I interviewed both my children separately with the conservation of number tasks. I used 14 pennies; 7 pennies in 1 row and the other 7 pennies in a row spaced farther apart than the first row of pennies. First, I interviewed my 4-year-old daughter; I asked her if there are the same amounts of pennies in both rows. She did not ask me anything she just began to count. After she counted both lines, she told me they were the same amount in both lines. I was very surprised by her action and response. I expected her to look at them and tell me no; I did not expect her to count them.
Then, I asked her to tell me why she said they were the same; her response was because she counted them. Next, I interviewed my 7-year-old son, I asked him if the two rows had the same amount or not. He counted them and told me yes, they have the same amount of pennies. I asked him to tell me why he thought that he responded, because I counted them and there are 7 in each row, and he added, “It may seem one row is longer than the other because one row is spaced out farther than the other”. He said if I was to ask him, which one is longer in measurement his answer would be the one spaced out but that was not the question. He explained they are both the same in amount but not in length.
My observation of both my children was very interesting and educational. I would have never expected my daughter to give me the same response as my son, taking into consideration their ages. Especially being that Dr. Rozankski, head of the Gifted program in MISD just informed me my son had an IQ score of 136 and scored in the 82nd percentile on the California Achievement Test. My daughter could tell me that there was 7 pennies in both rows but, my son could see beyond that and express what someone else may think given the lay out of the pennies or the way the question was asked. According to Piaget, both my children were in or have been in the concrete operational stage. I do not really know if I agree fully with this theory.
The Term Paper on Top 50 Most Common Problems in Interview
A) The 15 most critical problems that can occur with interviews Some things should not be measured in an interview – few start an interview with a list of the things they want to assess. Many things just can’t be measured accurately during an interview including: many technical skills, team skills, intelligence, attitude, and physical skills. Giving them a work sample or test is often superior. ...
I also did the conservation of liquid with both of my children and my daughter could not see that there was the same amount of water and my son quickly could tell me there was and that the glassed were shaped differently. Therefore my daughter had mastered conservation of number but not liquid and my son has mastered both. In conclusion, I could not asses a child on these tasks and give a correct and proven stage he or she is in according to Piaget. Piaget also cautioned that although all children pass through these stages, they do so at their own rate (text page 21).