Adolescent Cognition

Adolescent Cognition

  • Submitted By: Ashf07
  • Date Submitted: 11/22/2008 1:23 PM
  • Category: Psychology
  • Words: 772
  • Page: 4
  • Views: 1166

Adolescent Cognition: Thinking in a New Key Throughout history, adolescents changed their styles and their location in which they associate. It went from wearing penny loafers and hanging outside of drug stores to wearing athletic sneakers and hanging around the malls. Adolescents follow the reasoning of Aristotle: all men are mortal, Socrates is a man, and therefore Socrates is mortal. The first age of reasoning was focused on concrete operational thinking. Concrete operational thinking enabled children to understand and cooperate with rules. The previous age of reasoning is the formal reasoning stage. Formal reasoning is concerned more with the form of thinking instead of content. By the age of 12 or 13, adolescents are thinking at a higher level. Adolescents tend to use abstractions, propositions, ideals, thinking of thinking, and combinatorial reasoning. An abstraction is the use of symbols or the understanding of symbols by the adolescent. For example, a child was asked to evaluate a sentence and give the meaning of that statement. The sentence giving was “you shouldn’t change horses in midstream.” The child was not able to giving the correct explanation for this sentence. The same child was asked the same question as an adolescent, and she got the answer correct. This example requires the understanding of abstractions. This statement means don't change your leader or your position when part-way through a campaign or a project. If they did not answer in such a way, they have not yet experienced formal reasoning. Adolescents often use propositions which is a form of if then thinking. Propositions allow the adolescent to deal with the possibilities of a situation. Adolescents think about what might be instead of what is. When they use propositions, it might make the adolescents seem argumentative. Propositions often include statement such as, “If I do not go to school, then I will not be bullied.” Also, adolescents may use ideals to try to validate their...

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