Piaget's Stage Theory
Core Developmental Issues
Developmental Methodology
Labs
Mystery
100

The stage that spans the 7 - 11 year age group

Preoperational stage

100

The prenatal period where the fetus is susceptible to toxins

Embryonic period

100

Key feature of longitudinal methods

They compare the same groups at multiple time points

100

An inference is

An idea that logically follows from facts in the statement and/or commonly accepted knowledge

100

The 1st two weeks after conception are known as

The germinal period 

200

The 4 major stages of cognitive development are characterized by

Differing thought processes

200

Maturation refers to

Biologically determined changes that follow an orderly sequence

200

The purpose of cross-sectional methods

It compares groups of different ages at the same time

200

A weakening argument is

A piece of information that makes a statement less likely to be true by contradicting or disproving a premise of the statement

200

The three styles of infant-caregiver attachment

Secure; Anxious ambivalent; Avoidant 

300

Conservation during the concrete operational stage refers to

Awareness that physical quantities remain constant despite changes in shape or appearance

300

This happens if a key experience does not occur during a critical time period

The function may not develop or be fully developed

300

Sequential methodology is best used to

reduce cohort effects

300

The 5 Watson-Glaser critical thinking skills are

Assumption; Interpretation; Argument (strengthening/weakening); Deduction; Inference

300

This is characteristic of a rooting reflex

A touch on the cheek induces the infant to move its mouth toward the source of the touch

400

Key features of the formal operational stage

Abstract logic and reasoning develops & concepts can be applied across contexts; the adolescent engages in thoughts about their identity & social/moral issues

400

Effect of teratogen alcohol on the fetus

It can cause fetal alcohol syndrome (occurs if mother consumes alcohol during pregnancy). Effects: physical abnormalities and learning disabilities

400

One pro and one con of a cross-sectional method

It is useful for assessing age differences; Not useful for assessing age change

400

Signal detection theory (what, 4 outcomes)

A method to measure the ability to differentiate between information-bearing patterns and random patterns that distract from the information; Hit, Miss, False Alarm, Correct Rejection.

400

The intellectual process used in the statement “all 4 legged animals are viewed as cats”

Assimilation

500

The inability to understand conservation results from these 3 basic flaws in preoperational thinking

Centration (tendency to focus on just one feature of a problem)

Irreversibility (inability to envision reversing an action)

Egocentrism (limited ability to share another person’s POV)

500

Genie's case (who, what, how)

A girl who was isolated until the age of 13; her syntax never made it to normal levels. It supports the notion of critical time periods, especially for language

500

This methodology is used to examine the progress and well-being of children at critical age periods

Longitudinal method ( same group, different time periods)

500

An example of the 3 stages of shaping required in the Sniffy experiment (unconditioned stimulus?)

Stage 1: reward when Sniffy stands (30 times)
Stage 2: reward standing at back wall (30 times)
Stage 3: reward standing in centre of back wall (30 times)
US: food/reward

500

The use of __ allows children to handle new information and situations

Cognitive schemas (Assimilation & Accommodation)