Waubonsee Community College

The grasp of consciousness, action and concept in the young child, Jean Piaget ; translated by Susan Wedgwood

Label
The grasp of consciousness, action and concept in the young child, Jean Piaget ; translated by Susan Wedgwood
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
The grasp of consciousness
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1974250
Responsibility statement
Jean Piaget ; translated by Susan Wedgwood
Sub title
action and concept in the young child
Summary
In this volume, the world's foremost cognitive psychologist turns his attention to the development of the child's awareness of his own action. The book reports the results of experimentation conducted at the world-famed Center of Genetic Epistemology in Geneva, to distinguish between the child's ability to perform the actions required by a simple task and the child's understanding of the rationale behind the action. Children, ranging in age between four and adolescence, were asked to perform such tasks as walking on all fours, playing tiddlywinks, building a ramp for a toy car. They were then asked to explain how they had performed the task and in some cases to instruct the interviewer. Their answers show a number of surprising inaccuracies in the child's ability to grasp the nature of what he had done. Taking a broad view of his results, Piaget shows that they reveal several stages in the slow and gradual development of the child's conceptualization of his actions. In analyzing each stage, Piaget argues that the child's concept of his own action cannot be considered a simple matter of "enlightenment," but must be actively reconstructed from his experience. This view has always been at the core of Piaget's work, and it is here extended into an interesting new area of the child's mental world.-- Book Jacket
Table Of Contents
Walking on all fours -- The path of an object launched by a sling -- The ping-pong ball (or the hoop) -- The slope -- Building a road up a hill -- Tiddlywinks -- The impact of one ball on another -- Pushing symmetrical and asymmetrical objects -- Towing a small rectangular box -- The catapult -- The flying balloon -- The construction of tracks by means of connecting rails -- Rings and string -- The Hanoi Tower -- Seriation -- Conclusions
Classification
Content
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