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Preschoolers at play show science skills
When kids incessantly ask “Why?,” mess around in the dirt and run their hands over everything within reach, they’re not just being kids. It turns out they’re also being scientists.
Until recently, preschoolers were widely believed to be irrational thinkers. For most of the 20th century, the prevailing theory pioneered by cognitive development expert Jean Piaget held that children roughly ages 2 through 7 cannot understand concrete logic or other people’s perspectives.
Although young children are the only ones who truly know what they ponder, research conducted over the past decade has led many psychologists to see infants and toddlers as, in fact, capable of thinking logically and abstractly.
"The main thing is that they’re drawing conclusions from data and evidence and experiences the same way scientists are - by making hypotheses, testing them, analyzing statistics and even doing experiments, even though when they do experiments, it’s called ‘getting into everything,’ " said Alison Gopnik, a UC Berkeley psychology professor and one of the field’s leading experts.
Better understanding of how children learn about the world could have important implications for their formal schooling, Gopnik argued in a recent paper published in the journal Science, which summarized studies by her and other researchers.

Preschoolers at play show science skills

When kids incessantly ask “Why?,” mess around in the dirt and run their hands over everything within reach, they’re not just being kids. It turns out they’re also being scientists.

Until recently, preschoolers were widely believed to be irrational thinkers. For most of the 20th century, the prevailing theory pioneered by cognitive development expert Jean Piaget held that children roughly ages 2 through 7 cannot understand concrete logic or other people’s perspectives.

Although young children are the only ones who truly know what they ponder, research conducted over the past decade has led many psychologists to see infants and toddlers as, in fact, capable of thinking logically and abstractly.

"The main thing is that they’re drawing conclusions from data and evidence and experiences the same way scientists are - by making hypotheses, testing them, analyzing statistics and even doing experiments, even though when they do experiments, it’s called ‘getting into everything,’ " said Alison Gopnik, a UC Berkeley psychology professor and one of the field’s leading experts.

Better understanding of how children learn about the world could have important implications for their formal schooling, Gopnik argued in a recent paper published in the journal Science, which summarized studies by her and other researchers.

Filed under children thinking learning science probabilistic models neuroscience psychology

  1. sunshinescattered reblogged this from hockeysweaterweather
  2. m3ch4k1tty reblogged this from scienceyoucanlove
  3. nothelpingrightnow reblogged this from neurosciencestuff and added:
    Proof! Support of my explanations of my childhood behavior! Not that I ever felt like I was making it up when I said...
  4. avotica reblogged this from angeladellamuerta and added:
    I was thinking the exact same thing… Scientists who are adults where the ones who never really grew up and stopped...
  5. angeladellamuerta reblogged this from notaparagon and added:
    I thought it was pretty much accepted that kids learn through play, that it’s how they discover the world…? Why are...
  6. karethdreams reblogged this from johnfuckingwatson and added:
    One of the things I always try to do with my girls is when they ask “Why?” is to always give them an answer, and if I...
  7. johnfuckingwatson reblogged this from sayserasera and added:
    When I was a preschool teacher I explained everything to my kids when they asked, because I think it’s stupid to treat...
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  29. ouiououi reblogged this from thescienceofreality and added:
    I could have told you this, for I was a child once —
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