1.3.5 Conditioning Techniques To Control Children Flashcards
what is the debate?
use of conditioning techniques to control the behaviour of children
(Home - for) the supernanny team advocate the use of conditioning in the home to correct what?
inappropriate behaviour
(Home - for) the techniques the supernanny team uses are based upon the principles of what?
operant conditioning
(Home - for) what is the common parental reaction when a child does something naughty? and why is this wrong?
to shout
operant conditioning - shouting means you are giving the child attention, feeding the behaviour and encouraging more of it
(Home - for) according to operant conditioning what is a better way to deal with a naughty child and why?
ignoring them
not encouraging behaviour with attention
(Home - for) the idea behind ignoring the child is the theory behind what?
disengagement - the naughty step
(Home - for) what is the procedure of the naughty step?
- parent warns the child
- child placed on naughty step
- parent explains why the child is on the step
- left for a certain amount of time
- parent explains why they were on the step
- child can move after apologising
(Home - for) supernanny believe the technique is appropriate to use with children especially when?
used alongside parents rewarding their child for appropriate behaviour
(Home - for) the naughty step technique is more appropriate than what?
smacking the child
(Home - against) Morris said the naughty step may have a negative effect on the child’s what?
emotional development
(Home - against) Morris - why can the naughty step have a negative effect on emotional development?
children aren’t learning to control their own emotions - parents aren’t accepting their responsibility to teach them this instead just placing them on a step
(Home - against) for the naughty step to be effective what must the parents be when using it?
calm and consistent
(Home - against) in these situations parents aren’t likely to be what?
calm
(Home - against) why is it hard to be consistent?
if you aren’t at home or are in the middle of something important
(Home - for) parents can encourage good behaviour e.g. cleaning by what?
positive reinforcement - offering pocket money or sweets for completion of tasks
(Home - for) Gill - chore completion by payment of pocket money or postponement led to children doing what?
performing 20% of household chores suggesting it is successful in increasing positive behaviours
(Home - against) why do some believe pocket money for chore completion is inappropriate?
children should help around the house regardless of payment
you are putting a value on what should be co-operative family life
(school - for) education has been a major user of what?
operant conditioning techniques
praise is especially reinforcing
(school - for) McAllister et al - increase in teacher praise led to a decrease in what?
inappropriate talking in high school English classes
(school - for) what method did McAllister use?
experiment - possibly field by going into a school and having one teacher increase praise and one not
(school - against) some believe rewards and reinforcers are actually harmful, why?
they interfere with a child’s drive to learn
(school - against) children aren’t allowed to learn through own experience rather they are just controlled by what?
conditioning and reinforcement
(school - against) Montessori believed children educate themselves they have absorbent minds meaning what?
they are born to learn and best learn in an environment where they have the freedom to learn and absorb knowledge
(school - against) Montessori - using conditioning means children don’t have the freedom to do what?
learn themselves