Psychology, asked by iviemaycolina345, 3 months ago

It's a Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development: analogy
Siblings, Tria 10, Enzo 8, and Riel 4, were sorting out their stuffed animals. They had 7 bears, 3 dogs, 2 cows, and 1 dolphin. Mommy , a psychlogy teacher , enters and says, ''Good thing you're sorting those. Do you have more stuffed animals or more bears? Tria and Enzo says, stuffed animals. Riel says, Bears...Why do you think Riel answered Bears? What does this say about how she thought to answer the question?

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Answered by Jasleen0599
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It's a Piaget's Stages of Cognitive Development: analogy Siblings, Tria 10, Enzo 8, and Riel 4, were sorting out their stuffed animals. They had 7 bears, 3 dogs, 2 cows, and 1 dolphin. Mommy , a psychlogy teacher , enters and says, ''Good thing you're sorting those.

  • stage of sensory-motor (0–2 years old) preliminary phase (2–7 years old) concrete stage of operation (7–11 years old) stage of formal operation (11 years old to adulthood) Each of the four stages that Piaget identified for children's cognitive development represents a different method of thinking about and comprehending the environment. He identified them as (4) formal operational thinking, (5) concrete operational thinking, (6) preoperational thinking, and (7) sensorimotor intelligence.
  • Birth through two years is the sensorimotor stage. Ages 2 to 7 in the preoperational stage. Ages 7 to 11 in concrete operating stage. Minimum age for formal operating stage is 12.
  • For instance, by playing with a toy animal repeatedly, a baby learns what it is and remembers their previous experiences with it. This comprehension, known as object permanence by Piaget, denotes the awareness of the toy even when it is hidden.
  • Sensorimotor intelligence, preoperational thinking, concrete operational thinking, and formal operational thinking were the four main phases of cognitive development identified by Piaget.

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