Developmental Theories and Other Relevant Theories: Debunked
Developmental Theories and Other Relevant Theories: Debunked
Developmental Theories and Other Relevant Theories: Debunked
INTRODUCTION
Freud’s views about human development are more than a century old. He can
be considered the most well-known psychologist because of his very interesting theory
about the unconscious and also about social development. Although a lot of his views
were criticized and some considered them debunked, Freud’s theory remains to be one
of the most influential in psychology. His theory sparked the ideas in the brilliant minds
of other theorists and thus became the starting point of many other theories, notable of
which is Erikson’s Psychosocial theory.
Topographic Model
The Unconscious. Freud said that most what we go through in our lives,
emotions, beliefs, feelings, and impulses deep within are not available to us at a
conscious level. He believed that most of what influence us is our unconscious. The
Oedipus and Electra complex mentioned earlier were both buried down into
unconscious, out of out awareness due to the extreme anxiety they caused. While these
complexes are in our unconscious, they still influence our thinking, feeling and doing in
perhaps dramatic ways.
The Conscious. Freud also said that all that we are aware of is stored in our
conscious mind. Our conscious mind only comprises a very small part of who we are so
that, in our everyday life, we are only aware of a very small part of what makes up our
personality; most of what we are is hidden and out of reach.
The Subconscious. The last part is the preconscious or subconscious. This is
the part of us that we can reach if prompted, but is not in our active conscious. It’s right
below the surface, but still “hidden” somewhat unless we search for it. Information such
as our telephone number, some childhood memories, or the name of your best
childhood friend is stored in the preconscious.
Because the unconscious is so huge, and because we are only aware of the very
small conscious at any given time, Freud used the analogy of the iceberg to illustrate it.
A big part of the iceberg is hidden beneath the water’s surface.
The water, may represent all that we are not aware of, have not experienced,
and that has not been made part of our personalities referred to as the nonconscious.
Concsious
Preconscious
Superego
Ego* Unconscious
Unconscious
ID
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
INTRODUCTION
For sixty years, Jean Piaget conducted research on cognitive development. His
research method involved observing a small number of individuals as they responded to
cognitive tasks that he designed. These tasks were later known as Piagetian tasks.
Piaget examined the implications of his theory not only to aspects of cognition
but also to intelligence and moral development. His theory has been applied widely to
teaching and curriculum design specially in the preschool and elementary curricula.
Schema. Piaget used the term “schema” to refer to the cognitive structures by
which individuals intellectually adapt to and organize their environment. It is an
individual’s way to understand or create meaning about a thing or experience. It is like
the mind has a filing cabinet and each drawer has folders that contain files of things he
has had an experience with. For instance, if a child sees a dog for the first time, he
creates his own schema of what a dog is. It has four legs and a tail. It barks. It’s furry.
The child the “puts this description of a dog ‘on file’ in his mind.” When he sees another
similar dog, he “pulls” out the file (his schema of a dog) in his mind, looks at the animal,
and says, “four legs, tail, barks, furry…. That’s a dog!”
Equilibration. Piaget believed that people have the natural need to understand
how the world works and to find order, structure, and predictability in their life.
Equilibration is achieving proper balance between assimilation and accommodation.
When our experiences do not match our schemata (plural of schema) or cognitive
structures, we experience cognitive disequilibrium. This means there is a
discrepancy between what is perceived and what is understood. We then exert effort
through assimilation and accommodation to establish equilibrium once more.
Stage 1. Sensori-motor Stage. The first stage corresponds from birth to infancy. This
is the stage when a child who is initially reflexive in grasping, sucking and
reaching becomes more organized in his movement and activity. The term
sensori-motor focuses on the prominence of the senses and muscle movement
through which infant comes to learn about himself and the world. In working with
children in the sensori-motor stage, teachers should aim to provide a rich and
stimulating environment with appropriate objects to play with.
Object permanence. This is the ability of the child to know that an object still
exists even when out of sight. This ability is attained in the sensory motor stage.
(Please refer to Unit 2, Module 13 for more notes.)
Stage 2. Pre-Operational Stage. The preoperational stage covers from about two to
seven years old, roughly corresponding to the preschool years. Intelligence at
this stage is intuitive in nature. At this stage, the child is now ever closer to the
use of symbols. This stage is highlighted by the following:
Egocentrism. This is the tendency of the child to only see his point of view and
to assume that everyone also has his same point of view. The child cannot take
the perspective of others. You see this in a five year-old boy who buys a toy truck
for his mother’s birthday. Or a three year-old girl who cannot understand why her
cousins call her daddy “uncle” and not daddy.
Centration. This refers to the tendency of the child to only focus on one aspect
of a thing or event and exclude other aspects. For example, when a child is
presented with a two identical glasses with the same amount of water. However,
once water from one glass is transferred to an obviously taller but narrower
glass, the child might say that there is more water in the taller glass.
The child only focused or “centered” only one aspect of the new glass, that it is a
taller glass. The child was not able to perceive that the new glass is also
narrower. The child only centered on the height of the glass and excluded the
width in determining the amount of water in the glass.
Decentering. This refers to the ability of the child to perceive the different
features of objects and situations. No longer is the child focused or limited to one
aspect or dimension. This allows the child to be more logical when dealing with
concrete objects and situations.
Reversibility. During the stage of concrete operations, the child can now follow
that certain operations can be done in reverse. For example, they can already
comprehend the commutative property of addition, and that subtraction is the
reverse of addition. They can also understand that a ball of clay shaped into a
dinosaur can again be rolled back into a ball of clay.
Conservation. This is the ability to know the certain properties of objects like
numbers, mass, volume, or area do not change even if there is a change in
appearance. Because of the development of the child’s ability of decentering and
also reversibility, the concrete operational child can now judge rightly that the
amount of water in a taller but narrower container is still the same as when the
water was in the shorter but wider glass. The children progress to attain
conservation abilities gradually being a pre-conserver, a transitional thinker and
then a conserver.
Stage 4. Formal Operational Stage. In the final stage of formal operations covering
ages between 12 and 15 years, thinking becomes more logical. They can now
solve abstract problems and can hypothesize. The stage is characterized by the
following:
From Piaget’s findings and comprehensive theory, we can derive the following
principles:
1. Children will provide different explanations of reality at different stages of
cognitive development.
2. Cognitive development is facilitated by providing activities or situations that
engage learners and require adaption (i,e., assimilation and accommodation).
3. Learning materials and activities should involve the appropriate level of motor or
mental operations for a child of given age; avoid asking students to perform tasks
that are beyond their current cognitive capabilities.
4. Use teaching methods that actively involve students and present challenges.