Stages of cognitive development

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Piaget presented the theory that children develop cognitive ability in four distinct stages. In the first stage, babies are fascinated by the outside world. They explore everything around them and make sense of their environment through touch, taste, smell, sound, sight, and movement – the sensorimotor stage. In the second stage, children begin to understand how things work. They put together simple puzzles like building blocks, learning how to grasp and manipulate objects, and understanding cause and effect – the pre-operational stage. Third, children start to build models of themselves and others. For example, they may learn how their own thoughts and feelings influence their behavior – the concrete operational stage where they are fully equipped to reason. Finally, in the fourth stage, children become aware of abstract concepts, think logically, and can use verbal reasoning and imagination – the formal operational stage.

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