Language & Thought
Is language the engine of thinking or just its messenger? CTET tests the three classic answers. Piaget argued that thought develops first and language simply reflects the cognitive stage the child has already reached - so he treated a young child's self-directed 'egocentric speech' (talking aloud while playing, addressed to no one) as an immature by-product that fades away. Vygotsky reversed this: language and social interaction actually drive cognitive development. For him, egocentric or 'private' speech is not useless babble - it is thinking out loud that gradually 'goes underground' to become inner speech, the silent voice we reason with. Then comes the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (linguistic relativity): the structure and vocabulary of the language you speak shapes, or at least influences, how you perceive and think about the world - speakers of different languages may categorise colour, time or space differently. The strong version (language determines thought) is largely rejected today; the weaker version (language influences thought) is widely accepted. The classroom takeaway: language is not just a school subject, it is a tool for thinking, so a rich language environment supports cognitive growth.
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✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Language and thought - the three positions
| Piaget | Thought comes FIRST; language reflects existing cognition |
|---|---|
| Vygotsky | Language DRIVES thought; speech becomes inner thought |
| Sapir-Whorf | Linguistic relativity - your language shapes how you think |
| Egocentric speech | Piaget: immature talk; Vygotsky: tool that turns inward |
Difference, diversity and the fair classroom
| Sex vs Gender | Sex = biological; Gender = socially constructed roles |
|---|---|
| Individual differences | Variation in ability, pace, style, interest, personality |
| Sources | Heredity AND environment interacting (nature x nurture) |
| Inclusive practice | Diversity is a RESOURCE; teach equitably, not identically |