Child Development

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CHILD DEVELOPMENT

Child Development

Child Development

Introduction

This paper is designed to introduce readers to topics (i.e., physical, cognitive, language, personality and social, and morality development) that have helped us to better understand how children are unique, intriguing beings when it comes to their development.

Cognitive Development by Piaget, Vygotsky and Bruner

Lev Vygotsky, Jean Piaget, and Jerome Bruner have emphasized cognitive development as being intimately linked to the brain's construction of knowledge within a social context. Their work has been instrumental in providing a foundation for multiage grouping

Lev Vygotsky. Vygotsky asserts that the most fruitful experience in a child's education is his or her collaboration with more skilled partners. Vygotsky explains that the more experienced partner provides help in the way of an intellectual scaffold, which allows the less experienced learner to accomplish more complex tasks than may be possible alone (Stone, 1995; McClellan, 1994). Within a multiage setting, many opportunities exist for interaction between children of different ages, experiences, and developmental levels.

Jean Piaget. Piaget considers the most critical factor in a child's cognitive development to be interaction with peers. Interaction lends opportunities for the child to have cognitive conflict, which results in arguing or debating with peers. This type of interaction requires children to decenter, or consider another person's point of view. Piaget observes that children are most challenged in their thinking when they are with peers, because they all are on an equal footing and are more free to confront ideas than when interacting with adults. However, when children are too similar in their thinking, there may be little to debate about, resulting in fewer developmental gains (Stone, 1995; McClellan, 1994). The multiage setting maximizes a child's opportunity for cognitive conflict because it brings together children at a variety of developmental levels. For further information, refer to Thinking About Piaget in Relationship to the Mixed-Age Classroom (McClellan, 1993).

Jerome Bruner. Bruner observes that the process of constructing knowledge of the world is not done in isolation but rather within a social context. The child is a social being and, through social life, acquires a framework for interpreting experiences (Bruner & Haste, 1987). Bruner (1966) also notes that "there is no unique sequence for all learners, and the optimum in any particular case will depend upon a variety of factors, including past learning, stage of development, nature of the material, and individual differences" (p. 49). Effective curriculum then, must provide many opportunities and choices for children (Anderson & Pavan, 1993). Within the multiage setting, opportunities exist for children to make choices about their learning experiences. In addition, the variety of teaching methods used in the multiage classroom provides opportunities for children to construct knowledge in a multitude of ways.

Noam Chomsky on Language

Noam Chomsky's answer to this question in part characterizes the importance of his linguistic theories to modern thought. In his view, to truly study language is to study a part of human nature, manifested in the human mind. What does he mean by this? To begin, one has to understand what Chomsky thinks ...
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