Piaget's Key Terms
Piaget's Theory
Vygotsky's Theory
Name the Stage
Which Developmental Stage
100

Sets of mental operations, concepts, physical actions, or theories people use to organize the information they acquire about their worlds.

What are schemas?

100
Piaget's stages of cognitive development
What is Sensorimotor, Preoperations, Concrete Operations, and Formal Operations?
100

The gap between what children can do on their own and what they can do with the assistance of others.

What is zone of proximal development?

100

The ability to think abstractly and reflectively occurs during this stage.

What is formal operations stage?

100

Children learn that objects exist even though they aren’t seen.

What is Infancy (or Sensorimotor)?

200

Process by which children mold new information to fit their existing schemes.

What is assimilation?

200

Children's tendency to perceive, understand, and interpret the world in terms of the self.

What is egocentrism?

200

Vygotsky placed a strong importance on this with regard to its influence on learning and development.

What is Social Interactions?

200

Children can use symbols as a tool to think about their environment in this stage.

What is preoperational stage?

200

In this stage children learn to think about their actions and interactions with others and objects.

What is the preoperational stage?

300

A unique concept in Piaget's theory that refers to our innate tendency for individuals, when encountering situations that are new and/or do not make sense, to try to make sense of the situation.

What is equilibration?

300

The understanding that an entity remains the same despite superficial changes in its form or physical appearance.

What is conservation?

300
Refers to the process of constructing an internal representation of external physical actions or mental operations.
What is Internalization ?
300

Goal directed behavior and object permanence are achieved during this stage.

What is Sensorimotor stage?

300

Abstract thought and scientific reasoning skills becoming more prevalent, especially for topics about which adolescents have considerable knowledge

What is concrete operational stage?

400

The discomfort that happens when a learner encounters new information that contradicts what they already know, which leads learners to try to resolve the conflicting feelings.

What is cognitive dissonance?

400

This the phenomenon wherin an aspect of cognitive development emerges in some domains prior to others.

What is Horizontal decalage?

400

This is the means which guides children's thinking and behaviors and serves as a self-regulatory function.

What is private speech?

400
Children begin to use mental operations and logic to think about events and objects in their environment.
What is Concrete Operational Stage?
400

Increasing ability to reason about complex hypothetical and abstract ideas.

What is the formal operational stage?

500

What happens when individuals change their current way of thinking as a result of acquiring new information.

What is accommodation?

500

Occurs when individuals acquire new information and fit that information in with their current thinking.

What is assimilation?

500

This is when teachers and students take turns being the discussion leader. It is through collaborative dialogue that children learn how to regulate their own reading comprehension.

What is reciprocal teaching?

500

Children develop logical operations for seriation, classification, and conservation during this stage.

What is concrete operations?

500

Frequent self-talk occurs

What is preoperational stage?