Across
- 4. the stage in development from 2-7 years, when the child is increasingly able to assimilate and accommodate ideas and therefore think and imagine in more complex ways
- 5. difficulty in seeing things from another person’s perspective.
- 6. understanding that something can change from one state to another.
- 10. behaviour that is carried out with a particular purpose in mind
- 15. Piaget's nationality
- 16. a way of thinking that does not rely on being able to see or visualise things in order to understand concepts.
- 19. the continuous process of using the environment to learn, and adjusting to changes that occur in the environment
- 21. taking in new information and fitting it into an existing mental idea
Down
- 1. understanding that an object’s weight, mass, volume or area remains the same even if the object changes shape in appearance.
- 2. organising information into categories based on common features
- 3. a mental idea or organised mental representation of what something is and how to deal with it.
- 7. the mental ability to reason soundly and systematically on the basis of known information
- 8. the stage about 12 years of age where complex thought processes become evident and thinking becomes incredibly sophisticated.
- 9. A Swiss developmental psychologist and philosopher known for his studies with children in cognitive development
- 11. this stage in development is from 7-12 years. The thinking in this stage revolves around what children know and what they can experience through their senses (what is ‘concrete’).
- 12. changing an existing mental idea in order to fit new information
- 13. understanding that objects still exist even if they cannot be seen or touched.
- 14. following a line of reasoning back to its original starting point.
- 17. The first stage of cognitive development, when infants construct their knowledge of the world by co-ordinating sensory experiences with motor abilities.
- 18. focussing on only one quality or feature of an object at a time
- 20. Believing that everything which exists has some kind of consciousness or awareness