Behaviorists believe the
environment conditions one’s behavior (Ormrod 286). Learning, then, occurs when
one changes a behavior due to environmental stimuli. To measure my students’
learning as a behaviorist, I would have to create an activity that would allow
be to observe their behavior. For example, I could do a class-wide contingency
check over material I had previously covered. I may ask students true or false
or short answer questions over the material and then give them time to write
down their responses. I would look at certain behaviors to gauge if they had
learned the material. If students look at others’ responses, talk to their
peers about the question, or hesitate to reveal their answer, I may infer that learning
had not occurred and that they had not mastered the material. For those who did
well, I could offer rewards to reinforce their behavior and motivate other
students to try to master the material.
Social cognitivists believe people learn
by observing others but that learning may not always directly or immediately
lead to a behavior change (Ormrod 324). Moreover, instead of a one-way
interaction between the environment and behavior, social cognitivists recognize
reciprocal causation, that is, a mutual exchange between the environment,
behavior, and the learner (Ormrod 352). I could gauge learning one way by
observing a learner’s behavior after an assessment. A poor performance could
lead to a decrease in self-efficacy, which would alter the student’s behavior.
Being cognizant of my own role in shaping the environment would be important as
well. Spending more time with a student or differentiating instruction would be
recognition on my part that learning had not occurred. Because modeling plays
an integral role in social cognitive theory, I could see if students could
model desirable behavior or aspects of the lesson to determine if learning had
occurred. But a change in behavior when learning might not always occur
according to this theory. I might measure learning another way by charting
students’ progress. If they continuously show improvement, I would know they
were mastering the material. This approach may be more appropriate if, as
Ormrod suggests, it is more important to focus on improvement rather than
mastery (337).
I liked how you mentioned how you need to be cognizant of you own role in shaping the environment would be important as well. We are quick to wonder why the children aren't grasping a certain concept, but don't realize that we are in charge of the environment that they are in (while in school). So I liked how you are aware of the fact that, that is your role: the environment that you shape is important. I also like your idea of charting their progress. This is very important to do in every class, I think. This lets you know who need to work on what and who is mastering what and when, but most importantly who is showing the most progress, like you said. Good job! Keep it up! :-)
ReplyDeleteGlad to see that you recognize one of the complicated implications of SCT: learning is harder to assess if you recognize the fact that learning can occur with or without display. The good part of the trade off is that SCT recognizes the many things teachers and students can do to build motivation, self efficacy and self regulation.
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