Table : TABLE 9.2
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive Development
StageCharacteristics of the StageMajor Change of the Stage
Sensorimotor (0–2 years)Acquires understanding of object permanence. First understandings of cause-and-effect relationships.Development proceeds from reflexes to active use of sensory and motor skills to explore the environment.
Preoperational (2–7 years)Symbolic thought emerges. Language development occurs (2–4 years). Thought and language both tend to be egocentric. Cannot solve conservation problems.Development proceeds from understanding simple cause-and-effect relationships to prelogical thought processes involving the use of imagination and symbols to represent objects, actions, and situations.
Concrete operations (7–11 years)Reversibility attained. Can solve conservation problems. Logical thought develops and is applied to concrete problems. Cannot solve complex verbal problems and hypothetical problems.Development proceeds from prelogical thought to logical solutions to concrete problems.
Formal operations (adolescence through adulthood)Logically solves all types of problems. Thinks scientifically. Solves complex verbal and hypothetical problems. Is able to think in abstract terms.Development proceeds from logical solving of concrete problems to logical solving of all classes of problems, including abstract problems.