Title: Beyond Behaviorism
1Beyond Behaviorism
2Modern Social-Cognitive Theory
- Latent Learning - Tolman et al
- Observational Learning - Bandura et al
- Perceptions and Interpretations of events - Eron,
Anderson and Dill - Motivating Beliefs - goals, expectations
confidence, doubt etc. - Rotter, Bandura
3Latent Learning
- Tolman and Honzik (1930) conducted their
experiments with the rats. - Group 3 demonstrated latent learning.
- Much of our learning remains latent until
circumstances allow or require it to be expressed.
4Observational Learning
- Albert Bandura
- Observational Learning
- Emphasizes the knowledge that results when a
person sees a model behave in a certain way.
5An Example
- In January of 1996 Cynthia Sikes a instrumental
teacher and Alto Saxophone jazz musician told the
NY Times that little girls are asking to play the
saxophone
6Observational Learning in Children
- Elizabeth Hanna and Andrew Meltzoff (1993) worked
with toddlers using specially designed toys. - They found babies who observed other babies play
with the toys learned faster than those who did
not.
7So what does it all mean?
- According to social-cognitive learning theory,
what we learn in observational learning, as in
latent learning, is not a specific response, but
knowledge about responses and consequences. - This knowledge allows us to be creative and
flexible in reaching goals.
8The Power of Perceptions
- Social-cognitive learning theory also emphasize
the importance of peoples perceptions and what
they learn or how they behave. - There is abundant evidence that movies and
television programs are powerful in shaping
values, attitudes, and beliefs. - there is absolutely no doubt that higher levels
of viewing violence on television are correlated
with increased acceptance of aggressive attitudes
and increased aggressive behavior (APA
Commission on Violence and Youth, 1993)
9TV Violence and Aggressive Behavior.
- Leonard Eron (1995) has conducted longitudinal
research on the issue of television and violence. - TV violence seems to lead to later violence by
establishing, attitudes, norms of behavior and
aggressive solutions to problems.
10Violence and Video Games
- Craig Anderson and Karen Dill (2000) look at
violence in video games and determine they also
have an impact. - The games, they note, provide a complete
social-cognitive learning environment for
aggression violent models, reinforcement, and
the opportunity to rehearse aggressive behavior
11Delinquency and Video Games
Anderson and Dill (2000)
12Questions?
- Other psychologists believe the relationship
between media and violence and real violence is
not as strong as it would appear. (Bushman, 1995
and Freedman, 1988) - First, Children watch many different programs and
movies. - Critics believe that cause and effect work in the
opposite direction.
13Motivating Beliefs
- Motivation - in psychology it is any process that
causes a person or animal to move toward a goal
or away from an unpleasant situation. - Behaviorists would say that motivation is just a
result of reinforcers. - Social-cognitive theory would believe that
motivation is because of internalized and
self-directed forces.
14Locus of Control
- Julian Rotter (1966, 1982, 1990)
- Clients of Rotters had troubling emotions and
irrational beliefs which led to entrenched
attitudes affecting decisions. - Self-fulfilling prophecy - the persons
expectations lead to behavior that makes the
prediction come true.
15Locus of Control
- Predictive Formula. Behavior Potential (BP),
Expectancy (E) and Reinforcement Value (RV) can
be combined into a predictive formula for
behavior - BP f(E RV)
- behavior potential (BP) is a function (?) of
expectancy (E) and reinforcement value(RV). - Internal vs. External Locus of Control
16Explanatory Style
- Martin Seligman (1991)
- Optimistic or Pessimistic Explanatory Style.
- Depends on the following
- Pessimistic Explanatory Style
- Internal (Its my fault)
- Stable (This is going to last forever)
- Global ( It effects everything I do)
- Optimistic Explanatory Style
- External (I couldnt have done anything)
- Unstable (Things will improve)
- Limited (This is only one thing in my life.)
17Optimism vs. Pessimism
- Optimism is a tremendous predictor of success.
- Optimists focus on what they can do not what they
feel. - Optimism is a predictor of stress recovery
(Hurricane Andrew)
18Self-Efficacy
- Albert Bandura
- Self-efficacy is the conviction that you can
successfully accomplish what you set out to do. - Research in North America, Europe and Russia
found it effects the following - How well tasks are performed
- Level of persistence in pursuit of goals
- Career choice
- Solution to complex problems
- Health habits
- Athletic performance
- Overall response to stress.
19Moral Reasoning
- Is it the same as moral behavior?
20Kohlberg and Piaget
- Kohlberg and by attribution, Piaget believed that
children are born amoral or without morals - Kohlberg believes moral reasoning is developed in
a predictable way. - Kohlberg believed there are predictable, specific
and identifiable stages. (relates to Piagets
stages of intellectual development)
21Kohlberg - Piaget
- Level I Preconventional/ Premoral
- Stage 1 Obedience and punishment orientation
- Stage 2 Naively egoistic orientation
- Level II Conventional/Role conformity
- Stage 3 Good-boy/good-girl orientation
- Stage 4 Authority and social-order-maintaining
orientation - Level III Postconventional/Self-Accepted Moral
Principles - Stage 5 contractual/legalistic orientation
- Stage 6 The morality of individual principles of
conscience.
22The child can internalize the moral values of
his parents and culture and make them his own
only as he comes to relate to these values to a
comprehended social order and to his own goals as
a social self. Kohlberg (1964)
Kohlberg - morality is acquired in developmental
stages (These stages are precise and formal)
23Kohlberg on Stages
- Kohlberg - structural moral stages in childhood
and adolescence - Each stage is a uniquely different kind of moral
thinking- not just an increased understanding of
an adult concept of morality - The stages always occur in the same step by step
sequence so that no stage is ever skipped and
there is never a backward progression
(regression) - The stages are prepotent, meaning children
comprehend all the stages below their own and
possibly some understanding of no more than one
stage above.
24Kohlberg
- Children are incapable of understanding higher
stages, regardless of encouragement, teaching or
practice. The prefer to function at the highest
stage they have reached.