
1.4M
MEJean Piaget proposed that children do not understand the world instantly.
Cognitive development unfolds in stages.
According to his theory, children actively construct knowledge through interaction with their environment. They learn by touching, testing, observing, dropping, tasting, and experimenting. Understanding is built piece by piece.
One of Piaget’s most well known concepts is object permanence.
Object permanence refers to the understanding that objects continue to exist even when they are out of sight. For adults, this seems obvious. For infants, it is a developmental milestone that emerges gradually during the sensorimotor stage.
When a toy is hidden and a baby searches for it, we are not just seeing curiosity. We are witnessing cognitive growth.
Observing how a child responds when something is hidden, moved, or blocked offers insight into how their thinking is organizing itself. These small moments reflect the formation of memory, representation, and logical reasoning.
Cognitive development is not automatic. It is constructed through experience.
Piaget’s work reminds us how complex and delicate the process of building a mind truly is.
child development, cognitive development, object permanence, sensorimotor stage, developmental psychology, Jean Piaget, experiment
#childdevelopment #developmentalpsychology #cognitivedevelopment #parenting #psychology
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