Who is he
Formation of his theory
Bobo doll
Development
100

Where was he born 

Alberta 

100

What does he prove in his theory 

when you are independently given a task, your habits are different based on if you are around other people.

100

What was it trying to prove 

 how children learn through observation

100

What can you understand from his theory 

how an individual learns through observing

200

What university did he teach at 

Stanford
200

What did he base his theory on 

How people are reliant on being independent based on what other people around them are doing.

200

How did the experiment work 

Kids watched a video of adults interacting with this large inflatable doll named Bobo, then later had to go into the room with Bobo and interact with him. 


200

What type of development would it be 

Intellectual, Social, Moral  

300

Where did he do his undergraduate education 

University of British Colombia 

300

What is the basic premise of his theory 

Attention, Retention, Reproduction, Motivation 

300

What did this experiment demonstrate 

Children can learn and replicate behaviors by watching others 

300

True or False: High self-efficacy often leads to greater motivation, persistence, and success in task accomplishment.

True 

400

What was his degree

Bachelor of the arts - Psychology 

400

What was the main concept of his work 

Self efficiency 

400

What was one of the biggest findings of this experiment 

 aggression can be learned through observation, not only direct reinforcement


400

How does this theory show that personality can change 

Personality can change based on their environment

500

What award was he granted ever year in university 

Outstanding student award 

500

How did he prove his theory is correct 

The Bobo doll experiment 

500

Name a limitation of the experiment 

The research only looks at short term behaviour which may not affect the child behaviour in the long term.  

500

Who is more likely to copy behavior 

Boys are three times more likely to copy behaviour they observe, two times more likely to copy the behaviour of a man

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