a) Perhaps
the most obvious principle of behaviorist learning theory that would help
inform me of whether or not my students are successfully mastering lesson
objectives is instrumental conditioning. In instrumental conditioning, a student
will steadily increase behavior or decrease behavior depending on the
reinforcement each behavior receives (Ormrod, 2011). In a classroom setting, a child’s mastering a lesson
objective can be seen as academic behavior. Let’s say that on a particular day, my lesson objective is
to get my students to understand the appropriate punctuation that needs to be
used in writing dialogue. Let’s
say I lecture the students for a few minutes about the correct uses of
punctuation in dialogue. Then I
write this sentence on the whiteboard: Marsha said “I want a new pair of
shoes.” I then ask for someone to
raise their hand and tell me what punctuation mark to put between “said” and
“I.” One of my students raises his
hand and says, “A period.” The
student answered the question incorrectly, an academic behavior that I do not
want him to display, so I gently tell him that he did not answer the question
correctly (a form of punishment), and that there is a different punctuation
mark that should be used. Another
student then raises her hand and says, “You should use a comma.” This student displayed the academic
behavior I do want to see, so I reinforce her answer by saying “Good job” in
hopes of increasing this behavior.
Next, I would pass out worksheets in which students will be provided
various examples of dialogue that are missing the punctuations, and their job
will be to insert the correct punctuation marks into each sentence. The students will complete this task, I
will take the worksheets up, and I will grade them either by providing gentle
punishment in the form of X’s and corrections for each missed question, or
reinforcement in the form of check marks and “Good jobs” for each correct
answer given. Slowly, through this
steady process of reinforcing good academic behavior and punishing undesirable
academic behavior, the students will eventually master the lesson objective,
which is to understand the appropriate punctuation marks used in dialogue.
The
main principle of the social cognitive theory of learning that I would help inform
me of my students’ mastery of lesson objectives is modeling. Let’s continue to use the lesson in
which my objective is to get my students to understand how to correctly use
punctuation in sentences with dialogue.
If I am abiding by the social cognitive theory, the first thing I do is
lecture for a minute about the different ways to punctuate sentences with
dialogue. Next, I write this
example sentence on the white board: Tom asked, “Can I ride the bicycle after
you” This time, instead of asking students what punctuation mark should be used
and where, I am going to model the correct academic skills I want to see from
my students by inserting a question mark between “you” and the final quotation
mark myself. By seeing me model
this behavior, the students will know that this is the correct answer and they
will be more likely to imitate it on their own. I would not have to stop there, though. I could go on to provide cognitive
modeling. After inserting the
question mark between “you” and the final quotation mark, I could explain the
cognitive process I went through to determine what the correct answer was. “Well,” I could say out loud, “first we
know that this is a sentence with dialogue, so really there are two people
speaking in this sentence: the narrator, and Tom. Now, I tell myself that it sounds like Tom is asking a
question, as signaled by the question-marker word ‘Can.’ So, since Tom is asking the question,
the question mark should go inside the final quotation mark, because if it was
outside the final quotation mark it would be like the narrator was asking a
question, when we know that the narrator is actually simply telling us what Tom
asked.” Hopefully, as I do this,
my students will pay attention, retain the information and demonstration I am
providing, and, after I have passed out the worksheets with the sentences that
need punctuation, reproduce the correct behavior I modeled on their own
worksheet. Perhaps on their
worksheet I could require my students, as they complete the worksheet, to
elaborate on each answer by explaining the cognitive process they went through
to determine the correct answer, as I did in front of the class. In abiding by the social cognitive
theory of learning, I will know that the students have mastered my lesson
objective when they are able to observe my modeling of the academic skill and
successfully demonstrate these academic skills themselves, possibly providing
an explanation of the cognitive process they went through to get to their
answer as well.
Another
way to make sure my students master my lesson objectives when using the social
cognitive theory is teaching them self-monitoring techniques. In self-monitoring, a student is able
to observe oneself in terms of how well they are progressing toward a certain
goal (Ormrod, 2011). As Friend and
Bursuck (2012) posit, teaching self-monitoring is especially important when
dealing with children with special needs, as it fosters a sense of independent
learning and self-reliance in the student. Friend and Bursuck lay down a clear, three-step process
educators can take when teaching students with disabilities
self-monitoring. The authors
suggest educators discuss with the student an effective strategy the student
can take in order to display an appropriate behavior or academic skill, model
for the student what behaviors you expect him or her to display, and reward the
student when he or she successfully displays the desired behavior or academic
skill (Friend and Bursuck, 2012, p. 400-401). So, taking my punctuation lesson as an example, I could foster
self-monitoring in a student with disabilities (or any student, really) by
discussing what strategies they can take to determine which punctuation mark to
use and where, modeling for the student the correct use of punctuation marks,
and rewarding the student when they correctly imitate the behavior and
demonstrate an understanding of the academic skill.
Ormrod, J. (2011). Educational
psychology: Developing learners (7th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
Friend, M, & Bursuck, W. (2012). Including students with special needs: A practical guide for classroom
teachers (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Pearson Education.
I like how you describe gentle punishment in X's and saying "Nope, that's not it." I never really thought about it like that, but it is a form of punishment and it is in a gentle manner. Nobody likes hearing that they answered wrong or get a paper back that has a bunch of X's all over it, so the punishment works (sometimes) and makes the student want to do better next time (we hope). I also liked your idea on having the students explain their logic behind why they put the question mark there over all the other punctuation marks. This helps them understand more of the meaning why rather than it is what it is. I liked that you want to keep them thinking! Good job! Keep it up! :-) (I hope my punctuation doesn't bother you; I just get excited about stuff! lol)
ReplyDeleteNice illustration if the differences between the two theories. Your example points to one of the things people like about behaviorism: there is not the assumption that students pay attention, rather they should actively demonstrate knowledge. These are very clear examples.
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