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Infants - Intellectual Development

Infants - Intellectual Development. Intellectual Development. I.D. is how people learn, what they learn and how they express what they know through language. Mental Development. Cognitive Development. Happens as quickly as physical development From birth, use all sense organs

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Infants - Intellectual Development

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  1. Infants - Intellectual Development

  2. Intellectual Development I.D. is how people learn, what they learn and how they express what they know through language Mental Development Cognitive Development

  3. Happens as quickly as physical development • From birth, use all sense organs • By age one, infants know many words and may even be able to say a few words

  4. How do infants learn? • Brain development research suggests the following three factors • Baby’s physical development (mainly brain) • Baby’s environment • The interaction of the first two factors; using the windows of opportunity

  5. As motor skills develop, infants are able to move toward many sights, sounds, and other learning experiences.

  6. Motor Center • Cognitive development aids in motor development! • They learn that their movements are voluntary and they are responsible. • Reach/touch objects

  7. Vision Center • Very active in early infancy • Maturing eyes and brain wiring helps them look at people’s faces and objects • 2-3 Months = can see objects at a distance very clearly • 8 Months = Vision Peaks! They begin to inspect everything!!!

  8. Binocular Vision = necessary to recognize how far away an object is. • Eyes guide how far the must reach or how far down the step might be

  9. Thinking and Memory Centers • They try to figure out what is happening and how to make things happen! • Make a ball roll, etc. • Important for new environments/experiences • Interesting things to see, hear, and touch

  10. Perception • Organizing information that comes through the senses • Infants notice how things are • alike and different • Size • Color • Shape • Texture • Perceptions come through the senses about: • Form • Space • Weight • Numbers

  11. Perception • Perception also involves how fast the brain organizes information

  12. Perception • Perception involves the way a person reacts to different sensory experiences • Example: child in a crowded room vs. alone with mom playing with blocks • What do children usually do?

  13. Cognition • Cognition- the act or process of knowing or understanding

  14. The Sensorimotor Stage – Piaget • Birth to age 2 • Infants use senses and motor skills to learn and communicate • Practicing Reflexes and Repeating New Learnings • Beginning to Control • Solving Problems • Imitating

  15. Perceptual Concepts • Object Constancy or Sameness -airplane • Object Concept- separate from one’s interactions with them • Object Identity – same bear, Daddy/clothes • Object Permanence • Depth Perception • Why might depth perception be important?

  16. Beginnings of Language!

  17. How do babies communicate? • Crying and Cooing - babies do not have control over the sounds they make • 1st Month = cries • 2nd Month = coos (light, happy sounds) • Babbling – Important pre-talking skill! • 4th and 5th month (ba, da, gi)

  18. First Words –(consistently refer to object or person as that word) • 9th Month+

  19. First Words Before first words, babies must do the following: • Understand object permanence • Understand that people, objects, places and events have names • Remember words that go with people, objects, places and events • Have the ability to make the sounds • Realize that talking is important

  20. Reduplication babbling- • “da-da-da-da” • Adult should make connection • Point, confirm and repeat! • By age 1 = 3 words • 2nd year = Spoken Vocab

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