Piaget Pieces
Sensorimotor
Preoperational
Concrete Operational
Formal Operational
100

A Swiss psychologist known for his theory of cognitive development in children

Who was Jean Piaget?

100

The age range of the sensorimotor stage.

What is 0-2?

100

The age range of the preoperational stage. 

What is 2-7?

100

The age range for children in the Concrete Operational Stage.

What is 7-11 years?

100

The age at which Formal Operational thinking typically begins.

What is 12?

200

 the process of incorporating new information into existing schemas

What is assimilation?

200

Understanding that objects continue to exist even when they cannot be seen.

What is object permanence?

200

The inability to see the world from another person's perspective.

What is egocentrism?

200

The understanding that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape.

What is conservation?

200

The ability to form hypotheses and use the scientific method to understand and explain the world.

What is scientific reasoning?

300

the process of altering existing schemas or creating new schemas to fit new information

What is accommodation?

300

Babies learn primarily through these natural and automatic movements.

What are reflexes?

300

Focusing on one aspect of a situation and ignoring other important details.

What is centration?

300

The ability to arrange objects in order based on size, length, or another attribute.

What is seriation?

300

The ability to think about multiple causes, represent all combinations of a given set of items, produce combinations systematically.

What is combinatorial reasoning?

400

A mental framework that helps individuals organize and interpret information.

What is a schema in Piaget’s theory?

400

The ability to replicate an observed behavior after some time; emerges around 18-24 months. 

What is deferred imitation?

400

The belief that inamimate objects have human-like qualities or intentions.

What is animism?

400

The understanding and awareness that actions can be reversed.

What is reversibility?

400

Thinking in terms of ratios, percents, and calculating risk or chance.

What is reasoning about probability and proportion?

500

A state of imbalance between a person's knowledge and new information. 

What is diseqyilibrium?

500

An example of this goal-directed behavior would be when a baby discovers that sucking his thumb feels good, so he repeats the action. 

What is a circular reaction?

500

Children begin to rely more on logic than just perception alone in this substage of the preoperational stage. 

What is the intuitive thought substage?

500

The ability to understand how different elements relate to each other, such as if A>B and B>C, then A>C.

What is transitivity?

500

The ability to think logically and abstractly about statements, proposals, or considerations.

What is propositional thinking?

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