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Piaget: Curriculum Figure Stephanie Chislett 100451633 Curriculum Theory

Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896 He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist His interest in cognitive development

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Page 1: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Piaget: Curriculum Figure

Stephanie Chislett100451633Curriculum Theory

Page 2: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Quick Biography

Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896

He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist

His interest in cognitive development derived from his training in natural sciences & his interest in epistemology

He was interested in knowledge and how children come to know their world

Page 3: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Stages of Intellectual Development

Piaget discovered that children think and reason differently at different periods in their lives

He believed that everyone passes through an invariant sequence of four quantitatively distinct stages

There is some variability in the ages at which children attain each stage

Page 4: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development
Page 5: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

How Children Learn

“...we discovered that education is not something which the teacher does, but that it is a natural process which develops spontaneously in the human being. It is not acquired by listening to words, but in virtue of experiences in which the child acts on his environment. The teacher's task is not to talk, but to prepare and arrange a series of motives for cultural activity in a special environment made for the child.” (Dr. Maria Montessori)

Page 6: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

How Children Learn

A central component of Piaget's developmental theory of learning and thinking is that both involve the participation of the learner

Knowledge is not merely transmitted verbally but must be constructed and reconstructed by the learner

The learner must be active; the learner is not a vessel to be filled with facts

Page 7: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Readiness Approach

Piaget’s approach to learning is a readiness approach

Readiness approaches in developmental psychology emphasize that children cannot learn something until maturation gives them certain prerequisites

Page 8: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Intellectual Growth Intellectual growth involves three fundamental

processes: assimilation, accommodation and equilibration

Assimilation involves the incorporation of new events into preexisting cognitive structures

Accommodation means existing structures change to accommodate to the new information

This dual process enables a child to form a schema Equilibration involves the person striking a balance

between oneself and the environment, between assimilation and accommodation

When a child experiences a new event, disequilibrium sets in until he or she is able to assimilate and accommodate the new information and thus attain equilibrium

http://youtu.be/WAQur-Y_BJY

Page 9: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Implications For Education

Piagetian-inspired curricula emphasizes a learner-centered educational philosophy

The teaching methods which most Canadian school children are familiar with-teacher lectures, demonstrations, audio-visual presentations and programmed instruction-do not fit in with Piaget’s ideas on the acquisition of knowledge

Page 10: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Implications For Education

Children need to explore, to manipulate, to experiment, to question and to search out answers themselves—activity is essential

Piaget believed in active discovery learning environments in our school

Intelligence grows through the twin processes of assimilation and accommodation

Page 11: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

Role of Teacher

Teacher’s should be able to assess the child’s present cognitive level; their strengths & weaknesses

Teacher’s are guides on the side-they are there to guide & stimulate the students along

Instruction should be individualized as much as possible

Students should have frequent opportunities to interact with one another

Page 12: Jean Piaget was born in Switzerland in 1896  He has been labeled as an interactionist as well as a constructivist  His interest in cognitive development

References

Brainerd, C. J. (1978). Piaget's Theory of Intelligence. New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc.

Evans, R. (1973). Jean Piaget: The Man and His Ideas. New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc.

Lavatelli, C. (1973). Piaget's Theory Applied to an Early Childhood Curriculum. Boston: American Science and Engineering, Inc.

London, C. (1988). A Piagetian constructivist perspective on curriculum development. Reading Improvement, 27, 82-95.

Piaget, J. Development and learning. In LAVATTELLY, C. S. e STENDLER, F. Reading in child behavior anddevelopment. New York: Hartcourt Brace Janovich, 1972.

Piaget, J. (1972). To Understand Is To Invent. New York: The Viking Press, Inc.

Sigel, I. and Cocking, R. (1977). Cognitive Development from Childhood to Adolescence: A Constructivist Perspective. NY: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Singer, D. & Revenson, T. (1978). A Piaget Primer: How a Child Thinks. NY: International Universities Press, Inc.