Piaget's Constructivist Theory
Piaget's Constructivist Theory
Piaget's Constructivist Theory
April 2017
Piaget studied how children think and develop
He believed individual development is more
important than environment and cultural
background
Interested in the development of intelligence:
thinking, language, perception, morality and
adaptation to the environment
Constructivist theory = building of knowledge and
cognitive processes to construct realities
Schemes: ways of processing information
Sensorimotor schemes: action schemes:
sucking, grasping, looking
Cognitive schemes: concepts, thinking,
solving problems
Adaptation: ability to adjust to demands of
the environment
Organisation: combination of existing
reflexes like grasping into more complex
actions like visually directed reaching e.g.
baby reaches for other objects in his visual
field
Assimilation: transforming new information
to fit with existing ways of thinking into
current cognitive system
Accommodation: changing the way you think
about things in order to integrate new
experiences
Operations: reversible mental actions which
combine to form stages of cognitive
development
Equilibrium: state of balance between the
cognitive system and the environment
3 stages of equilibrium: dissatisfaction with
current thinking – disequilibrium, adoption of
more sophisticated way of thinking, stable
equilibrium
The 4 stages occur in a fixed sequence, but
the age of the child may vary