EDY 2312/5312 - Managing Behaviour in Schools: Lecture 3: Theories of Behaviour Development
EDY 2312/5312 - Managing Behaviour in Schools: Lecture 3: Theories of Behaviour Development
EDY 2312/5312 - Managing Behaviour in Schools: Lecture 3: Theories of Behaviour Development
Behaviour in Schools
Lecture 3 2019
Psychoanalytic theory originated with the work of Sigmund Freud. Through his clinical
work with patients suffering from mental illness, Freud came to believe that childhood
experiences and unconscious desires influenced behaviour. According to Freud,
conflicts that occur during each of these stages can have a lifelong influence on
personality and behaviour.
Freud proposed one of the best-known grand theories of child development. According
to Freud’s psychosexual theory, child development occurs in a series of stages focused
on different pleasure areas of the body. During each stage, the child encounters
conflicts that play a significant role in the course of development.
His theory suggested that the energy of the libido was focused on different erogenous
zones at specific stages. Failure to progress through a stage can result in a fixation at
that point in development, which Freud believed could have an influence on adult
behaviour.
Psychoanalytic Theory – Sigmund Freud
Freud proposed that people operate from three states of being: the id, which seeks
self-gratification; the superego, which seeks what is morally proper; and the ego,
which is the rational mediator between the id and superego. Freud used a variety of
therapeutic techniques to tap into the unconscious thoughts of his patients, which
he thought was the source of his patients’ distress.
Advantages
The theory emphasizes the importance of childhood experiences. It initiated and
addressed the importance of the unconscious, sexual and aggressive drives that
make up the majority of all human beings' personalities. The approach also explains
defence mechanisms and why every individual reacts differently to similar situations.
Limits
Sigmund Freud failed to include evidence of the impact of the environment on the
individual throughout his theory. The theory is lacking in empirical data and too
focused on pathology (experience). This theory lacks consideration of culture and its
influence on personality.
Erikson's Psychosocial Developmental Theory
Bowlby's attachment theory suggested that children are born with an innate need to
form attachments. Such attachments aid in survival by ensuring that the child
receives care and protection. Not only that, but these attachments are characterized
by clear behavioural and motivational patterns. In other words, both children and
caregivers engage in behaviours designed to ensure proximity. Children strive to
stay close and connected to their caregivers who in turn provide safe haven and a
secure base for exploration.
Albert Bandura - Social Learning Theory
Bandura believed that the conditioning and reinforcement process could not
sufficiently explain all of human learning. For example, how can the conditioning
process account for learned behaviours that have not been reinforced through
classical or operant conditioning?
Bandura's child development theory suggests that observation plays a critical role
in learning, but this observation does not necessarily need to take the form of
watching a live model. Instead, people can also learn by listening to verbal
instructions about how to perform a behaviour as well as through observing either
real or fictional characters display behaviours in books or films.
Urie Bronfenbrenner - Ecological Theory
The five systems explain how everything in a child and the child's environment affects how a
child grows and develops. (Bronfenbrenner, 1979)
Lev Vygotsky - Sociocultural Theory
Each developmental theory has its proponents and critics. Yet different
tasks and components of development simply call for different theories.
Most psychologists prefer an eclectic approach to development.
Continuity theories of development suggest that human development is
gradual and uninterrupted, whereas discontinuity models suggest humans
pass through a set sequence of stages, characterized by distinct states of
ego
formation, identity, or thought.
Social scientists continue the debate about the role of nature or nurture for
human development.
Tutorial Activity