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BEHAVIORISM HOW IT WORKS IN THE CLASSROOM

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Title: BEHAVIORISM HOW IT WORKS IN THE CLASSROOM


1
BEHAVIORISMHOW IT WORKS IN THE CLASSROOM
  • Irina Leonov
  • Kathleen Coolman
  • Kori Cohen
  • Morgan Carey
  • Sarah Dummer
  • Tyler Bayer

2
Roots of Behaviorism
  • John B. Watson
  • Ivan Pavlov
  • B.F Skinner
  • Launched in 1913

3
John Broadus Watson (1878- 1958)
  • Watson was born to a large, poor, rural family in
    South Carolina.
  • Influenced by the Nobel Prize-winning (1904) work
    of Russian physiologist Ivan Pavlov (1849-1936)

4
B.F. Skinner
  • Born in Susquhanna, PA.
  • He was a teacher, psychologist and inventor
  • Studied and taught at Harvard

Photo taken in 1971 by Joyce Dopkeen - New York
Times/Hulton Archive/Getty Images (Accessed July
30, 2009 from http//www.britannica.com/EBchecked/
topic-art/334034/109857/BF-Skinner-1971)
5
Ivan Pavlov
  • Born on September 14, 1849 in Ryazan, Russia
  • Russian physiologist
  • Research on the physiology of digestion would
    earn him the Nobel Prize

6
How it works
  • Focuses on the learning of behaviors
  • Goal was to predict and control behavior
  • All behavior can be explained through the process
    of learning.
  • Emphasizes the role of experience in a persons
    life, shaping development from childhood into
    adulthood.
  • Psychology of development should study behavior
    rather than speculate about unobservable
    behavior.

7
Social, Emotional Cognitive
  • Emphasizes the role of more experienced people in
    the process of learning.
  • Zone of Proximal Development
  • Cognitive development should be studied through
    the observations of behavior.

8
Two Types of Conditioning
  • Classical Conditioning
  • Operant Conditioning
  • Ivan Petrovich Pavlov (18491936)
  • B.F Skinner (190490)
  • Thorndike

9
Classical Conditioning
  • When a natural stimulus is replaced by a new or
    conditioned stimulus and still produces the
    original response.

10
Before Conditioning
  • Unconditioned
    Unconditioned
  • Stimulus
    Response
  • Neutral
    No
  • Stimulus
    Response

11
During Conditioning
  • Neutral Unconditioned
    Unconditioned
  • Stimulus Stimulus
    Response

12
After Conditioning
  • Neutral
    Conditioned
  • Stimulus
    Response
  • When alone, the neutral stimulus now produces the
    original response. Therefore, the neutral
    stimulus has become the conditioned stimulus
    producing the conditioned response.

13
http//www.northern.ac.uk/learning/NCMaterial/Psyc
hology/lifespan20folder/PAVLOV.gif
14
Operant Conditioning
  • When behavior is maximized if followed by
    reinforcement, or minimized if followed by
    punishment.
  • The act operates on the environment to produce
    rewarding or punishing stimuli.
  • - David G. Myers

15
http//www.legacee.com/Assets/LeaderImages/Operant
Conditioning.jpg
16
Criticisms of Behaviorism
  • Behaviorism is naturalistic. This means that the
    material world is the ultimate reality, and
    everything can be explained in terms of natural
    laws. Man has no soul and no mind, only a brain
    that responds to external stimuli.

17
Criticisms of Behaviorism cont.
  • Behaviorism teaches that man is nothing more than
    a machine that responds to conditioning. One
    writer has summarized behaviorism in this way
    The central principle of behaviorism is that
    thoughts, feelings, and intentions, mental
    processes all, do not determine what we do. Our
    behavior is the product of our conditioning. We
    are biological machines and do not consciously
    act rather we react to stimuli.

18
Criticisms of Behaviorism cont.
  • Consistently, behaviorism teaches that we are not
    responsible for our actions. If we are mere
    machines, without minds or souls, reacting to
    stimuli and operating on our environment to
    attain certain ends, then anything we do is
    inevitable. Sociobiology, a type of behaviorism,
    compares man to a computer Garbage in, garbage
    out

19
Criticisms of Behaviorism cont.
  • Behaviorism is manipulative. It seeks not merely
    to understand human behavior, but to predict and
    control it. From his theories, Skinner developed
    the idea of shaping. By controlling rewards and
    punishments, you can shape the behavior of
    another person.

20
Behaviorism in the Classroom
  • Classroom behavior management
  • Small rewards can motivate students
  • Games with a point system can be used in
    memorization tasks
  • Keep a pleasant environment during class to avoid
    conditioning kids to dislike certain subjects
  • Use behaviorist methods (rewards or punishment)
    to practice what has already been taught, not to
    teach

students.ou.edu/.../images/JHerb20Classroom.JPG
21
Social Studies
  • Behaviorism does little to develop analytical and
    comprehension skills, so it may be of limited use
    in the social studies classroom
  • Helpful in memorization of facts or important
    dates, but this type of information should only
    play a supporting role in understanding the
    larger concepts being studied.

22
Mathematics
  • Behaviorism is especially applicable to memory
    tasks that may be required in math class
  • Reward system will motivate kids to answer
    correctly, but will not directly aid in
    understanding concepts

http//twobarkingdogs.files.wordpress.com/2009/03/
mathematics.jpg
23
References
  • Babkin, B.P. (1949). Pavlov A Biography.
    Toronto, Canada The University of Chicago Press.
  • "behaviourism n."  A Dictionary of Psychology.
    Edited by Andrew M. Colman. Oxford University
    Press 2009. Oxford Reference Online. Oxford
    University Press.  Portland State University.  11
    August 2009  lthttp//www.oxfordreference.com/views
    /ENTRY.html?subviewMainentryt87.e951gt
  • Gauvain, Mary, E. Mavis Hetherington, Virginia
    Otis Locke, and Ross D. Parke. Child Psychology A
    Contemporary Viewpoint Sixth 6th Edition. New
    York Mcgraw Hill, 2006.
  • Myers, David G. (2004). Psychology Seventh
    Edition Modules. New York Worth Publishers.
  • O'Donnell, J. M. (1985). The origins of
    behaviorism American psychology, 1870-1920.New
    York New York University Press.
  • Phillips, D. C., and Jonas F. Soltis.
    Perspectives on Learning (Thinking About
    Education Series). New York Teachers College
    Press, 2004.

24
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