LEARNING THEORIES Bandura's original study Flashcards
what was the aim
to demonstrate that if children were witnessed to an aggressive role model, they would imitate the behaviour
when did the study take place
1961
what was the sample
- 36 boys, 36 girls
- around 4 year old
- opportunity sample from Stanford University’s nursery
what was the procedure (stage 1 to 3)
- children matched on pre-existing aggression (assessed by teachers)
- stage 1= brought to an experiment room for 10 minutes and observed, had a child’s play corner and model sat in the opposite corner
in aggressive role model condition, adult was aggressive towards Bobo - stage 2= child subjected to mild aggression arousal - taken to a room with attractive toys, once playing with them the experiment took it away and that the children had to leave
- stage 3 = child taken to another room with aggressive and non-aggressive toys for 20 minutes, observed through a one-way mirror every 5 seconds
what were the observed results
- aggressive model = more aggression
- boys more than girls
- girls = physical aggression when male model but verbal aggression when female role model
- boys= more aggressive wit male role model
what were the quantitative results
girls = 5.5 aggressive acts copied if model was female
girls = 7.2 acts copied if model was male
boys = 25.8 aggressive acts when model was male
what was the conclusion of the study
it supports Bandura’s Social Learning Theory
positives of the study
controlled variables - pre-tested for aggression - the model influenced the children - internal validity
standardised procedure - same length of time in the rooms - reliability
useful application - danger of children viewing aggression on TV - leads to censorship
negatives of the study
not representative to real life - model and child are strangers - kicking an inflatable doll - lacks ecological validity
qualitative data - comments from children - cannot be analysed objectively - leads to subjectivity
reductionist - doesn’t consider aggression being innate - falsely assume that aggression is due to imitation of role models