GENERALIZATIONS ABOUT GENERALIZATION: HOW A THEORY OF SKILL DEVELOPMENT EXPLAINS BOTH GENERALITY AND SPECIFICITY*
- 12 October 1987
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in International Journal of Psychology
- Vol. 22 (5-6) , 643-677
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00207598708246798
Abstract
Within a skill‐theory framework, the traditional opposition between generalization and specificity is resolved. Neither generalization nor specificity is considered the normal state. Instead, they are both phenomena that can be predicted and explained in terms of skill structures and functional mechanisms of development or learning. A person acquires a skill in a specific context and must work to gradually extend it to other contexts. Within a task domain and across related domains, a set of structural transformations predict the order of generalization of the skill. Range of generalization of a given skill at a point in time varies widely across people and situations as a function of specified functional mechanisms. Generalization is maximized when (a) tasks are similar and familiar, (b) the environment provides opportunities for practice and support, (c) the person has had time to consolidate skills at the relevant developmental level, and (d) he or she is intelligent and in an emotional state facilitative of the particular skill. True generalization must be distinguished from optimal‐level synchrony, where new capacities emerge across domains as a new developmental level emerges.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Object permanence and relational words: a lexical training studyJournal of Child Language, 1986
- Stages and Individual Differences in Cognitive DevelopmentAnnual Review of Psychology, 1985
- Cognitive bases of lexical development: object permanence and relational wordsJournal of Child Language, 1984
- The Control of Animate and Inanimate Components in Pretend Play and LanguageChild Development, 1982
- Toward Symbolic Functioning: Structure of Early Pretend Games and Potential Parallels with LanguageChild Development, 1981
- The emergence of representation in search: Understanding the hider as an independent agentDevelopmental Review, 1981
- The question of decalage between object permanence and person permanence.Developmental Psychology, 1978
- Cognitive bases of children's moral judgments.Developmental Psychology, 1977
- A Developmental Sequence of Agent Use in Late InfancyChild Development, 1977
- Egocentrism in Childhood: A Unitary Construct?Child Development, 1973