This page presents an overview of the development of intellectual abilities in children and adolescents. Also, links to information on learning, other developmental timelines, research and parenting are included.
This page presents an overview of the development of
intellectual abilities. Children are not little adults.
Until they reach the age of 15 or so they are not
capable of reasoning as an adult. The following
information is based on the work of Jean Piaget. He was
not a psychologist. He was a developmental biologist who
devoted his life to closely observing and recording the
intellectual abilities of infants, children and
adolescents.
The stages of intellectual development formulated by
Piaget appear to be related to major developments in
brain growth. The human brain is not fully developed
until late adolescence or in the case of males sometimes
early adulthood. We often expect children to think like
adults when they are not yet capable of doing so. It is
important that parents know what to expect from their
child as they develop and to be sure that the
expectations they may have for their child at a given
age are realistic.
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Sensory Motor Period |
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Developmental Stage |
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Reflexive Stage |
Simple reflex activity such as grasping, sucking. |
| Primary Circular Reactions(2-4 months) | Reflexive behaviors occur in
stereotyped repetition such as opening and
closing fingers repetitively. |
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Secondary Circular Reactions |
Repetition of change actions to reproduce interesting consequences such as kicking one's feet to more a mobile suspended over the crib. |
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Coordination of Secondary Reactions
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Responses become coordinated into more complex sequences. Actions take on an "intentional" character such as the infant reaches behind a screen to obtain a hidden object. |
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Tertiary Circular Reactions |
Discovery of new ways to produce the same consequence or obtain the same goal such as the infant may pull a pillow toward him in an attempt to get a toy resting on it. |
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Invention of New Means Through Mental
Combination |
Evidence of an internal representational system. Symbolizing the problem-solving sequence before actually responding. Deferred imitation. |
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The Preoperational
Period |
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Developmental Stage |
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Preoperational Phase |
Increased use of verbal representation but speech is egocentric. The beginnings of symbolic rather than simple motor play. Transductive reasoning. Can think about something without the object being present by use of language. |
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Intuitive Phase |
Speech becomes more social, less egocentric.
The child has an intuitive grasp of logical
concepts in some areas. However, there is still
a tendency to focus attention on one aspect of
an object while ignoring others. Concepts formed
are crude and irreversible. Easy to believe in
magical increase, decrease, disappearance.
Reality not firm. Perceptions dominate judgment.
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Period of Concrete
Operations Characteristic Behavior: |
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Period of Formal
Operations Characteristic Behavior: |
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