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LEARNING
CHAPTER V
FERDINAND AGDORO
MARY JANE PAULINE MAGNIFICO
IT’S MORE FUN IN LEARNING !
#HUGOTVIDEO
#HUGOTGAME
Ichoose
JUST CHOOSE YOUR CHOICE !
God Where do you learn more
about your God?
A B
Nation
Among of the two women presidents of our country, who
do you admire most?
A B
Internal
Where do you learn about your personal life?
A B
News
Which of the two national news in our country that brought a
great impact to you as a student?
A B
Role
If you will be given the chance, who do you like most to
impersonate?
A B C
Asan ang Forever?
Sinong pagbibigyan mo ng chance
upang ikaw ay i-pursue?
A
BESTFRIEND
B EX-BF/GF
C Long Time Crush
D Pantasya ng Bayan
Entertainment
Which do you prefer to dance?
B
Entertainment
Which do you prefer to dance?
A C
MAHAL
MO
LumaLovelife?
Who do you prefer to be and grow old with you?
MAHAL
KA
It is a relatively permanent change in
behavior that occurs through experience
(Santrock, 2000)
Involves a relatively
permanent influence on
behavior
Through
experiences
LEARNING
EXPERIENCES LEARNING
RESPONDING to things
that happen
ACTING and experiencing
consequences for our behavior
OBSERVING what others
say and do
CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
OPERANT
CONDITIONING
OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs
through experience
(Santrock, 2000)
LEARNING
I. CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
• responding
II. OPERANT
CONDITIONING
• acting
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
• observing
I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
VARIABLES: STIMULUS and
RESPONSES
FEATURE
S
INTRODUCTIO
N
• Discovered accidentally by IVAN PAVLOV
• It involves the link between two stimuli
• CLASSICAL CONDITIONING is a form of associative
learning, which involves learning that two events are related or linked.
INTRODUCTIO
N
I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS)
UNCONDITIONED
STIMULUS(US)
CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS)
UNCONDITIONED
STIMULUS(US)
VARIABLES: STIMULUS
and
RESPONSES
UNCONDITIONED
STIMULUS (US)
-produces a response
without prior learning
CONDITIONED STIMULUS
(CS)
-a previously neutral stimulus
that eventually elicits the
conditioned response after
being associated with the US
UNCONDITIONED
RESPONSE (UR)
-an unlearned response
without prior learning
CONDITIONED RESPONSE
(CR)
-the learned response to the CS
that occur after CS-US pairing
I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
VARIABLES: STIMULUS and
RESPONSES
FEATURE
S
INTRODUCTIO
N
A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION
B. EXTINCTION
C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
FEATURE
S
STIMULUS GENERALIZATION – the process by which the conditioned
response transfers to other stimuli that are
similar to the original stimuli.
COUNTERCONDITIONING– a classical conditioning procedure for
weakening a CR by associating the fear-provoking
stimulus with a new response incompatible with fear
- Has been used to eliminate fears
A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION
B. EXTINCTION
C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION
• a process of learning to respond to certain stimuli and not to respond
to others.
Pavlov gave food to the dog only after ringing the bell and not
after any other sounds.
B. EXTINCTION
• the weakening of the conditioned response in the absence of the
unconditioned stimulus.
Ex: Rita has a fear of her seatmate Tom because he bullied her
at the start of the school year but in the succeeding days, Rita
experienced pleasant treatment from Tom, gradually, the anxiety or
fear will be extinguished.
C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
• the process which a conditioned response can recur after a time
delay without further conditioning.
In the case of Rita, even though Tom is giving her pleasant
treatment most of the time, she might have the tendency to fear Tom
from time to time.
I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING
VARIABLES: STIMULUS and
RESPONSES
FEATURE
S
INTRODUCTIO
N
A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION
B. EXTINCTION
C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
IVAN PAVLOV
It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through
experience (Santrock, 2000)
LEARNING
I. CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
(responding) – IVAN PAVLOV
• VARIABLES
• US  UR
• CS  CR
• FEATURES
• Stimulus Discrimination
• Extinction
• Spontaneous Recovery
II. OPERANT
CONDITIONING
• acting
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
• observing
II. OPERANT CONDITIONING
A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT
CONDITIONING
B. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CONDTIONING
INTRODUCTIO
N
• Pioneered by B. F SKINNER and E.L THORNDIKE
• A form of learning in which the consequence of behavior
produce changes in the probability of the behavior’s occurrence.
• OPERANT CONDITIONING is better than classical
conditioning at explaining voluntary behavior.
INTRODUCTIO
N
II. OPERANT CONDITIONING
• Association between a response and its consequences
A. THORNDIKE’S
OPERANT
CONDITIONING
• In the experiment of Thorndike, he established the power of
consequences in determining voluntary behavior.
• He put more emphasis on the response of the
organism.
A. THORNDIKE’S
OPERANT
CONDITIONING
• E.L THORNDIKE formulated the
THREE MAJOR LAWS OF
LEARNING
A. LAW OF
READINES
S
B. LAW OF
EXERCISE
C. LAW OF
EFFECT
THREE MAJOR LAWS OF
LEARNING
A. LAW OF
READINES
S
• Behavior may only be satisfying or annoying
depending on how ready the organism is.
“ Nobody can force a learner to learn if he/she is not
biologically and psychologically prepared”
- Gines, Dizon, Fulgencio, Obias and Vendivel Jr. (1999)
B. LAW OF
EXERCISE
• Explains that any connection is strengthened in
proportion to the number of times it occurs
and in proportion to the average vigor and
duration of the connection
When CONNECTION is
made between STIMULUS
and RESPONSE
Connection’s
strength decreases
“ Practice alone was not enough for improvement”
- Thorndike
C. LAW OF
EFFECT
• States that behaviors
followed by positive outcomes are strengthened ;
those followed by negative outcomes are weakened
“ Through observation and experience people
learned that learners tend to learn more effectively
and retain the learning longer, if he/she
experiences pleasant consequences”
II. OPERANT CONDITIONING
A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT
CONDITIONING
B. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CONDTIONING
INTRODUCTIO
N
THREE LAWS OF
LEARNING
A. LAW OF READINESS
B. LAW OF EXERCISE
C. LAW OF EFFECT
THORNDIK
E
SKINNER
B. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CONDITIONING
• Skinner described operant conditioning as a form of learning in
which the consequences of behavior lead to changes in the
probability of that behavior’s occurrences
REINFORCEMEN
T
PUNISHMENT
REINFORCEMEN
T
A. FOUR TYPES
1. Positive
2. Negative
3. Punishment
4. Extinction
B. REINFORCEMENT
SCHEDULE
B1. Continuous Schedule
1. Fixed Ratio
2. Fixed Interval
B2. Variable Schedule
1. Variable Ratio
2. Variable Interval
• The term reinforce means to
strengthen.
• In psychology, it refer to any
stimulus which strengthens or
increases the probability of a specific
response.
REINFORCEMEN
T
A.FOU
R
TYPE
S
1.Positive Reinforcement
•Adding something in order to increase a response
2. Negative Reinforcement
•Taking something in order to increase a response
e.g. Taking away a toy until the child cleans up
his/her room ; Withholding payment until a job is
completed
e.g. adding a treat, praise, reward
REINFORCEMEN
T
A.FOU
R
TYPE
S
e.g. pg. 130
e.g. spanking a child for misbehaving
3. Punishment
•Adding something aversive in order to decrease a
behavior
4. Extinction
•Occurs when a previously reinforced response is no
longer reinforced and there is a decreased tendency to
perform the response
REINFORCEMEN
T
B.
REINFORCE
-MENT
SCHEDULE
CONTINUOUS SCHEDULE
•Applying one of the four types of reinforcement ever
time the behavior occurs every negative behavior
1. Fixed Ratio
•Refers to applying the reinforcement after a specific
number of behaviors.
2. Fixed Interval
 CONTINUOU
S SCHEDULE
 VARIABLE
SCHEDULE
e.g. Spanking a child if one has asked three times already in
order to clean his/her room
•Applying the reinforcement after a specific amount of
time
e.g. Getting a raise every year and not in between
REINFORCEMEN
T
B.
REINFORCE
-MENT
SCHEDULE
VARIABLE SCHEDULE
•When reinforcement is applied on an irregular
basis
3. Variable Ratio
•Applying a reinforcement after a variable number of
responses
 CONTINUOU
S SCHEDULE
 VARIABLE
SCHEDULE
4. Variable Interval
e.g. pg. 132
•Reinforcing someone after a variable amount of time
II. OPERANT CONDITIONING
A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT
CONDITIONING
B. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CONDTIONING
INTRODUCTIO
N
THREE LAWS OF
LEARNING
A. LAW OF READINESS
B. LAW OF EXERCISE
C. LAW OF EFFECT
THORNDIK
E
SKINNER
A. FOUR TYPES OF
REINFORCEMENT
1. Positive
2. Negative
3. Punishment
4. Extinction
B. REINFORCEMENT
SCHEDULE
B1. Continuous Schedule
1. Fixed Ratio
2. Fixed Interval
B2. Variable Schedule
1. Variable Ratio
2. Variable Interval
It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through
experience (Santrock, 2000)
LEARNING
I. CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
(responding) – IVAN PAVLOV
• VARIABLES
• US  UR
• CS  CR
• FEATURES
• Stimulus Discrimination
• Extinction
• Spontaneous Recovery
II. OPERANT
CONDITIONING
(acting) – THORNDIKE and SKINNER
a. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT
CON.
- THREE LAWS OF LEARNING
A. LAW OF READINESS
B. LAW OF EXERCISE
C. LAW OF EFFECT
A. b. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CON.
-FOUR TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT
Positive, Negative , Punishment , Extinction
-REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE
B1. Continuous Schedule
Fixed Ratio, Fixed Interval
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
• observing
CLASSICAL CONDITIONING vs.
OPERANT CONDITIONING
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
FOUR MAIN PROCESSES
INTRODUCTIO
N
• According to Bandura, if we learn only in trial and error fashion, it
would be exceedingly tedious and at times hazardous.
• A form of learning that occur when a person observes and imitates
someone’s behavior.
• OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING is also called
imitation or modeling.
INTRODUCTIO
N
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING’S
FOUR MAIN
PROCESSES
• BANDURA described the
FOUR MAIN PROCESSES
THAT ARE INVOLVED IN OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING
ATTENTION RETENTION
MOTOR
REPRODUCTION
REINFORCEMEN
T
• Refers to attending to what the model is saying or doing
before he/she can reproduce a model’s action
ATTENTION
RETENTION
• Refers in coding information and keeping it in memory
for retrieval in order to reproduce a model’s actions
MOTOR
REPRODUCTION
• We might attend to a model and code in memory what we
have seen, but because of limitations in motor development
we might not be able to reproduce the model’s action
REINFORCEMEN
T
• Or INCENTIVE CONDITION
• You attend to what a model says or does, retain the information in
memory, and possess the motor capabilities to perform the action, but
fail to repeat the behavior because of inadequate
reinforcement.
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
FOUR MAIN PROCESSES
INTRODUCTIO
N
ALBERT BANDURA
MOTOR
REPRODUCTION
REINFORCEMEN
T
ATTENTION
RETENTION
It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through
experience (Santrock, 2000)
LEARNING
I. CLASSICAL
CONDITIONING
(responding) – IVAN PAVLOV
• VARIABLES
• US  UR
• CS  CR
• FEATURES
• Stimulus Discrimination
• Extinction
• Spontaneous Recovery
II. OPERANT
CONDITIONING
(acting) – THORNDIKE and SKINNER
a. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT
CON.
- THREE LAWS OF LEARNING
A. LAW OF READINESS
B. LAW OF EXERCISE
C. LAW OF EFFECT
A. b. SKINNER’S OPERANT
CON.
-FOUR TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT
Positive, Negative , Punishment , Extinction
-REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE
B1. Continuous Schedule
Fixed Ratio, Fixed Interval
III. OBSERVATIONAL
LEARNING
(observing) – ALBERT BANDURA
 FOUR MAIN
PROCESSES
1. Attention
2. Retention
3. Motor Reproduction
4. Reinforcement
LEARNING
CHAPTER V
FERDINAND AGDORO
MARY JANE MAGNIFICO

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Learning

  • 2. IT’S MORE FUN IN LEARNING ! #HUGOTVIDEO
  • 4. God Where do you learn more about your God? A B
  • 5. Nation Among of the two women presidents of our country, who do you admire most? A B
  • 6. Internal Where do you learn about your personal life? A B
  • 7. News Which of the two national news in our country that brought a great impact to you as a student? A B
  • 8. Role If you will be given the chance, who do you like most to impersonate? A B C
  • 9. Asan ang Forever? Sinong pagbibigyan mo ng chance upang ikaw ay i-pursue? A BESTFRIEND B EX-BF/GF C Long Time Crush D Pantasya ng Bayan
  • 10. Entertainment Which do you prefer to dance? B Entertainment Which do you prefer to dance? A C
  • 11. MAHAL MO LumaLovelife? Who do you prefer to be and grow old with you? MAHAL KA
  • 12. It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through experience (Santrock, 2000) Involves a relatively permanent influence on behavior Through experiences LEARNING
  • 13. EXPERIENCES LEARNING RESPONDING to things that happen ACTING and experiencing consequences for our behavior OBSERVING what others say and do CLASSICAL CONDITIONING OPERANT CONDITIONING OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING
  • 14. It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through experience (Santrock, 2000) LEARNING I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING • responding II. OPERANT CONDITIONING • acting III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING • observing
  • 15. I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING VARIABLES: STIMULUS and RESPONSES FEATURE S INTRODUCTIO N
  • 16. • Discovered accidentally by IVAN PAVLOV • It involves the link between two stimuli • CLASSICAL CONDITIONING is a form of associative learning, which involves learning that two events are related or linked. INTRODUCTIO N I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS) UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS(US)
  • 17. CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS) UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS(US) VARIABLES: STIMULUS and RESPONSES UNCONDITIONED STIMULUS (US) -produces a response without prior learning CONDITIONED STIMULUS (CS) -a previously neutral stimulus that eventually elicits the conditioned response after being associated with the US UNCONDITIONED RESPONSE (UR) -an unlearned response without prior learning CONDITIONED RESPONSE (CR) -the learned response to the CS that occur after CS-US pairing
  • 18. I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING VARIABLES: STIMULUS and RESPONSES FEATURE S INTRODUCTIO N A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION B. EXTINCTION C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
  • 19. FEATURE S STIMULUS GENERALIZATION – the process by which the conditioned response transfers to other stimuli that are similar to the original stimuli. COUNTERCONDITIONING– a classical conditioning procedure for weakening a CR by associating the fear-provoking stimulus with a new response incompatible with fear - Has been used to eliminate fears A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION B. EXTINCTION C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY
  • 20. A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION • a process of learning to respond to certain stimuli and not to respond to others. Pavlov gave food to the dog only after ringing the bell and not after any other sounds. B. EXTINCTION • the weakening of the conditioned response in the absence of the unconditioned stimulus. Ex: Rita has a fear of her seatmate Tom because he bullied her at the start of the school year but in the succeeding days, Rita experienced pleasant treatment from Tom, gradually, the anxiety or fear will be extinguished.
  • 21. C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY • the process which a conditioned response can recur after a time delay without further conditioning. In the case of Rita, even though Tom is giving her pleasant treatment most of the time, she might have the tendency to fear Tom from time to time.
  • 22.
  • 23. I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING VARIABLES: STIMULUS and RESPONSES FEATURE S INTRODUCTIO N A. STIMULUS DISCRIMINATION B. EXTINCTION C. SPONTANEOUS RECOVERY IVAN PAVLOV
  • 24. It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through experience (Santrock, 2000) LEARNING I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING (responding) – IVAN PAVLOV • VARIABLES • US  UR • CS  CR • FEATURES • Stimulus Discrimination • Extinction • Spontaneous Recovery II. OPERANT CONDITIONING • acting III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING • observing
  • 25. II. OPERANT CONDITIONING A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CONDITIONING B. SKINNER’S OPERANT CONDTIONING INTRODUCTIO N
  • 26. • Pioneered by B. F SKINNER and E.L THORNDIKE • A form of learning in which the consequence of behavior produce changes in the probability of the behavior’s occurrence. • OPERANT CONDITIONING is better than classical conditioning at explaining voluntary behavior. INTRODUCTIO N II. OPERANT CONDITIONING • Association between a response and its consequences
  • 27. A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CONDITIONING • In the experiment of Thorndike, he established the power of consequences in determining voluntary behavior. • He put more emphasis on the response of the organism.
  • 28. A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CONDITIONING • E.L THORNDIKE formulated the THREE MAJOR LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINES S B. LAW OF EXERCISE C. LAW OF EFFECT
  • 29. THREE MAJOR LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINES S • Behavior may only be satisfying or annoying depending on how ready the organism is. “ Nobody can force a learner to learn if he/she is not biologically and psychologically prepared” - Gines, Dizon, Fulgencio, Obias and Vendivel Jr. (1999)
  • 30. B. LAW OF EXERCISE • Explains that any connection is strengthened in proportion to the number of times it occurs and in proportion to the average vigor and duration of the connection When CONNECTION is made between STIMULUS and RESPONSE Connection’s strength decreases “ Practice alone was not enough for improvement” - Thorndike
  • 31. C. LAW OF EFFECT • States that behaviors followed by positive outcomes are strengthened ; those followed by negative outcomes are weakened “ Through observation and experience people learned that learners tend to learn more effectively and retain the learning longer, if he/she experiences pleasant consequences”
  • 32. II. OPERANT CONDITIONING A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CONDITIONING B. SKINNER’S OPERANT CONDTIONING INTRODUCTIO N THREE LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINESS B. LAW OF EXERCISE C. LAW OF EFFECT THORNDIK E SKINNER
  • 33. B. SKINNER’S OPERANT CONDITIONING • Skinner described operant conditioning as a form of learning in which the consequences of behavior lead to changes in the probability of that behavior’s occurrences REINFORCEMEN T PUNISHMENT
  • 34. REINFORCEMEN T A. FOUR TYPES 1. Positive 2. Negative 3. Punishment 4. Extinction B. REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE B1. Continuous Schedule 1. Fixed Ratio 2. Fixed Interval B2. Variable Schedule 1. Variable Ratio 2. Variable Interval • The term reinforce means to strengthen. • In psychology, it refer to any stimulus which strengthens or increases the probability of a specific response.
  • 35. REINFORCEMEN T A.FOU R TYPE S 1.Positive Reinforcement •Adding something in order to increase a response 2. Negative Reinforcement •Taking something in order to increase a response e.g. Taking away a toy until the child cleans up his/her room ; Withholding payment until a job is completed e.g. adding a treat, praise, reward
  • 36. REINFORCEMEN T A.FOU R TYPE S e.g. pg. 130 e.g. spanking a child for misbehaving 3. Punishment •Adding something aversive in order to decrease a behavior 4. Extinction •Occurs when a previously reinforced response is no longer reinforced and there is a decreased tendency to perform the response
  • 37. REINFORCEMEN T B. REINFORCE -MENT SCHEDULE CONTINUOUS SCHEDULE •Applying one of the four types of reinforcement ever time the behavior occurs every negative behavior 1. Fixed Ratio •Refers to applying the reinforcement after a specific number of behaviors. 2. Fixed Interval  CONTINUOU S SCHEDULE  VARIABLE SCHEDULE e.g. Spanking a child if one has asked three times already in order to clean his/her room •Applying the reinforcement after a specific amount of time e.g. Getting a raise every year and not in between
  • 38. REINFORCEMEN T B. REINFORCE -MENT SCHEDULE VARIABLE SCHEDULE •When reinforcement is applied on an irregular basis 3. Variable Ratio •Applying a reinforcement after a variable number of responses  CONTINUOU S SCHEDULE  VARIABLE SCHEDULE 4. Variable Interval e.g. pg. 132 •Reinforcing someone after a variable amount of time
  • 39. II. OPERANT CONDITIONING A. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CONDITIONING B. SKINNER’S OPERANT CONDTIONING INTRODUCTIO N THREE LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINESS B. LAW OF EXERCISE C. LAW OF EFFECT THORNDIK E SKINNER A. FOUR TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT 1. Positive 2. Negative 3. Punishment 4. Extinction B. REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE B1. Continuous Schedule 1. Fixed Ratio 2. Fixed Interval B2. Variable Schedule 1. Variable Ratio 2. Variable Interval
  • 40. It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through experience (Santrock, 2000) LEARNING I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING (responding) – IVAN PAVLOV • VARIABLES • US  UR • CS  CR • FEATURES • Stimulus Discrimination • Extinction • Spontaneous Recovery II. OPERANT CONDITIONING (acting) – THORNDIKE and SKINNER a. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CON. - THREE LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINESS B. LAW OF EXERCISE C. LAW OF EFFECT A. b. SKINNER’S OPERANT CON. -FOUR TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT Positive, Negative , Punishment , Extinction -REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE B1. Continuous Schedule Fixed Ratio, Fixed Interval III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING • observing
  • 42. III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING FOUR MAIN PROCESSES INTRODUCTIO N
  • 43. • According to Bandura, if we learn only in trial and error fashion, it would be exceedingly tedious and at times hazardous. • A form of learning that occur when a person observes and imitates someone’s behavior. • OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING is also called imitation or modeling. INTRODUCTIO N III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING
  • 44. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING’S FOUR MAIN PROCESSES • BANDURA described the FOUR MAIN PROCESSES THAT ARE INVOLVED IN OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING ATTENTION RETENTION MOTOR REPRODUCTION REINFORCEMEN T
  • 45. • Refers to attending to what the model is saying or doing before he/she can reproduce a model’s action ATTENTION RETENTION • Refers in coding information and keeping it in memory for retrieval in order to reproduce a model’s actions
  • 46. MOTOR REPRODUCTION • We might attend to a model and code in memory what we have seen, but because of limitations in motor development we might not be able to reproduce the model’s action REINFORCEMEN T • Or INCENTIVE CONDITION • You attend to what a model says or does, retain the information in memory, and possess the motor capabilities to perform the action, but fail to repeat the behavior because of inadequate reinforcement.
  • 47. III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING FOUR MAIN PROCESSES INTRODUCTIO N ALBERT BANDURA MOTOR REPRODUCTION REINFORCEMEN T ATTENTION RETENTION
  • 48. It is a relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs through experience (Santrock, 2000) LEARNING I. CLASSICAL CONDITIONING (responding) – IVAN PAVLOV • VARIABLES • US  UR • CS  CR • FEATURES • Stimulus Discrimination • Extinction • Spontaneous Recovery II. OPERANT CONDITIONING (acting) – THORNDIKE and SKINNER a. THORNDIKE’S OPERANT CON. - THREE LAWS OF LEARNING A. LAW OF READINESS B. LAW OF EXERCISE C. LAW OF EFFECT A. b. SKINNER’S OPERANT CON. -FOUR TYPES OF REINFORCEMENT Positive, Negative , Punishment , Extinction -REINFORCEMENT SCHEDULE B1. Continuous Schedule Fixed Ratio, Fixed Interval III. OBSERVATIONAL LEARNING (observing) – ALBERT BANDURA  FOUR MAIN PROCESSES 1. Attention 2. Retention 3. Motor Reproduction 4. Reinforcement
  • 49.