An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age

This enquiry is concerned with the examination of a particular aspect of Piagetian theory, the conservation performance of five to nine years old British and Korean children (N =360) in contrasting social and educational backgrounds. The tests used were a) the Standard Piagetian Test, b) a revised t...

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Main Author: Chung, Mi-Ryung
Published: University of Edinburgh 1984
Subjects:
150
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.352996
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-3529962018-10-09T03:23:46ZAn analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of ageChung, Mi-Ryung1984This enquiry is concerned with the examination of a particular aspect of Piagetian theory, the conservation performance of five to nine years old British and Korean children (N =360) in contrasting social and educational backgrounds. The tests used were a) the Standard Piagetian Test, b) a revised test, c) a new test devised to allow children to reason in relatin to culturally familiar contexts. The main findings are: (1) Children's ability to think logically was not satisfactorily assessed by administering logical and and mathematical tasks proposed by Piaget. Such ability was revealed better through test which took into consideration of the children's fmailiar conceptual experience. (2) An appropriate usage of child language in the tests affects the level of performance of young children in solving cognitive tasks successfully (This could mean that there is a mismatch between children's language and their thinking, (3) Almost all the children in this study, regardless of their ages (5 -9) or their social and educational and cultural backgrounds, can think logically. However, their ways of understanding logical and mathematical problems differ vastly among extreme cultural groups. This means that children's understanding of the logical structure of experimental tasks does not provide a satisfactory estimate of their "free" cognitive ability. It is therefore suggested that any method of evaluating children's ability to think logically has to be adapted to the children's level of knowledge, their experience of applying such knowledge in their activities and their language proficiency. In Piagetian theory, cognitive ability is equivalent to the ability to understand the structure and logic of mathematical tasks. On the contrary, the investigator suggests that cognitive ability of children is, in fact, a facet of their life experience. It is also argued that the ability to solve abstract tasks does not necessarily correspond to the ability to understand the principle of the knowledge concerned.150PsychologyUniversity of Edinburghhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.352996http://hdl.handle.net/1842/27795Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 150
Psychology
spellingShingle 150
Psychology
Chung, Mi-Ryung
An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
description This enquiry is concerned with the examination of a particular aspect of Piagetian theory, the conservation performance of five to nine years old British and Korean children (N =360) in contrasting social and educational backgrounds. The tests used were a) the Standard Piagetian Test, b) a revised test, c) a new test devised to allow children to reason in relatin to culturally familiar contexts. The main findings are: (1) Children's ability to think logically was not satisfactorily assessed by administering logical and and mathematical tasks proposed by Piaget. Such ability was revealed better through test which took into consideration of the children's fmailiar conceptual experience. (2) An appropriate usage of child language in the tests affects the level of performance of young children in solving cognitive tasks successfully (This could mean that there is a mismatch between children's language and their thinking, (3) Almost all the children in this study, regardless of their ages (5 -9) or their social and educational and cultural backgrounds, can think logically. However, their ways of understanding logical and mathematical problems differ vastly among extreme cultural groups. This means that children's understanding of the logical structure of experimental tasks does not provide a satisfactory estimate of their "free" cognitive ability. It is therefore suggested that any method of evaluating children's ability to think logically has to be adapted to the children's level of knowledge, their experience of applying such knowledge in their activities and their language proficiency. In Piagetian theory, cognitive ability is equivalent to the ability to understand the structure and logic of mathematical tasks. On the contrary, the investigator suggests that cognitive ability of children is, in fact, a facet of their life experience. It is also argued that the ability to solve abstract tasks does not necessarily correspond to the ability to understand the principle of the knowledge concerned.
author Chung, Mi-Ryung
author_facet Chung, Mi-Ryung
author_sort Chung, Mi-Ryung
title An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
title_short An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
title_full An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
title_fullStr An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
title_full_unstemmed An analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
title_sort analysis of pre-operational and concrete-operational thinking in contrasting social and cultural contexts : a study of cognitive development in children from five to nine years of age
publisher University of Edinburgh
publishDate 1984
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.352996
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