Piaget's Theory of Cognitive Development • Topic 4 of 6

Concrete Operational Stage (7–11 years)

From about 7 to 11 years the child can perform logical mental operations — but only on concrete, real, tangible objects and situations, not yet on abstract or hypothetical ideas. Three big abilities arrive. Conservation is now mastered (the water is the same amount whatever the glass). Reversibility appears — the child can mentally reverse a sequence of steps (3 + 4 = 7, so 7 − 4 = 3). Decentration lets the child consider several features at once, so egocentrism declines. The child can also seriate (arrange in order, e.g. sticks shortest to longest) and classify objects by more than one property, and understands transitivity (if A>B and B>C then A>C) — as long as the materials are concrete. Hand this child a purely verbal, abstract 'if…then' puzzle, though, and they still struggle.

✅ Solved examples

1. A 9-year-old now agrees the water is the same amount in both glasses and explains 'you can just pour it back'. The two abilities shown are:
Conservation and reversibility — both characteristic of the concrete operational stage.
2. A child can arrange a set of sticks from shortest to longest. This logical operation is called:
Seriation — ordering items along a quantitative dimension, a concrete-operational achievement.
3. Concrete operational children can reason logically but mainly about:
Concrete, tangible objects and real situations — not abstract or hypothetical possibilities (that is the next stage).
4. Given red squares and blue squares of two sizes, a child sorts them by both colour and size at once. This shows:
The decline of centration / the ability to classify on multiple attributes (decentration) — a concrete-operational skill.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. Mastery of conservation is the hallmark of which stage?
Logic on concrete things.
7–11 years.
Concrete operational stage
2. Understanding that 8 × 2 = 16 implies 16 ÷ 2 = 8 demonstrates:
Mentally undo a step.
Reversibility
3. Arranging objects in increasing order of weight is called:
Ordering by a dimension.
Seriation
4. A concrete operational child struggles most with:
Logic is fine on real things.
The next stage handles this.
Abstract / hypothetical reasoning

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.

Loading questions…