Behavioural Approach To Learning
Behavioural Approach To Learning
Preview
Virtually everyone agrees that helping students learn is an important function of schools.
However, not everyone agrees on the best way to learn. We begin this chapter by exam-
ining just what learning involves, then turn to the main behavioral approaches to learning.
Next, we explore how behavioral principles are applied to educating students. In the final
section, we will discuss the social cognitive approaches to learning.
Learning is a central focus of educational psychology. When people are asked what
schools are for, a common reply is “To help children learn.”
The scope of learning is broad (Powell, Honey, & Symbaluk, 2017). It involves
academic behaviors and nonacademic behaviors. It occurs in schools and everywhere
else that children experience their world.
APPROACHES TO LEARNING
A number of approaches to learning have been proposed. Next we explore behavioral
and cognitive approaches to learning.
Behavioral The learning approaches that we discuss in the first part of this chapter
are called behavioral. Behaviorism is the view that behavior should be explained
by observable experiences, not by mental processes. For the behaviorist, behavior is
everything that we do, both verbal and nonverbal, that can be directly seen or heard:
a child creating a poster, a teacher explaining something to a child, one student
picking on another student, and so on. Mental processes are defined by psycholo-
gists as the thoughts, feelings, and motives that each of us experiences but that
cannot be observed by others. Although we cannot directly see thoughts, feelings,
and motives, they are no less real. Mental processes include children thinking about
ways to create the best poster, a teacher feeling good about children’s efforts, and
children’s inner motivation to control their behavior.
For the behaviorist, these thoughts, feelings, and motives are not appropriate
subject matter for a science of behavior because they cannot be directly observed.
Behaviorists don’t deny that thoughts, feelings, and motives exist; rather, they say
these mental processes are not needed to explain behavior. Classical conditioning
and operant conditioning, two behavioral views that we will discuss shortly, adopt
this stance. Both of these views emphasize associative learning, which consists
of learning that two events are connected or associated (Domjan, 2015). For exam-
ple, associative learning occurs when a student associates a pleasant event with
learning something in school, such as the teacher smiling when the student asks a
good question.
learning but must also know how to use them to meet diverse learning goals in
contexts where students’ needs differ (Bransford & others, 2005; Yasnitsky & Van
der Veer, 2016).
REVIEW
∙ What is learning? Are there any behaviors that don’t reflect learning?
∙ What essentially is behaviorism? What are four main cognitive approaches to
learning?
REFLECT
∙ How do you learn? Think of a behavior you engage in and describe how you learned it.
PRAXIS™ PRACTICE
1. According to the psychological definition of learning, all of the following are examples of
learning except
a. writing
b. sneezing
c. swimming
d. washing dishes
2. Mr. Zeller does not believe his students have learned anything unless they demonstrate
it to him. This demonstration could be through assignments they turn in to him,
answering questions in class, or the way they behave. Which approach to learning is
most consistent with Mr. Zeller’s ideas?
a. cognitive
b. behavioral
c. social cognitive
d. conditioning
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
Classical conditioning is a type of learning in which an organism learns to connect,
or associate, stimuli. In classical conditioning, a neutral stimulus (such as the sight
of a person) becomes associated with a meaningful stimulus (such as food) and
acquires the capacity to elicit a similar response. Classical conditioning was the
brainchild of Ivan Pavlov (1927). To fully understand Pavlov’s theory of classical
conditioning, we need to understand two types of stimuli and two types of responses:
unconditioned stimulus (UCS), unconditioned response (UCR), conditioned stimulus
(CS), and conditioned response (CR).
Figure 2 summarizes the way classical conditioning works. An unconditioned
stimulus (UCS) is a stimulus that automatically produces a response without any
prior learning. Food was the UCS in Pavlov’s experiments. An unconditioned
response (UCR) is an unlearned response that is automatically elicited by the UCS.
In Pavlov’s experiments, the dog’s salivation in response to food was the UCR. A
conditioned stimulus (CS) is a previously neutral stimulus that eventually elicits a
conditioned response after being associated with the UCS. Among the conditioned
stimuli in Pavlov’s experiments were various sights and sounds that occurred prior
to the dog’s actually eating the food, such as the sound of the door closing before
the food was placed in the dog’s dish. A conditioned response (CR) is a learned
response to the conditioned stimulus that occurs after UCS-CS pairing.
Classical conditioning can be involved in both positive and negative experiences classical conditioning A form of associative learning
of children in the classroom. Among the things in the child’s schooling that produce in which a neutral stimulus becomes associated with a
pleasure because they have become classically conditioned are a favorite song and meaningful stimulus and acquires the capacity to elicit a
feelings that the classroom is a safe and fun place to be. For example, a song could similar response.
Before Conditioning
be neutral for the child until the child joins in with other classmates to sing it
with accompanying positive feelings.
Children can develop fear of the classroom if they associate the classroom
with criticism, so the criticism becomes a CS for fear. Classical conditioning
also can be involved in test anxiety. For example, a child fails and is criticized,
which produces anxiety; thereafter, the child associates tests with anxiety, so
they then can become a CS for anxiety (see Figure 3).
Some children’s health problems also might involve classical conditioning
(Chance, 2014). Certain physical complaints—asthma, headaches, and high
blood pressure—might be partly due to classical conditioning. We usually say
that such health problems can be caused by stress. Often what happens, though,
UCS
is that certain stimuli, such as a parent’s or teacher’s heavy criticism, are
Teacher’s UCR conditioned stimuli for physiological responses. Over time, the frequency of
criticism Anxiety the physiological responses can produce a health problem. A teacher’s persis-
CR
tent criticism of a student can cause the student to develop headaches, muscle
CS tension, and so on. Anything associated with the teacher, such as classroom
Tests learning exercises and homework, might trigger the student’s stress and sub-
sequently be linked with headaches or other physiological responses.
FIGURE 3 CLASSICAL CONDITIONING INVOLVED
IN TEACHERS’ CRITICISM OF CHILDREN AND TESTS Generalization, Discrimination, and Extinction In studying a dog’s responses
© Elizabeth Crews to various stimuli, Pavlov rang a bell before giving meat powder to the dog.
By being paired with the UCS (meat), the bell became a CS and elicited the
dog’s salivation. After a time, Pavlov found that the dog also responded to other
sounds, such as a whistle. The more bell-like the noise, the stronger the dog’s
response. Generalization in classical conditioning involves the tendency of a new
stimulus similar to the original conditioned stimulus to produce a similar response.
Let’s consider a classroom example. A student is criticized for poor performance on
a biology test. When the student begins to prepare for a chemistry test, she also
becomes very nervous because these two subjects are closely related in the sciences.
Thus, the student’s anxiety generalizes from taking a test in one subject to taking a
test in another.
Discrimination in classical conditioning occurs when the organism responds to
certain stimuli but not others. To produce discrimination, Pavlov gave food to the
dog only after ringing the bell, not after any other sounds. Subsequently, the dog
responded only to the bell. In the case of the student taking tests in different classes,
she doesn’t become nearly as nervous about taking an English test or a history test
because they are very different subject areas.
Extinction in classical conditioning involves the weakening of the condi-
tioned response (CR) in the absence of the unconditioned stimulus (UCS). In
one session, Pavlov rang the bell repeatedly but did not give the dog any food.
Eventually the dog stopped salivating at the sound of the bell. Similarly, if the
student who gets nervous while taking tests begins to do much better on tests,
her anxiety will fade.
Remember that reinforcement comes in positive and negative forms. In both forms,
FIGURE 4 REINFORCEMENT
the consequences ANDInPUNISHMENT
increase behavior. punishment, behavior is decreased.
Remember that reinforcement comes in positive and negative forms. In both forms, the consequences increase behavior. In punishment,
behavior is decreased.
(left to right) © Daniel Laflor/Getty Images RF; © Hero/Corbis/Glow Images RF; © Westend61/Getty Images RF
the attention is maintaining. For example, in some cases a teacher’s attention inad-
vertently reinforces a student’s disruptive behavior, as when a student pinches
another student and the teacher immediately talks with the perpetrator. If this hap-
pens on a regular basis, the student might learn that pinching other students is a
good way to get the teacher’s attention. If the teacher withdraws his or her attention,
the pinching might extinguish.
REVIEW
∙ What is classical conditioning? What are the UCS, UCR, CS, and CR? In the context
of classical conditioning, what are generalization, discrimination, extinction, and system-
atic desensitization?
∙ What is operant conditioning? Explain the different types of reinforcement and punish-
ment. In the context of operant conditioning, what are generalization, discrimination,
and extinction?
REFLECT
∙ Do you think that your emotions are the result of classical conditioning, operant con-
ditioning, or both? Explain.
PRAXIS™ PRACTICE
1. Sylvia is participating in a class spelling bee. The teacher asks her to spell the word
mortgage. “Don’t forget the t, don’t forget the t,” Sylvia says to herself. “M-O-R-T-A-
G-E,” says Sylvia. “I’m sorry, that’s incorrect, Sylvia,” says her teacher. One of the
students in the back of the class snickers and comments, “Gee, about time Miss
Smarty-pants got one wrong. See, she’s not so smart.” Some other students join in
the laughter. Sylvia begins to cry and runs out of the room. After that, Sylvia becomes
very anxious about spelling bees. According to classical conditioning theory, what is the
conditioned stimulus in this scenario?
a. the teacher telling her she is incorrect
b. the other students’ laughter
c. the word mortgage
d. spelling bees
2. Tyler is a fourth-grade student. He loves to crack jokes, often at his teacher’s
expense. One day he called his teacher, Ms. Bart, “Ms. Fart.” Ms. Bart quickly
admonished him for his behavior and told him that name-calling was unacceptable.
She made him stay after school to discuss his behavior. The other students in the
class thought Tyler’s nickname for Ms. Bart was hilarious, laughing along with Tyler
and later telling him what a good name that was for Ms. Bart. The next day, Tyler
again called Ms. Bart by the insulting nickname. According to operant conditioning
theory, Tyler continued to use this name in spite of having to stay after school the
day before because
a. the behavior had continued for a lengthy period of time
b. he was positively reinforced by his classmates for the behavior
c. he was negatively reinforced by his teacher for his behavior
d. he was punished by his teacher for his behavior