What is the age range for Piaget's preoperational reasoning stage?

Correct answer: 2 to 6 or 7 years

Explanation

This question is a direct recall of a quantitative fact from the chapter, asking for the specific age range Piaget assigned to the preoperational stage of development.

Other questions

Question 1

What is the primary focus of stage theories of child development, such as Piaget's stage theory?

Question 2

In the DeVries (1969) study, how did most 3-year-old children describe Maynard the cat after a dog mask was placed on its head?

Question 3

According to the text, what does 'nurture' refer to in the context of child development?

Question 4

What must an infant experience to develop normal depth perception, according to the text?

Question 5

What is the age range for Piaget's sensorimotor stage of cognitive development?

Question 6

What is the key cognitive limitation that Piaget claims infants younger than 9 months have, as demonstrated by the object permanence task?

Question 7

According to Piaget, what is the primary error in thinking that children in the preoperational stage make when faced with conservation problems?

Question 8

During which of Piaget's stages do children overcome the tendency to focus on a single dimension and begin to think logically in most situations?

Question 9

What did Diamond's (1985) research on the object permanence task reveal about Piaget's claims?

Question 10

What skill is identified as a crucial skill in learning to read and the strongest predictor of reading achievement in third and fourth grade?

Question 11

In the study by Ramani and Siegler (2008), what activity was found to improve low-income children's knowledge of numerical magnitudes?

Question 12

The development of which part of the brain, particularly involved with planning and flexible problem solving, continues throughout adolescence?

Question 13

What is the term for changes that are gradual and incremental, such as the growth of a pine tree's width?

Question 14

Which of Piaget's stages is characterized by children's thinking being largely realized through their perceptions of the world and their physical interactions with it?

Question 16

What is a major cognitive limitation for children in the concrete operations stage, according to Piaget's pendulum problem experiment?

Question 17

What does the example of children of pottery makers in Mexican villages demonstrate regarding cognitive development?

Question 18

According to the vocabulary section, what are 'conservation problems'?

Question 19

The life cycle of a ladybug, which involves becoming a totally different type of entity, is an example of what kind of developmental change?

Question 20

How long did low-income children play the numerical board game in the Ramani and Siegler (2008) study to see improvements in their mathematical knowledge?

Question 21

What is the primary characteristic of sociocultural theories of child development, like that of Lev Vygotsky?

Question 22

According to Diamond's (1985) findings, at what age do infants successfully retrieve a hidden object if the waiting period is no longer than 2 seconds?

Question 23

What is the primary function of information processing theories of child development?

Question 24

In Piaget's conservation-of-liquid task, a child in the preoperational stage sees water poured from a short, wide glass into a tall, thin glass. What will the child typically claim?

Question 25

What is the age range for Piaget's concrete operations stage?

Question 26

Which factor is described as being necessary for the formal operations stage to occur?

Question 27

How does the text resolve the debate between whether cognitive development is fundamentally continuous or discontinuous?

Question 28

What is an example of a task used to measure phonemic awareness in children?

Question 29

What did Ramani and Siegler (2008) hypothesize was the reason for the gap in mathematical knowledge between children from low-income and more affluent backgrounds?

Question 30

What is a key advantage of the educational intervention using a numerical board game like Chutes and Ladders?

Question 31

What is defined as the development of thinking across the lifespan?

Question 32

How did the 6-year-old participants in DeVries's (1969) study react when a dog mask was placed on Maynard the cat?

Question 33

According to the text, what is a way that infants' genes can influence their cognitive development through nurture?

Question 34

Even 1-month-old infants contribute to their own cognitive development by choosing to do what?

Question 35

The existence of both gradual changes and sudden shifts in the world has led developmental researchers to ask which key question?

Question 36

At what age do children enter Piaget's formal operations stage, where they may gain the reasoning power of mature adults?

Question 37

At 3 or 4 months, what behavior do infants show that suggests an early form of object permanence, according to Baillargeon (1987)?

Question 38

What was the long-term result of teaching phonemic awareness skills to randomly chosen 4- and 5-year-olds?

Question 39

The game 'Chutes and Ladders' is thought to provide a broad-based, multisensory foundation for what type of knowledge?

Question 40

What is the conclusion of the chapter about our understanding of cognitive development?

Question 41

According to Piaget's theory, as defined in the vocabulary list, how does development occur?

Question 42

What does 'Nature' refer to as defined in the vocabulary list for this chapter?

Question 43

In the context of cognitive development, what are 'qualitative changes'?

Question 44

What is the key ability children gain during the preoperational reasoning stage (age 2 to 7 years)?

Question 45

Why do older children and adolescents have greater contributions to their own cognitive development compared to younger children?

Question 46

According to the study by DeVries (1969), the dramatic difference in thinking between 3-year-olds and 6-year-olds in just a few years is described as what?

Question 47

An example of a child in Piaget's concrete operational stage performing a biased experiment with a pendulum would be:

Question 48

What does the text conclude about the impact of teaching phonemic awareness skills to 4- and 5-year-olds?

Question 49

According to the vocabulary list, 'numerical magnitudes' refers to what?

Question 50

According to Diamond's (1985) findings, at what age can infants successfully retrieve a hidden object if the wait is no longer than 4 seconds?