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Chapter 9- part 2: Middle Childhood

Chapter 9- part 2: Middle Childhood. Module 4 Intellectual Development in Middle Childhood. INTELLECTUAL AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD. What are advances and limitations, in thinking during childhood?. Approaches: Piaget Information-processing Vygotsky. 212.

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Chapter 9- part 2: Middle Childhood

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  1. Chapter 9- part 2: Middle Childhood Module 4 Intellectual Development inMiddle Childhood

  2. INTELLECTUAL AND LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT IN MIDDLE CHILDHOOD

  3. What are advances and limitations, in thinking during childhood? Approaches: • Piaget • Information-processing • Vygotsky 212

  4. Intellectual Development: Piaget • Concrete operational stage • 7 and 12 years • Characterized by active and appropriate use of logic • Logical operations applied to concrete problems • Conservation problems; reversibility; time and speed, decentering 212

  5. How does preoperational thought emerge? • Shift from preoperational thought to concrete operational thought does not happen overnight • Children shift back and forth between preoperational and concrete operational thinking • Once concrete operational thinking is fully engaged, children show several cognitive advances 213

  6. Piaget Was Right…Piaget Was Wrong • Right • Virtuoso observer of children • Powerful theoretical, educational implications • Wrong • Underestimate of children’s capabilities, in part because of the limited nature of mini-experiments conducted • Misjudged age at which children’s cognitive abilities emerge • Neglected cross-cultural differences 213

  7. Memory How well do you recall and recognize?

  8. How did you do? • Explicit memory • Recognition • Recall

  9. Increasing ability to handle information Memory improvement Short term memory capacity improvement Information Processing 214

  10. Thinking about Memory: Metamemory • Understanding about processes that underlie memory • Improves during school age years • Helps children use control strategies (conscious, intentional tactics to improve functioning) 215

  11. Can children be trained to be more effective in use of control strategies? • School-age children can be taught to use particular strategies • Keyword strategies • See Center for Development and Learning (10 Strategies to Enhance Memory) for additional strategies 215

  12. Vygotsky’s Approach • Cognitive advances occur through exposure to information within zone of proximal development (ZPD) • Influential in development of classroom practices • Cooperative learning • Reciprocal teaching 215

  13. ZPD in Action! • Can you identify two ways in which the teacher helped children learn in their ZPD?

  14. LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT

  15. Mastering the Mechanics of Language in Middle Childhood • Vocabulary continues to increase • Mastery of grammar improves • Understanding of syntax grows • Certain phonemes remain troublesome • Decoding difficulties when dependent on intonation • More competence in pragmatics • Increase in meta-linguistic awareness 216

  16. Metalinguistic Awareness • One of most significant developments in middle childhood is children’s increasing understanding of their own use of language • By age 5 or 6, • Understand language is governed by set of rules • By age 7 or 8, • Realize that miscommunication be due to factors attributable not only to themselves, but to person communicating with them 217

  17. How does language promote self-control? • Helps school-age children control and regulate behavior • “Self-talk” used to help regulate behavior • Effectiveness of self-control grows as linguistic capabilities increased 217

  18. Bilingualism • English is second language for 32 million Americans 218

  19. Immigrants in the United States • Are monolingual speakers of their native language • Develop bilingualism as they acquire English • Establish English-speaking households • Raise their children as English-speaking monolinguals (Pease-Alveraz, 1993) 218

  20. Long-term Bilingualism • According to survey data, even Spanish, a language thought to be particularly enduring in the United States, seldom lasts beyond the second or third generation (Pease-Alveraz, 1993) Why do you think this occurs?

  21. Cognitive Advantages of Bilingualism • Greater cognitive flexibility • Higher self-esteem • Greater meta-linguistic awareness • Potential improved IQ scores 219

  22. Review and Apply REVIEW • Piaget believed school-age children are in the concrete operational stage, while information processing approaches focus on quantitative improvements in memory and in the sophistication of the mental programs children use. • Vygotsky suggests schoolchildren should have the opportunity to experiment and participate actively with their peers in their learning. 219

  23. Review and Apply REVIEW • Children gain increasing control over the memory processes—encoding, storage, and retrieval, and the development of metamemory improves cognitive processing and memorization. • As language develops, vocabulary, syntax, and pragmatics improve; metalinguistic awareness grows; and language is used as a self-control device. 219

  24. Review and Apply • Do adults use language (and self-talk) as a self-control device? How? 219

  25. SCHOOLING: THE THREE Rs (AND MORE) OF MIDDLE CHILDHOOD

  26. Schooling Around the World and Across Genders: Who Gets Educated? • Primary school education universal right and legal requirement? • Children in developing countries may have less access • Females in these countries receive less formal education than males 220

  27. What was the first book you remember reading?

  28. Reading: Learning to Decode Meaning Behind Words • No other task that is more fundamental to schooling than learning to read • Reading involves significant number of skills 220

  29. How Should We Teach Reading? • Disagreement about nature of mechanisms by which information is processed during reading • Code-based approaches • Whole-language approaches • National Reading Panel and National Research Council support reading instruction using code-based approaches 221

  30. Educational Trends: Beyond the Three Rs • U.S. schools are experiencing return to educational fundamentals embodied in traditional three Rs • Elementary school classrooms today stress individual accountability, both for teachers and students 221

  31. Are We Pushing Too Hard? From Research to Practice • No Child Left Behind Act • Outcomes: • Frequent testing becoming commonplace • Student scores related to federal funding • Reading instruction sometimes replaces recess and other activities • Increase in amount of homework • Some children burn out 222

  32. But is extra homework worth the cost? • Time spent on homework is associated with greater academic achievement in secondary school • Relationship gets less strong for the lower grades; below grade 5, the relationship disappears • For older children more homework is not necessarily better • Some research indicates that benefits of homework may reach plateau beyond which additional time spent on homework produces no further benefits 222

  33. Do you agree? The social and emotional development of children are taking a back seat to literacy education?

  34. Cultural Assimilation or Pluralistic Society? • Cultural assimilation model • Pluralistic society model 223

  35. Fostering a Bicultural Identity • School systems encourage children to maintain their original cultural identities while they integrate themselves into dominant culture • More contemporary approaches emphasize a bicultural strategy in which children are encouraged to maintain simultaneous membership in more than one culture 223

  36. Review and Apply REVIEW • Schooling is considered a legal right in the United States and many other countries, but millions of the world’s children do not receive even a primary education. • Reading skills generally develop in several stages. • U.S. schools have returned in recent decades to a focus on the traditional academic skills, which de-emphasize the arts and other subjects that expand children’s perspectives and social understanding. 225

  37. Review and Apply APPLY • Do you think that the emphasis on the traditional “three Rs” in middle school is appropriate? Do less “academic” subjects have a place in the regular curriculum, or should they be dealt with as “add-ons” and after’school activities? Why? 225

  38. Intelligence: Determining Individual Strengths

  39. How do you define intelligence?

  40. Intelligence Benchmarks • Binet’s Test • Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scales, Fifth Edition (SB5) • Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children—Fourth Edition (WISC-IV) • Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children, 2nd Edition (KABC-II) 225

  41. Alternative Conceptions of Intelligence • Spearman’s g • Catell: fluid and crystallize intelligence • Gardner: 8 intelligences • Vygotsky: dynamic assessment • Sternberg: triarchic theory of intelligence 227

  42. The Concept of Intelligence Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory • Three main types of intelligence • Analytic • Creative • Practical • Assessing Sternberg Triarchic Ability Theory (STAT) • Effective in predicting college GPA • More research needed

  43. Group Differences in IQ • Previous experiences of test-takers may have a substantial effect on their ability to answer questions • Cultural background and experience have the potential to affect intelligence test scores 231

  44. Racial Differences in IQ Nature or Nurture? • Mean score of African Americans tends to be about 15 IQ points lower than the mean score of whites—although the measured difference varies a great deal depending on the particular IQ test employed 231

  45. For Whom the Bell Told!! The Bell Curve Controversy • Herrnstein and Murray: Average 15-point IQ difference between whites and African Americans is due primarily to heredity 231

  46. Do you agree or disagree?

  47. Below Intelligence Norms Mental Retardation • Public Law 94-142, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act • Least restrictive environment • Mainstreaming • Full inclusion 232

  48. Benefits of Mainstreaming • Ensure that all persons, regardless of ability or disability, have access to full range of educational opportunities, and fair share of life’s rewards 233

  49. How is mental retardation identified? • American Association on Mental Retardation definition • Familial retardation • FAS • Down Syndrome • Levels • Mild • Moderate • Severe • Profound 233

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