Thorndike's Laws
Watson's Conditioning
Skinner's Reinforcement
Behaviorism in the Classroom
Contemporary Connections
100

Thorndike's Law of Effect states:

What is behaviors followed by satisfying consequences are more likely to be repeated?

100

Watson's most controversial experiment 

Who is Little Albert? (Conditioning fear of a white rat)

100

Type of conditioning Skinner is known for:

What is operant conditioning?

100

Giving gold stars for completed homework:

What is positive reinforcement?

100

A classroom app that uses digital points that students can see to reinforce behavior:

What is ClassDojo?

200

Thorndike studied learning using this type of experimental setup:

What are puzzle boxes with cats? 

200

What was Watson trying to prove with the Little Albert experiment?

Emotions like fear can be conditioned through the environment and experience.

200

Device Skinner invented to study learning:

What is the Skinner Box?

200

Why is consistency important in applying behaviorist strategies?

It helps students form strong, predictable behavior patterns. 

200

Behaviorist principles applied in online learning:

What are badges, levels, and rewards?

300

This one of Thordike's laws says that practice strengthens stimulus-response connections

What is the Law of Exercise?

300

Classical conditioning is:

What is learning through association between a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned response?

300

Giving a student praise, stickers, or extra recess for good behavior:

What is positive reinforcement?

300
Behaviorism supporting classroom management can look like"

Encouraging desired behaviors through reinforcement and discouraging misbehavior. 

300

A reason reinforcement is important for social development:

What is it shapes prosocial behaviors like sharing and self-control?

400

Thorndike's work connects to skill-building in children today: 

How does practice and reinforcement build stronger learning habits?

400

Watson believed behavior could be shaped by:

What is the environment and external experiences?

400

Removing an unpleasant stimulus to increase behavior:

What is negative reinforcement?

400

The strongest reinforcement schedule for long-term behavior change:

What is variable ratio? (Rewards given unpredictably)

400

An example of behaviorist ideas applied in the classroom today:

What is reward charts, time-outs, losing privileges?

500

This type of development is most closely tied to Thorndike

What is cognitive development through problem solving and trial and error?

500

How might Watson's ideas appear in a classroom today?

Pairing routines or cues with expected behaviors. (EX. clapping patterns out to gain attention.)

500

What's a potential drawback of overusing reinforcement strategies?

Children may become dependent on rewards and not develop their own intrinsic motivation.

500

What is one criticism of behaviorist approaches in education?

They can ignore a student's emotions, creativity or intrinsic motivation. 

500

Why should behaviorism be balanced with other approaches in education?

Tp support the child as a whole and their development, not just behavior. 

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