Vygotsky's Theory of Cognitive Development

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23 Terms

1
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What are Piaget’s ideas?

  • Four discrete stages

  • Cognitive development is limited by stages

  • Young children are schematic

  • Motivation to maintain cognitive equilibrium

  • Development occurs when assimilation is not possible (adaption)

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What are Vygotsky’s ideas?

  • Continuous development (no stages)

  • Zone of proximal development

  • Socially transmitted knowledge (cooperative learning and scaffolding)

  • Private speech helps internalise knowledge

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What ideas to Vygotsky and Piaget have in common?

  • They were both constructionivists

  • They both believed that social forces set the limits of development

  • Piaget’s work influenced Vygotsky and they agreed on many of the basics of cognitive development

  • They agreed that children’s reasoning abilities develop in a particular sequence and that such abilities are qualitatively different at different ages

  • The major difference is that Vygotsky saw cognitive development as a social process of learning from more experienced others (referred to as experts)

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What were the differences between Piaget and Vygotsky?

  • Vygotsky emphasised more than Piaget the role of other, more knowledgable people in children’s development

  • Vygotsky argued that although children can acquire some concepts through their own unaided play, they acquire the mechanisms of thinking and learning as a result of the social interactions between themselves and the adults around them

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What is an example of culture difference?

  • Vygotsky provides the example of finger pointing:

    • Initially, this behaviour begins as a meaningless gesture; however, as people react to the gesture, it becomes a movement that has meaning

    • In particular, the pointing gesture represents an interpersonal connection between individuals

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Why did Vygotsky think culture played a big part in cognitive development?

  1. Vygotsky said there were two types of mental function - elementary and higher. Elementary functions can be thought of as innate reflexes, sensory abilities and certain types of memory. Higher functions include more complex tasks like language comprehension and decision-making.

  1. Social and cultural factors play a necessary part in moving from one type of functioning to the other — it's the influence of others around you that drives cognitive development. Because of this, Vygotsky's theory is known as a social interactionist theory.

  2. One of Vygotsky's ideas was the zone of proximal development. This is the difference between the problem-solving a child can do on their own and the problem-solving they can do with a more able peer or adult.

  3. If your teacher has an idea of what your potential is, they can help you reach it by pushing and guiding. So it's interaction with the teacher that's important (unlike Piaget's idea that progression happens on its own).

  4. Instruction is social and driven by the teacher using language and cultural influences. The intention is to help the child to be self-regulated and responsible for their own learning.

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Why is language important in cognitive development?

Vygotsky suggests that language is a driving influence on cognitive development:

  1. Children first learn language as a means to communicate with caregivers. It's also a tool that allows adults to communicate social and cultural information to children.

  2. As the child grows older they uses language not only to communicate but also to guide their behaviour- they uses self-talk (talking out loud) to regulate and direct themselves.

  3. This self-talk eventually becomes internalised and becomes silent inner speech. At this point, the child has developed two very different forms of language - inner speech and external oral speech.

  4. Oral speech is used socially for communication, whilst inner speech is a cognitive tool that allows individuals to direct and monitor their thoughts and behaviour.

  5. If someone finds a task difficult, they may re-employ self-talk to exert greater control over their thoughts.

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What are Vygotsky’s stages of development?

  1. Vague syncretic-trial and error methods are used, with no understanding of the underlying concepts.

  2. Complex — use of strategies begins, but they're not used successfully.

  3. Potential concept - successful strategies are used, but only one at a time.

  4. Mature concept - lots of strategies used at the same time. Thinking becomes mature and developed.

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What is the zone of proximal development?

  • Vygotsky was the first psychologist to bring in the variable of what we learn in social contexts, the role of speech and culture when looking at cognitive development

  • He believed that children learn from others who are more knowledgable and who support their learning

  • One of the terms used by Vygotsky is called the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)

  • Critically, Vygotsky was not just saying that children can learn more facts during social interaction but also that they acquire more advanced reasoning abilities

  • In fact, he believed that higher mental functions, such as formal reasoning, could only be acquired through interaction with more advanced others

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  • It is a process through which a teacher or more competent peer gives aid to the student in his/her ZPD as necessary and tapers off this aid as it becomes unnecessary

  • Much the same as scaffolding is removed from a building during construction

  • According to education expert Nancy Balaban, Scaffolding refers to the way the adult guides the child’s learning via focused questions and positive interactions

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What did Roazzi and Bryant do in 1998?

  • Support for ZPD:

    • They gave 4-5-year-olds the task of estimating the number of sweets in a box

  • Condition 1:

    • Children worked alone

  • Condition 2:

    • Worked with an older child

  • Most children working alone failed to give a good estimate, but in condition 2, with help, the older child was seen offering prompts, pointing the younger child in the right direction

  • Most of those children successfully mastered the task

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What are the five aspects of scaffolding according to Wood, Bruner and Ross in 1976?

  1. Recruitment: Engaging the child’s interest in the task

  2. Reduction of degrees of freedom: Focusing the child on the task and where to start with solving it

  3. Direction maintenance: Encouraging the child in order to help them stay motivated and continue trying to complete the task

  4. Marking critical features: Highlighting the most important parts of the task

  5. Demonstration: Showing the child how to do aspects of the task

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Why does Vygotsky’s theory emphasise social interaction?

Vygotsky's theory is a teacher-guided approach and suggests that interactions with others are important in learning.

In other words, other people are needed to stimulate cognitive development. For example, scaffolding is an important concept developed from Vygotsky's theory where other people assist a child's cognitive development:

  • Scaffolding is when a teacher, another adult or a more cognitively advanced child acts as an expert to guide the child.

  • They do this by making suggestions or doing demonstrations to provide a framework by which the child learns to do a task.

  • At first the child might need lots of help, but as they learn, less help is needed, and they can carry on learning independently.

  • For scaffolding to work, it needs to take place within the child's zone of proximal development.

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What strategies are used when scaffolding?

  • As a learner crosses the ZPD, the level of help given declines from level 5 (Most help) to level 1 (Least help)

  • Example of helping a child draw:

    • 5: Demonstration- Mother draws an object

    • 4: Preparation for child- Mother helps child grasp a crayon

    • 3: Indication of materials- Mother points to crayon

    • 2: Specific verbal instructions- Mother says, ‘How about a green crayon?’

    • 1: General Prompts- Mother says, ‘Now draw something else’

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What method did Wood et al use when studying the effectiveness of scaffolding in 1976?

Thirty children aged 3-5 were given the task of building a model and were observed. A tutor gave help to each child according to how well they were doing — the help was either in the form of showing or telling.

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What are the results of Wood et al’s study about the effectiveness of scaffolding?

Scaffolding allowed the children to complete a task they wouldn't have been able to do alone. The effectiveness of the scaffolding was influenced by various factors, e.g. how the tutor simplified the task, and how they helped them identify important steps. Showing was used most when helping younger children, whilst telling was used more with the older children. Also, the older the child was the less scaffolding was needed for them to complete the task.

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What is the conclusion of Wood et al’s study about the effectiveness of scaffolding?

Scaffolding can be helpful but consideration needs to be given to maximise its effectiveness.

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What is the evaluation of Wood et al’s study about the effectiveness of scaffolding?

This study had fairly good ecological validity, but there was less control over variables, reducing reliability.

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What did Connor and Cross do in 2003?

  • Evidence for the idea of scaffolding comes from research showing that the level of help declines during the process of learning

  • A longitudinal study

    • Followed 45 children, observing them engaged in problem-solving tasks with the help of their mothers, at 16, 26, 44 and 54 months old

    • Distinctive changes in help were observed over time; mothers used less and less direct intervention and more hints and prompts as children gained experience

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What is the application in education?

  • Vygotsky’s ideas have been highly influential in education

  • The idea that children can learn faster with appropriate scaffolding has raised expectations of what they should be able to achieve

  • Social interaction in learning through group work, peer tutoring and individual adult assistance from teachers and teaching assistants has been used to scaffold children through the ZPD

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What is supporting research?

  • Keer and Verhaghe (2005):

    • Found that 7-year-olds tutored by 10-year-olds, in addition to their whole class teaching, progressed further in reading than controls who just had standard whole class teaching

  • Alborz et al. (2009):

    • A review of the usefulness of teaching assistants concluded that they are very effective at improving the rate of learning in children provided they had received appropriate training

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Who supported Vygotsky?

  1. Gardner and Gardner (1969) found that, with instruction, animals can reach higher levels of functioning. For example, they taught a chimp, Washoe, sign language, and she passed down her knowledge to her adoptive son. This is evidence for the role of culture and language in learning.

  2. Chi et al. (1989) showed that pretending to talk to the author as you read (self-explanation) can help increase understanding. This is evidence for the use of speech in thought.

  3. Berk (1994) found that children who used more self-talk when solving maths problems did better over the following year. This is evidence for the use of self-talk in problem-solving.

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What is the evaluation of Vygotsky?

  • Negative:

    • The theory may overemphasize cultural factors at the expense of biological factors

    • The theory may neglect the role of the individual in their own development

    • Many of Vygotsky’s ideas are difficult to test scientifically

    • The theory may not adequately address the role of play in cognitive development- Individual differences

  • Although Vygotsky's theory can be successfully applied to education, it has some limitations:

    • Some psychologists think that the theory over-emphasises social and ultural factors in intelligence and ignores biological factors.

    • Vygotsky didn't give any suggestions of the cognitive processes that

      might underlie development.