Behaviorism Theory
Behaviorism Theory
Behaviorism Theory
PSYCHOLOGICAL
FOUNDATION OF EDUCATION
In his positive reinforcement experiment Skinner would place the rats in a box with
a lever attached to a feeding tube. Whenever a rat pressed the lever, food would
be released. After the experience of multiple trials, the rats learned the
association between the lever and food and began to spend more of their time in
the box trying to get food than performing any other action.
B.F. Skinner greatly esteemed Pavlov’s works and even produced his
own version of Pavlov’s experiments, this time with pigeons.
Skinner’s Operant Conditioning is also an offshoot of Edward
Thorndike’s earlier study and theory, the Law of Effect.
Thorndike had previously used the term instrumental learning for
operant conditioning.
Maintains that behavior is not dependent on the preceding stimulus.
Rather it is dependent on the consequence to the response to the
stimulus.
In the Pavlovian case, this would mean that the dog’s behavior
could actually be explained better by the food presented to them.
B.F. Skinner -The Behavior of Organisms
Basically…
-supported by psychology
-believe that mind is an expression to bodily
behavior
-does not believe in the concept of “soul”
-argues that humans are programmed (by
psychology)
-relies on empirical evidence
Aims of Theory in Education
Criticisms against the Law of Effect include its mechanistic point of view. However,
one has to take into account that Thorndike’s experiments first made use of cats.
Another is that Thorndike’s explanation of behavior as a series of trial and error does
not give importance to the learning and thinking process of a learner.
Behaviorism does not account for all kinds of learning, since it disregards the activities
of the mind.
Behaviorism does not explain some learning–such as the recognition of new
language patterns by young children–for which there is no reinforcement
mechanism.
Research has shown that animals adapt their reinforced patterns to new information.
For instance, a rat can shift its behavior to respond to changes in the layout of a
maze it had previously mastered through reinforcements