- Cognitive Development - According to Jean Piaget, there are four major stages of cognitive development:
- Sensorimotor Stage. This stage occurs between the ages of birth and
two years of age.Sensorimotor (infancy): During this stage, which
includes six distinct substages, intelligence is demonstrated through
motor activity with limited use of symbols, including language; the
infant’s knowledge of the world is primarily based on physical
interactions and experiences.
- Preoperational Stage. The second stage occurs between the ages of 2 –
7 years. During this stage, intelligence is increasingly demonstrated
through the use of symbols; memory and imagination are developed as
language use matures; thinking is nonlogical, nonreversible, and
egocentric.
- Concrete Operations Stage. Occurring between ages 7 and about 12
years. During this stage—characterized by conservation of number,
length, liquid,mass, weight, area, volume—intelligence is increasingly
demonstrated through logical and systematic manipulation of symbols
relating to concrete objects; thinking is operational, reversible, and
less egocentric.
- Formal Operations Stage. The final stage of cognitive development
(from age 12 and beyond). During this final stage, intelligence is
demonstrated through the logical use of symbols related to abstract
concepts; thinking is abstract, hypothetical, and early on, quite
egocentric; it is commonly held that the majority of people never
complete this stage.
- Emotional Development - Concerning children's increasing
awareness and control of their feelings and how they react to these
feelings in a given situation.
- Social Development - Concerning the children's identity,
their relationships with others, and understanding their place within a
social environment
There are many other reformers of education that have contributed to
what early childhood education means today. Although Piaget had a great
impact on early childhood education, people like John Locke, Horace Mann
and Jane Addams contributed a lifetime of work to reform education and
learning in this country. The information presented is a starting point
for educators to better understand the development of children.
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