UNIT-3 Intellectual Development

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UNIT–3

INTELLECTUAL DEVELOPMENT
Objectives
At the end of this unit, students will be able to:
1. Discuss intelligence and how is it measured
2. Discuss theories of multiple intelligences
3. Review the controversies and issues in intelligence
4. Understand the intellectual characteristics of learners
5. Work out activities relevant to children's intellectual
development at pre and elementary school level
Concepts

DEFINITION OF INTELLIGENCE
•Dictionary has many definitions:
– Capacity for learning,
– Reasoning, understanding,
– Aptitude in grasping truths, relationships, facts, meanings,
– The ability to acquire and apply knowledge and skills.
•Intelligence is thought of a combination of different attributes.
Example:
“The ability to solve problems and adapt and learn from
experiences”
Theoretical Positions
Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory of Intelligence
•Robert Sternberg proposed that intelligence is composed of
three basic components including
– i) Analytical, ii) creative and iii) practical intelligence
•The analytical component deals with a person's ability to solve
problems.
•Creative intelligence refers to the ability to combine different
ideas to form something novel by thinking outside of the box.
•Practical intelligence involves applying knowledge and skills
into different kinds of environment.
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligence
Intelligence Characteristics Related activities
Logical Ability to understand and use Experimenting, calculating,
mathematical numerical patterns, solving logical puzzles etc
mathematical operations,
reasoning and logic
Linguistic Ability to acquire and use Reading, writing, playing word
functions of language, games, listening to and telling
express oneself and stories etc
comprehend others
Spatial Ability to understand, Navigating, designing, visualizing,
recognize and manipulate drawing, solving jigsaw puzzles et
patterns, spaces and objects c
Musical Ability to appreciate and use Singing, creating tunes, humming
the components of music etc
Gardner's Theory of Multiple Intelligence

Intelligence Characteristics Related activities


Bodily- Ability to coordinate and Dancing, running, cycling,
kinesthetic use fine- and gross motor swimming etc
skills in a productive way
Interpersonal Ability to interact with Leading, organizing,
others in a productive way socializing etc
Intrapersonal Ability to appreciate one's Goal-setting, organizing,
own self to guide one's planning, dreaming, meditation
own life etc
Naturalistic Ability to appreciate the Understanding, working with
natural environment and caring for mother nature
etc
Emotional Intelligence
• Both Gardner and Sternberg emphasize the abilities to
understand one's own self and others.
• Contemporary theorists show considerable interest in
students' emotional intelligence which enables them to
understand emotions and express emotions appropriately.
• Monitor their own and other's emotions and feelings
• Allow emotions to guide their thinking and actions
• Criticized for broadening the concept of intelligence without
adequate research based evidence
Intelligence Models
• Gardner • Sternberg
Issues and Controversies
• One of the greatest controversies in the area of educational and
developmental psychology is:
– Whether intelligence is an inherited ability (nature)
– Whether it can be developed by an individual's personal and
contextual experiences (nurture)
• Early psychologists view intelligence as an inherent and
fixed capacity which cannot be altered
• It can be improved with practice and a supportive
environment.
• This view is known as the Incremental view of Intelligence.
Piaget’s Theory

Jean Piaget (1896-1980) was one of the 20th


centuries most influential researchers in the area of
developmental psychology.
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive
Development

Describe intellectual development according


to Piaget, including a discussion of both the
process and the stages of development.
Note behavioral characteristics of each stage,
describing how assimilation and
accommodation are exemplified for each stage
of development.
Piaget’s Theory of Cognitive
Development
Describe specific actions that teachers can
take to incorporate Piaget's theory into the
classroom.
Compare Piaget's theory to Vygotsky's
socio-historical theory of cognitive
development.
Piaget’s Theory

Piaget originally trained in the areas of biology


and philosophy and considered himself a
“genetic epistimologist.”

He was mainly interested in the biological


influences on “how we come to know.”
Piaget’s Theory

Piaget believed that what distinguishes human


beings from other animals is our ability to do
“abstract symbolic reasoning.”
Piaget’s Theory
Piaget's views are often compared with those of Lev
Vygotsky (1896-1934), who looked more to social
interaction as the primary source of cognition and
behavior.

This is somewhat similar to the distinctions made between


Freud and Erikson in terms of the development of
personality.
Piaget’s Theory
While working in Binet’s test lab in Paris, Piaget became
interested in how children think.

He noticed that young children's answers were qualitatively


different than older children.

This suggested to him that the younger children were not less
knowledgeable but, instead, answered the questions differently
than their older peers because they thought differently.
Piaget’s Theory
This implies that human development is
qualitative (changes in kind) rather than
quantitative (changes in amount).
Piaget’s Theory
There are two major aspects to his theory:
• the process of coming to know and
• the stages we move through as we gradually
acquire this ability.

Piaget’s training as a biologist influenced both


aspects of his theory.
Process of Cognitive Development

As a biologist, Piaget was interested in how an


organism adapts to its environment (Piaget
described this ability as intelligence.)

Behavior is controlled through mental


organizations called schemes that the individual
uses to represent the world and designate action.
Process of Cognitive Development

This adaptation is driven by a biological


drive to obtain balance between schemes
and the environment (equilibration).
Process of Cognitive
Development
Piaget hypothesized that infants are born with
schemes operating at birth that he called
"reflexes."
In other animals, these reflexes control behavior
throughout life.
However, in human beings as the infant uses these
reflexes to adapt to the environment, these reflexes
are quickly replaced with constructed schemes.
Process of Cognitive Development

Piaget described two processes used by the individual in


its attempt to adapt:

• assimilation and

• accomodation

Both of these processes are used thoughout life as the person


increasingly adapts to the environment in a more complex
manner.
Process of Cognitive Development

The process of using or


transforming the
Assimilation environment so that it can be
placed in pre-existing
cognitive structures.
Process of Cognitive Development

Example: an infant uses a


sucking schema that was
Assimilation developed by sucking on a
small bottle when attempting
to suck on a larger bottle.
Process of Cognitive Development

The process of changing


cognitive structures in order
Accomodation
to accept something from the
environment.
Process of Cognitive Development

Example: the infant modifies a sucking


Accommodation schema developed by sucking on a
pacifier to one that would be successful
for sucking on a bottle.
Process of Cognitive Development

As schemes become increasingly more complex (i.e.,


responsible for more complex behaviors) they are
termed structures.

As one's structures become more complex, they are


organized in a hierarchical manner (i.e., from general to
specific).
Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development

• Jean Piaget's theory of cognitive development suggests that


children move through four different stages of mental
development.
• His theory focuses not only on understanding how children
acquire knowledge
• But also on understanding the nature of intelligence.
• Piaget's stages are:
– Sensorimotor Stage: birth to 2 years
– Preoperational Stage: ages 2 to 7
– Concrete Operational Stage: ages 7 to 11
– Formal Operational Stage: ages 12 and up
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The Sensorimotor Stage
Ages: Birth to 2 Years
•Major Characteristics and Developmental Changes:
•The infant knows the world through their movements and sensations
•Children learn about the world through basic actions such as
sucking, grasping, looking, and listening
•Infants learn that things continue to exist even though they cannot
be seen (object permanence)
•They are separate beings from the people and objects around them
•They realize that their actions can cause things to happen in the
world around them
The Preoperational Stage
Ages: 2 to 7 Years
•Major Characteristics and Developmental Changes:
•Children begin to think symbolically and learn to use words and
pictures to represent objects.
•Children at this stage tend to be egocentric and struggle to see
things from the perspective of others.
•While they are getting better with language and thinking, they
still tend to think about things in very concrete terms.
The Concrete Operational Stage
Ages: 7 to 11 Years
•Major Characteristics and Developmental Changes
•During this stage, children begin to thinking logically about
concrete events
•They begin to understand the concept of conservation; that the
amount of liquid in a short, wide cup is equal to that in a tall,
skinny glass, for example
•Their thinking becomes more logical and organized, but still
very concrete
•Children begin using inductive logic, or reasoning from specific
information to a general principle
The Formal Operational Stage
Ages: 12 and Up
•Major Characteristics and Developmental Changes:
•At this stage, the adolescent or young adult begins to think
abstractly and reason about hypothetical problems
•Abstract thought emerges
•Teens begin to think more about moral, philosophical, ethical,
social, and political issues that require theoretical and abstract
reasoning
•Begin to use deductive logic, or reasoning from a general
principle to specific information
Vygotsky's Socio-cultural Theory
• Did NOT focus on the individual child but on the child as a product of
social interaction, especially with adults (parents, teachers).

• Focus on Dyadic Interactions (e.g., child being taught by a parent how to


perform some culturally specific action), rather than child by himself.

• Social world mediates children's cognitive development.


• Cognitive development occurs as child's thinking is molded by society in
the form of parents, teachers, and peers.
• This leads to peer tutoring as a strategy in classrooms.

• People's thinking differs dramatically between cultures because different


cultures stress different things.
Theory’s Principles and Concepts

Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)


– The difference between what a child can do independently
and what the child needs help from a more knowledgeable
person.
– The gap between Potential and competence level is the
ZPD.
– It is achieved through MKOs.

Zone of
Proximal
Development
Theory’s Principles and Concepts

• Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)

Distance Between Actual and Potential Knowledge


 
Potential
Knowledge
Potential

ZPD
ZPD
 
Actual
Knowledge Actual

Two children with the same actual knowledge travel different distances to
their potential knowledge; therefore different ZPDs
Information Processing Approach
• Information processing approach presents another
major perspective which helps us to understand
cognitive development
• This approach views human brain as an active
information processing system, like a computer
machine.
• It examines how does information enter a human
mind, and how is it stored,
Cont…
• Information processing approach is the first serious
movement of cognitive psychology.
• It is concerned with how:
– human being acquires, processes, retains and retrieves
information.
– people remember and forget information.
• Psychologists work on different aspects in this approach.
– For example, Siegler worked on attention in memory formation
– Flavell worked on expansion of memory capabilities 
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ORGANIZATION OF RELEVANT
ACTIVITIES IN THE CLASSROOM

• A variety of experiences affect the development of

cognition among children.

• Preschool and Kindergarten

• Elementary Level
Preschool and kindergarten
• The preschool and kindergarten children have more.
• Play, at this stage supports the cognitive development of children.
These include, for example, object play (e.g., building objects
with blocks),
• Pretend play (role plays e.g., teacher),
• Social play (e.g., using different objects for different purposes),
locomotors play (e.g., playing tag in which children run after
each other).
• Hands-on activities (e.g., cutting out alphabets, conducting
simple science experiments, counting with the paddle-pop sticks)
are critical in developing advanced thinking and cognition
Children's Cognitive Development

The rapid changes during the early years of school.


•A number of activities and strategies may help the elementary
school child to make cognitive progress at this stage.
•Allowing children to experiment,

•Encouraging discovery learning,

•Reading with the children,


Children's Cognitive Development
• Encouraging them to share ideas and opinions,
• Asking them to make comparisons,
• Classify and categorize objects, things or events,
• Engaging them in the drama and role playing,
• Justify their answers and actions,
• It is important to engage them in individual or small
group activities according to their interests, for example,
a portfolio or a group project.
MEASUREMENT OF INTELLIGENCE

A number of standardized tests have been used to


measure intelligence:
1. Individual intelligence tests
2. Group intelligence tests
Measuring Intelligence
• Original version of Stanford-Binet (IQ = MA/CA x 100)
• Stanford-Binet and Wechsler most widely used individual intelligence
tests.
• Both tests compute an intelligence quotient (IQ), which compares the
deviation of a person’s test score to norms for that person’s age group,
thus eliminating age effects.
IQ Testing Today

• The most commonly used IQ test for adults is


the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale.
• Consists of 15 subtests that give 5 scores:
– Overall IQ
– Verbal comprehension
– Perceptual reasoning
– Working memory
– Processing speed
Measuring Intelligence
• Three scientific standards for psychological
tests:
1. Standardization--establishes norms and
uniform procedures for giving and scoring tests
2. Reliability--measure of the consistency and
stability of test scores over time
3. Validity--ability of a test to measure what it was
designed to measure

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