Behaviorist Perspective
Behaviorist Perspective
might "reward" yourself by giving yourself a dollar before each meal when
snacking before the meal did not occur. You would then need to use your
"snack money reward" toward some fun activity or item for yourself. (Like a
hot fudge sundae! Just kidding.)
Once you have selected the habit and your system of reward, use the
attached diary to track your behavior for one week. Turn a copy of this diary in
to your instructor at the end of the week.
Behaviorism
Definition
Behaviorism is a learning theory that only focuses on objectively observable behaviors and
discounts any independent activities of the mind. Behavior theorists define learning as nothing
more than the acquisition of new behavior based on environmental conditions.
Discussion
Experiments by behaviorists identify conditioning as a universal learning process. There are two
different types of conditioning, each yielding a different behavioral pattern:
1. Classic conditioning occurs when a natural reflex responds to a stimulus. We are biologically
wired so that a certain stimulus will produce a specific response. One of the more common
examples of classical conditioning in the educational environment is in situations where
students exhibit irrational fears and anxieties like fear of failure, fear of public speaking and
general school phobia.
2. Behavioral or operant conditioning occurs when a response to a stimulus is reinforced.
Basically, operant conditioning is a simple feedback system: If a reward or reinforcement follows
the response to a stimulus, then the response becomes more probable in the future. For
example, leading behaviorist B.F. Skinner used reinforcement techniques to teach pigeons to
dance and bowl a ball in a mini-alley.
Behaviorism does not account for all kinds of learning, since it disregards the activities of the
mind.
Behaviorism does not explain some learningsuch as the recognition of new language patterns
by young childrenfor 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.