something’s appearance‚ it will still have the same characteristics. For example
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