Title: Classical Conditioning
1Classical Conditioning
- Pavlovs paired associations
- S-gtR
- Spontaneous Recovery
- Generalization/discrimination
- Habituation
- Higher Order Conditioning
- Superstitious Behavior
- Extinction
2Classical Conditioning
Classical Conditioning S-R Paradigm Unconditioned
Stimulus Conditioned Stimulus Response Conditioned
Response Extinction Spontaneous
Recovery Generalization/Discrimination Habituation
Context effects
3Operant Conditioning
Behavior -gtResponse-gtConsequence Reinforcers or
Punishers Satiation and Potency Positive
Reinforcement Negative Reinforcement Presentation
Punishment Removal Punishment Schedules of
Reinforcement, Interval and Ratio, Fixed and
Variable. Learned Helplessness
4Application
- List 5 things that you are classically
conditioned to respond to. - List 5 things that you have taught your students
to respond to. - List 3 situations of instrumental conditioning in
your life, in your classroom life.
5How might behavioral theory be used in the
classroom?
6Applications of Behavioral Theory
- Premack Principle
- Contracts
- Generalization and Discrimination
- Feedback
- Praise
- Looking at Antecedents
- Cues
- Shaping
- Token economies
7Which Schedule is it?
- A teacher informs her class that they have thirty
addition problems to complete. After each
successive problem completion of ten problems,
the student will be given a token. Each token may
be used to pick one item from the treat box. - A teacher decided to reward on-task behavior of
students during study time. Using a timer, he
recognizes on task behavior on the following
schedule 3 minutes, 6 minutes, 8 minutes, 1
minute. - A student just beginning to learn a new behavior.
His teacher decided to recognize this behavior
every time that it is displayed. - The same student becomes more proficient.
Therefore, the teacher decides to recognize the
behavior every third time that it occurs.
8Effects of Punishment
- Does not eliminate behavior. Punished responses
may cease temporarily but recur at a later time. - Punishment produces emotional effects--guilt, as
conditioned to the setting where the punishment
occurred. - Behaviors related to reducing or avoiding
punishment will be reinforced. - Punishment does not illustrate or teach the
desired behavior. - Punishment may model aggression.
- Punishment that is removed from the act is
ineffective. - Corporal punishment may be physically harmful.
- Motive for corporal punishment is often the
punishers anger.