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WHAT IS COGNITIVE
DEVELOPMENT ?
• Development of children’s thinking,
reasoning and problem-solving skills.
• Children develop their thinking from the
simple to the complex and from the
concrete to the abstract.
• How a person perceives, thinks, and gains
understanding of his or her world through
the interaction of genetic and learned
factors.
Cognition is the mental activity and behavior
that allows us to understand the world.
The Benefits Of Understanding
Cognitive Development
• Whether you believe or agree with Piaget’s complex theories of
cognitive development, they at least allow parents to understand
what is normal and appropriate for general age groups.
• Toys, games, and activities are easier to choose if you understand
the stages of a child’s cognitive development. If you know that most
children do some things at a certain age, you will know that you don’t
need to change that behavior. You will understand that it is not your
fault your child is doing something annoying.
• By understanding normal development, you can tell when a child’s
development may be lagging behind their peers. In most cases, it’s
fine, but there are some red flags in children’s development that may
be worth raising with a doctor or specialist.
PRE OPERATIONAL
STAGE
SYMBOLIC FUNCTION
(2-4 Years)
INTUITIVE THOUGHT
(4-7 Years)
Symbolic Function Sub-stage,
which spans ages 2-4 years
Symbolic functioning
• It is the ability to use symbols such as words,
images, and gestures to represent objects and
events.
• Between the ages of 2 and 4, a child can
perform Symbolic Functions or think about
objects even though they are not real or
present. At this stage, they engage in rich
pretend play and use more language.
Transformation
• It is a person's ability to understand how certain
physical characteristics change while others remain the
same in a logical, cause and effect sequence. According
to Piaget, Preoperational Children do not readily
understand how things can change from one form to
another. To demonstrate this concept, Piaget first
showed young children two 1-inch round balls of clay.
Then, he presented the children with one 1-inch round
ball of clay and one 1-inch ball of clay squished flat. A
young person in the Preoperational stage would not
understand that the flat ball had been round before
and was squished to make its new shape.
Egocentrism
• Piaget also believed that Preoperational children have
a style of thinking characterized by Egocentrism, or the
inability to see the world someone else's point of view.
• According to Piaget, children with Egocentrism explain
situations from their own perspective and
understanding. Preoperational children also have a
hard time understanding why banging on pots and
pans or playing with a musical toy could increase their
mother's headache when they're having so much fun.
• The child thinks only about himself – on his own needs
and desires and can’t accommodate to other people.
Animism or Animistic Thinking
• Characteristics of the symbolic function sub stage in preoperational
stage. Children believe that inanimate objects are given human
characteristics.
• They belief that everything that exists has some kind of
consciousness.
• For example, children often believe that a car won't start because it is
tired or sick.
• Children may talk about cars like animals, as if they're growling or
that they're hungry.
• Similarly, young children may blame chairs or toys for causing them
to fall or trip.
• Children under the age of 4 don't have the ability to organize things
into hierarchical categories.
• Young children are unable to group items in larger sub-groups and
smaller sub-groups based on similarities and differences.
Transductive thinking in preoperational stage:
Transductive thinking is prominent in children’s thoughts. They create
a connection between two situations that occurs at the same time,
even though there’s nothing in common to both of them.
Transductive reasoning leads to illogical conclusions, since it involves
reasoning from one particular instance to another particular
instance without reference to the general . Transduction can
sometimes yield a correct conclusion, but the overgeneralization
resulting from this type of reasoning often leads to stubborn, rigid
behavior .
• As the child matures, he becomes capable of logical thought
based on inductive and deductive reasoning.
“Inductive reasoning” proceeds from specific to general
“Deductive reasoning” moves from general to specific.
IDENTITY CONSTANCY
• Preschoolers aged 3-4 years have not yet
attained “identify constancy”, or the
understanding that features of individuals, like
their sex, age, or species, are permanent and
unaffected by appearance.
NUMBERS
• At this stage, children lack a mature concept
of numbers as separate values. Four or five
year olds can count relatively easily from 0 to
10, but it is hard for them to answer, six is
more or less than three.
Intuitive Thought sub-stage, which
spans ages 4-7 years
Intuitive Thought
• Children in this sub-stage of development learn by asking questions
such as, "Why?" and "How come?" Piaget labeled this "intuitive
thought" because he believed that children at this stage tend to be
so certain of their knowledge and understanding that they are
unaware of how they gained this knowledge in the first place (i.e.,
knowing by intuition).
• In this process the child builds cognitive thinking based on
impression at the current moment.
• The child thinks through Subjective impression, which means that
the child cannot carry out conservational tasks.
• Preoperational stage shows that children at this sub-stage can’t act
with reversible thinking and they Cannot concentrate on more than
one dimension of the problem – concentrations.
• The intuitive thought Cause concentrate only about what appears
to be prominent at the moment.
Illustrative Example: intuitive thought
in preoperational stage:
I showed to Doron and Dan Two apples at equal size. I sliced the
two apples into ten equal pieces. I put the first 10 pieces on a
saucer and the other 10 ​​on a tray .
When I asked the children What Apple they prefer? The one
the saucer or the one ​​on a tray?
Doron and Dan chose the Apple I sliced ​​on a tray.
Doron and Dan are thinking that the amount of apple pieces
on the tray is larger then
the amount of pieces on the plate.
In conclusion:
Doron and Dan cannot concentrate on the number of apple
pieces and the same time, pay attention to the surface area of
the plate or the tray – concentration.
They cannot remember the apple in his original state, to
realize that the apple stays the same size, even though it was
cut to pieces, changing it’s form - reversible thinking.
Centration
• Piaget also suggested that Intuitive Thinking children
show a style of thinking he called "Centration". These
children typically hone in on one characteristic of
someone or something, and base their decisions or
judgment on that one characteristic (rather than
considering multiple characteristics).
• For example, a 4 yr. old who was asked to put blocks
into groups might focus his or her attention on the
color of the blocks instead of the shape or the material
from which they are constructed. De-centering,
combined with the concept of conservation (described
above) are prerequisites to more sophisticated logical
thinking abilities.
More Rational
• Children in the Intuitive Thought sub-stage also
show many advances in cognitive skills. For
example, young children shift from depending on
magical beliefs to using rational beliefs to explain
situations or events that they haven't
encountered before. Very young children may
explain that a new house "grew out of the
ground," while older children understand that
human beings put boards, bricks, and other
materials together to build it.
Ability to comprehend dual
relationships
• Another large gain during this sub-stage is the
ability to comprehend dual relationships.
Children now understand that something can
be both an object itself as well as a symbol for
something else. For example, a stuffed toy dog
is a fun, furry toy as well as a representation
of living and toy dogs in general.
FINALISM
• It is the belief that all movements
accomplishes some purpose.
• Since preschoolers believe themselves to be
the center of the universe, they feel they can
alter reality by their thoughts or wishes. Such
a belief is called “ MAGICAL THINKING”.
Concreteness
• A final characteristic of preschoolers’ cognitive
development is the static quality, or
“concreteness” of their language. Young
children tend to describe tangible and
observable aspects of the environment,
disregarding subtleties and abstractions.
REASONING & CONCEPT
FORMATION
Concatenative Thought
• Egocentrism and centration both affect the
preschool child’s ability to reason and to solve
everyday problems. When attempting to
explain causes and effect, preschoolers
assume that the observable characteristics of
an object have something to do with the
outcome.
CONCEPT FORMATION
• According to Piaget’s concept formation is one of
the most important cognitive achievements of
childhood. Concepts are cognitive categories that
help children-and adults- organize information
and acquire new knowledge.
• Children acquire more basic concepts such as
dog, house, and toy relatively early.
• Other more abstract concepts , such as number,
distance, and space, require more time.
Conservation
• The most important acquisition of the preoperational period is an
elementary understanding of the notion of conservation.
• Typically, the child learns to conserve number at the end of the period of
pre conceptual thought but cannot yet conserve other characteristics such
as mass and volume.
• Conservation is a person's ability to understand that certain physical
characteristics of objects remain the same, even if their appearance has
changed. To demonstrate the concept of Conservation, Piaget showed
young children two identical cups filled with identical volumes of water
(reaching to the same measuring line). Preoperational youth agreed the
cups had the same amount of liquid in them. Piaget proceeded to pour the
liquid from one of the original cups into a wide, short cup. Then, he poured
the liquid from the second original cup into a tall, narrow cup. When he
asked Preoperational kids which cup had more liquid, they chose the taller
cup. To these children, the taller cup looked like it had more volume even
though the same amount of fluid filled both cups.
• The concept of conservation can apply to number as well. For example,
according to Piaget, a Preoperational child will not understand that
rearranging six keys to make a different formation (e.g., spreading them out
or moving them closer together) does not change the number of items
present.
IRREVERSABILITY
• Another limitation of preoperational thought
is “irreversibility”.
• Children at this stage cannot play back actions
in their imaginations in order to reconstruct
the original.
Classification
• Sorting objects into categories or classes on the basis
of color, shape or size.
• Preschoolers have the inability in sorting objects.
• Children under 7 cannot consistently order objects
according to some dimension or the other.
• Although they can identify the end points of the
classification.
• They are rarely able to sort multicolored shapes
correctly.
• Can focus only on single attribute while classifying.
Seriation
• Transitivity is the term used by Piaget &
Inhelder for Seriation.
• The arranging of the things in a logical
progression i.e., tallest to shortest or lightest
to darkest.
• Cannot see a relation between more than two
elements at one time or between the
individual parts & the whole.
Class Inclusion
• Preschoolers have a difficulty in understanding
that one item can belong to several subsets or
classes.
• Training can aid the acquisition of class
inclusion skills.
• For example, a preschooler given a subset of 3
chairs & a table and asked, “Are there more
Chairs or more Furniture?” will usually
respond “More Chairs.”
WHAT CHILDREN
CAN DO
HOW PARENTS
CAN HELP
Be confused about present, past and future.
(3 to 4 years)
When reading a story, ask your child what
happened first, next and last. Use a calendar to
count down days to anticipated events and to
help him/her understand the passage of time.
Sort and classify objects by color, shape, sizes,
etc.
(3 to 4 years)
Ask your child to help you sort the laundry and
separate light and dark clothes into different
piles. Play “I Spy” and encourage him/her to
identify things by color, or shape. Go on a
“shape/color hunt” and try to point out things
that are blue, green, round, square, etc.
WHAT
CHILDREN CAN
DO
HOW PARENTS
CAN HELP
Learn through causality (cause and effect)
and problem solving.
(4–5 years)
Encourage your child to find the solution to a
problem by providing assistance rather than
giving him/her the solution. Ask questions, such
as, “What do you think will happen if we take the
snow inside the house?” At bath time, ask, “What
do you think will happen if we put a heavy object
in the water? Will it sink or float?”
Organize objects from small to big, light to
heavy, etc.
(4–5 year olds)
Play games in which your child can sort objects
from small to big (buttons, plastic containers, etc.)
or light to heavy (feathers, cardboard, wood
blocks, etc.).
AGE APPROPRIATE
TOYS
DEVELOPMENTAL
NEEDS
APPROPRIATE TOYS
Advances in pouring & measuring cooking
Learns mechanical skills Sturdy record player, magnets, jewelry kits like
big beads
Refines listening Songs, nursery rhymes
Enjoys simple stories Story books
Love language Important to read aloud to children until they
can read comfortably (age 7-8)
classifies Good blocks-variety of good shapes & sizes
Manipulates better Large crayons/markers for drawing
Plays imaginatively, makes houses Dolls(for boys, too), old clothes/hats, puppets,
small gym set for multi-use
2 TO 3 YEARS
DEVELOPMENTAL
NEEDS
APPROPRIATE TOYS
Imitates parent of same gender (ages 3-6) Toys to play house, store, doctor
Begins small muscle coordination (girls have
better fine motor skills and wrist rotation for
turning knobs, dressing and brushing teeth at
this age)
Small tools, cooking equipment
Drawing equipment (big pad of paper, liquid
paints & wide brushes-small watercolor sets
too frustrating)
Modeling clay
Begins to cut Safety scissors, paste & colored paper
Begins to play Houses, forts from boxes, sheets
Continues big muscle development Tricycle, wheelbarrow, small rake, jungle gym
Gains leg strength, balances Small bunk to throw/catch
3 TO 4 YEARS
DEVELOPMENTAL
NEEDS
APPROPRIATE TOYS
Builds complex structures Lincoln Logs
Wants highly realistic miniature toys (ages 4-7) Dollhouse, cars, fire station
Needs eye-hand coordination Spiro graph, caroms, big needlepoint
Big ball to bounce
Needs foot-eye coordination Sidewalk games
Begins math/science concepts Simple board games with counting (dice or
diamond cards)
By age 5, can tell long story accurately & add
fantasy
Short fiction & nonfiction in areas of interest
(dinosaurs)
Asks how things work and meanings of words
4 TO 5 YEARS
DEVELOPMENTAL
NEEDS
APPROPRIATE TOYS
Has lots of energy Ball games items
Likes complex projects (continues for days) Simple model boat, house
Likes cutting, pasting & folding Paper dolls, activity books, easy origami
Counts to 30s Cribbage, games with adding/substracting
5 TO 6 YEARS
PREPARED & COMPILED BY:
AASHNA (05)
Semester-IV
Delhi University

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Cognitive development including piaget's theory(mainly in pre-school years)

  • 1.
  • 2. WHAT IS COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT ? • Development of children’s thinking, reasoning and problem-solving skills. • Children develop their thinking from the simple to the complex and from the concrete to the abstract. • How a person perceives, thinks, and gains understanding of his or her world through the interaction of genetic and learned factors.
  • 3. Cognition is the mental activity and behavior that allows us to understand the world.
  • 4. The Benefits Of Understanding Cognitive Development • Whether you believe or agree with Piaget’s complex theories of cognitive development, they at least allow parents to understand what is normal and appropriate for general age groups. • Toys, games, and activities are easier to choose if you understand the stages of a child’s cognitive development. If you know that most children do some things at a certain age, you will know that you don’t need to change that behavior. You will understand that it is not your fault your child is doing something annoying. • By understanding normal development, you can tell when a child’s development may be lagging behind their peers. In most cases, it’s fine, but there are some red flags in children’s development that may be worth raising with a doctor or specialist.
  • 5.
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8.
  • 9. PRE OPERATIONAL STAGE SYMBOLIC FUNCTION (2-4 Years) INTUITIVE THOUGHT (4-7 Years)
  • 10. Symbolic Function Sub-stage, which spans ages 2-4 years
  • 11. Symbolic functioning • It is the ability to use symbols such as words, images, and gestures to represent objects and events. • Between the ages of 2 and 4, a child can perform Symbolic Functions or think about objects even though they are not real or present. At this stage, they engage in rich pretend play and use more language.
  • 12. Transformation • It is a person's ability to understand how certain physical characteristics change while others remain the same in a logical, cause and effect sequence. According to Piaget, Preoperational Children do not readily understand how things can change from one form to another. To demonstrate this concept, Piaget first showed young children two 1-inch round balls of clay. Then, he presented the children with one 1-inch round ball of clay and one 1-inch ball of clay squished flat. A young person in the Preoperational stage would not understand that the flat ball had been round before and was squished to make its new shape.
  • 13. Egocentrism • Piaget also believed that Preoperational children have a style of thinking characterized by Egocentrism, or the inability to see the world someone else's point of view. • According to Piaget, children with Egocentrism explain situations from their own perspective and understanding. Preoperational children also have a hard time understanding why banging on pots and pans or playing with a musical toy could increase their mother's headache when they're having so much fun. • The child thinks only about himself – on his own needs and desires and can’t accommodate to other people.
  • 14. Animism or Animistic Thinking • Characteristics of the symbolic function sub stage in preoperational stage. Children believe that inanimate objects are given human characteristics. • They belief that everything that exists has some kind of consciousness. • For example, children often believe that a car won't start because it is tired or sick. • Children may talk about cars like animals, as if they're growling or that they're hungry. • Similarly, young children may blame chairs or toys for causing them to fall or trip. • Children under the age of 4 don't have the ability to organize things into hierarchical categories. • Young children are unable to group items in larger sub-groups and smaller sub-groups based on similarities and differences.
  • 15. Transductive thinking in preoperational stage: Transductive thinking is prominent in children’s thoughts. They create a connection between two situations that occurs at the same time, even though there’s nothing in common to both of them. Transductive reasoning leads to illogical conclusions, since it involves reasoning from one particular instance to another particular instance without reference to the general . Transduction can sometimes yield a correct conclusion, but the overgeneralization resulting from this type of reasoning often leads to stubborn, rigid behavior . • As the child matures, he becomes capable of logical thought based on inductive and deductive reasoning. “Inductive reasoning” proceeds from specific to general “Deductive reasoning” moves from general to specific.
  • 16. IDENTITY CONSTANCY • Preschoolers aged 3-4 years have not yet attained “identify constancy”, or the understanding that features of individuals, like their sex, age, or species, are permanent and unaffected by appearance.
  • 17. NUMBERS • At this stage, children lack a mature concept of numbers as separate values. Four or five year olds can count relatively easily from 0 to 10, but it is hard for them to answer, six is more or less than three.
  • 18. Intuitive Thought sub-stage, which spans ages 4-7 years
  • 19. Intuitive Thought • Children in this sub-stage of development learn by asking questions such as, "Why?" and "How come?" Piaget labeled this "intuitive thought" because he believed that children at this stage tend to be so certain of their knowledge and understanding that they are unaware of how they gained this knowledge in the first place (i.e., knowing by intuition). • In this process the child builds cognitive thinking based on impression at the current moment. • The child thinks through Subjective impression, which means that the child cannot carry out conservational tasks. • Preoperational stage shows that children at this sub-stage can’t act with reversible thinking and they Cannot concentrate on more than one dimension of the problem – concentrations. • The intuitive thought Cause concentrate only about what appears to be prominent at the moment.
  • 20. Illustrative Example: intuitive thought in preoperational stage: I showed to Doron and Dan Two apples at equal size. I sliced the two apples into ten equal pieces. I put the first 10 pieces on a saucer and the other 10 ​​on a tray . When I asked the children What Apple they prefer? The one the saucer or the one ​​on a tray? Doron and Dan chose the Apple I sliced ​​on a tray. Doron and Dan are thinking that the amount of apple pieces on the tray is larger then the amount of pieces on the plate. In conclusion: Doron and Dan cannot concentrate on the number of apple pieces and the same time, pay attention to the surface area of the plate or the tray – concentration. They cannot remember the apple in his original state, to realize that the apple stays the same size, even though it was cut to pieces, changing it’s form - reversible thinking.
  • 21. Centration • Piaget also suggested that Intuitive Thinking children show a style of thinking he called "Centration". These children typically hone in on one characteristic of someone or something, and base their decisions or judgment on that one characteristic (rather than considering multiple characteristics). • For example, a 4 yr. old who was asked to put blocks into groups might focus his or her attention on the color of the blocks instead of the shape or the material from which they are constructed. De-centering, combined with the concept of conservation (described above) are prerequisites to more sophisticated logical thinking abilities.
  • 22. More Rational • Children in the Intuitive Thought sub-stage also show many advances in cognitive skills. For example, young children shift from depending on magical beliefs to using rational beliefs to explain situations or events that they haven't encountered before. Very young children may explain that a new house "grew out of the ground," while older children understand that human beings put boards, bricks, and other materials together to build it.
  • 23. Ability to comprehend dual relationships • Another large gain during this sub-stage is the ability to comprehend dual relationships. Children now understand that something can be both an object itself as well as a symbol for something else. For example, a stuffed toy dog is a fun, furry toy as well as a representation of living and toy dogs in general.
  • 24. FINALISM • It is the belief that all movements accomplishes some purpose. • Since preschoolers believe themselves to be the center of the universe, they feel they can alter reality by their thoughts or wishes. Such a belief is called “ MAGICAL THINKING”.
  • 25. Concreteness • A final characteristic of preschoolers’ cognitive development is the static quality, or “concreteness” of their language. Young children tend to describe tangible and observable aspects of the environment, disregarding subtleties and abstractions.
  • 27. Concatenative Thought • Egocentrism and centration both affect the preschool child’s ability to reason and to solve everyday problems. When attempting to explain causes and effect, preschoolers assume that the observable characteristics of an object have something to do with the outcome.
  • 28. CONCEPT FORMATION • According to Piaget’s concept formation is one of the most important cognitive achievements of childhood. Concepts are cognitive categories that help children-and adults- organize information and acquire new knowledge. • Children acquire more basic concepts such as dog, house, and toy relatively early. • Other more abstract concepts , such as number, distance, and space, require more time.
  • 29. Conservation • The most important acquisition of the preoperational period is an elementary understanding of the notion of conservation. • Typically, the child learns to conserve number at the end of the period of pre conceptual thought but cannot yet conserve other characteristics such as mass and volume. • Conservation is a person's ability to understand that certain physical characteristics of objects remain the same, even if their appearance has changed. To demonstrate the concept of Conservation, Piaget showed young children two identical cups filled with identical volumes of water (reaching to the same measuring line). Preoperational youth agreed the cups had the same amount of liquid in them. Piaget proceeded to pour the liquid from one of the original cups into a wide, short cup. Then, he poured the liquid from the second original cup into a tall, narrow cup. When he asked Preoperational kids which cup had more liquid, they chose the taller cup. To these children, the taller cup looked like it had more volume even though the same amount of fluid filled both cups. • The concept of conservation can apply to number as well. For example, according to Piaget, a Preoperational child will not understand that rearranging six keys to make a different formation (e.g., spreading them out or moving them closer together) does not change the number of items present.
  • 30.
  • 31. IRREVERSABILITY • Another limitation of preoperational thought is “irreversibility”. • Children at this stage cannot play back actions in their imaginations in order to reconstruct the original.
  • 32. Classification • Sorting objects into categories or classes on the basis of color, shape or size. • Preschoolers have the inability in sorting objects. • Children under 7 cannot consistently order objects according to some dimension or the other. • Although they can identify the end points of the classification. • They are rarely able to sort multicolored shapes correctly. • Can focus only on single attribute while classifying.
  • 33. Seriation • Transitivity is the term used by Piaget & Inhelder for Seriation. • The arranging of the things in a logical progression i.e., tallest to shortest or lightest to darkest. • Cannot see a relation between more than two elements at one time or between the individual parts & the whole.
  • 34.
  • 35. Class Inclusion • Preschoolers have a difficulty in understanding that one item can belong to several subsets or classes. • Training can aid the acquisition of class inclusion skills. • For example, a preschooler given a subset of 3 chairs & a table and asked, “Are there more Chairs or more Furniture?” will usually respond “More Chairs.”
  • 36. WHAT CHILDREN CAN DO HOW PARENTS CAN HELP Be confused about present, past and future. (3 to 4 years) When reading a story, ask your child what happened first, next and last. Use a calendar to count down days to anticipated events and to help him/her understand the passage of time. Sort and classify objects by color, shape, sizes, etc. (3 to 4 years) Ask your child to help you sort the laundry and separate light and dark clothes into different piles. Play “I Spy” and encourage him/her to identify things by color, or shape. Go on a “shape/color hunt” and try to point out things that are blue, green, round, square, etc.
  • 37. WHAT CHILDREN CAN DO HOW PARENTS CAN HELP Learn through causality (cause and effect) and problem solving. (4–5 years) Encourage your child to find the solution to a problem by providing assistance rather than giving him/her the solution. Ask questions, such as, “What do you think will happen if we take the snow inside the house?” At bath time, ask, “What do you think will happen if we put a heavy object in the water? Will it sink or float?” Organize objects from small to big, light to heavy, etc. (4–5 year olds) Play games in which your child can sort objects from small to big (buttons, plastic containers, etc.) or light to heavy (feathers, cardboard, wood blocks, etc.).
  • 39. DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS APPROPRIATE TOYS Advances in pouring & measuring cooking Learns mechanical skills Sturdy record player, magnets, jewelry kits like big beads Refines listening Songs, nursery rhymes Enjoys simple stories Story books Love language Important to read aloud to children until they can read comfortably (age 7-8) classifies Good blocks-variety of good shapes & sizes Manipulates better Large crayons/markers for drawing Plays imaginatively, makes houses Dolls(for boys, too), old clothes/hats, puppets, small gym set for multi-use 2 TO 3 YEARS
  • 40. DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS APPROPRIATE TOYS Imitates parent of same gender (ages 3-6) Toys to play house, store, doctor Begins small muscle coordination (girls have better fine motor skills and wrist rotation for turning knobs, dressing and brushing teeth at this age) Small tools, cooking equipment Drawing equipment (big pad of paper, liquid paints & wide brushes-small watercolor sets too frustrating) Modeling clay Begins to cut Safety scissors, paste & colored paper Begins to play Houses, forts from boxes, sheets Continues big muscle development Tricycle, wheelbarrow, small rake, jungle gym Gains leg strength, balances Small bunk to throw/catch 3 TO 4 YEARS
  • 41. DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS APPROPRIATE TOYS Builds complex structures Lincoln Logs Wants highly realistic miniature toys (ages 4-7) Dollhouse, cars, fire station Needs eye-hand coordination Spiro graph, caroms, big needlepoint Big ball to bounce Needs foot-eye coordination Sidewalk games Begins math/science concepts Simple board games with counting (dice or diamond cards) By age 5, can tell long story accurately & add fantasy Short fiction & nonfiction in areas of interest (dinosaurs) Asks how things work and meanings of words 4 TO 5 YEARS
  • 42. DEVELOPMENTAL NEEDS APPROPRIATE TOYS Has lots of energy Ball games items Likes complex projects (continues for days) Simple model boat, house Likes cutting, pasting & folding Paper dolls, activity books, easy origami Counts to 30s Cribbage, games with adding/substracting 5 TO 6 YEARS
  • 43. PREPARED & COMPILED BY: AASHNA (05) Semester-IV Delhi University