Cognitive development in school-age children has been one of the most active areas of research in developmental science. Yet the range of issues investigated has been relatively narrow and based primarily on Piaget's theory of cognitive development, school-related concerns about the testing of intelligence and achievement, and behaviorist theories of conditioning and learning and, more recently, information-processing theories.
Today many cognitive-developmental scholars are moving toward a broader, more integrative orientation, emphasizing relationships among the traditional categories for behavior (cognition, emotion, social behavior, personality, and so forth) and constructs that highlight the interaction or collaboration of child and environment. There has also been a growing emphasis on constructing and using methods and statistics that allow direct tests of cognitive-developmental hypotheses, in place of traditional methods and statistics, which often do not allow appropriate tests.
A Portrait Of The Capacities Of The School-Age Child
The cognitive capacities that develop during the school years do not develop in stages as traditionally defined. Instead, children's abilities seem to cumulate gradually and to show wide variations as a function of environmental support. Certain components of children's capacities do show weakly stagelike characteristics, however. At specific periods a wide range of children's abilities appear to undergo rapid development. These spurts may be particularly evident in children's best performances.
When the various neo-Piagetian theories are compared, there seems to be a consensus, with substantial empirical support, that four of these large-scale reorganizations occur between ages 4 and 18. At approximately age 4, middle-class children develop the capacity to construct simple relationships of representations, coordinating two or more ideas. The capacity for concrete operations emerges at age 6-7, as children become able to deal with complex problems about concrete objects and events. The first level of formal operations appears at age 10-12, when children can build general categories based on concrete instances and when they can begin to reason hypothetically. Abilities take another leap forward at age 14-16, when children develop the capacity to relate abstractions or hypotheses.
Cognitive developmentalists have often assumed that all children move through the same general developmental sequences, but research suggests that such generality occurs at best only for the most global analytic categories, such as concrete and formal operations. With more specific analyses, it seems that children will demonstrate important differences in developmental sequences. Only with research on these differences will a full portrait of school-age children's capacities be possible.
Little consensus exists on the specific processes underlying the cognitive changes that occur during the school years. Most characterizations of these processes fall into two opposing frameworks: an emphasis on changes in organization, usually conceptualized in terms of either logic or short-term memory capacity, versus an emphasis on continuous accumulation of independent habits or production systems. Progress is not likely to arise from continuation of arguments based on this assumption of opposition. The most promising direction for resolution would seem to lie in attempts to determine when abilities show reorganization and when they show continuous accumulation.
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