Albert bandura apa

Albert Bandura

  • Albert Bandura By: Stephanie Garcia

  • Born: December 4, 1925 in Mundare, Canada • Youngest of six children • In 1949, he graduated from the University of British Columbia with a B.A. in psychology. • In 1952, he received his PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Iowa. • He began working at Stanford University in 1953 and continues to work there. • He has accredited his successful path in psychology to his early childhood education and working in the Yukon.

  • Observational Learning Four Subprocesses: • Attentional Processes • Retention Processes • Motor Reproduction Processes • Motivational Processes

  • Attentional Processes • The model must be distinctive and engaging for the observer. • Bandura also made a connection between the interest of the individual observer to what was being observed (though there was little known about this connection).

  • Retention Processes • Imitating models comes after observing them, so usually we remember through symbolic form. • Bandura thinks of symbolic processes through stimulus contiguity which are assoc

    Albert bandura

  • 1. ALBERT BANDURA BY: MARY ALYSSA G. BOTIN BEED-SPED 2
  • 2. BIOGRAPHY •BANDURA WAS BORN IN MUNDARE, IN ALBERTA, A SMALL TOWN OF ROUGHLY FOUR HUNDRED INHABITANTS, AS THE YOUNGEST CHILD, AND ONLY SON, IN A FAMILY OF SIX. THE LIMITATIONS OF EDUCATION IN A REMOTE TOWN SUCH AS THIS CAUSED BANDURA TO BECOME INDEPENDENT AND SELF-MOTIVATED IN TERMS OF LEARNING, AND THESE PRIMARILY DEVELOPED TRAITS PROVED VERY HELPFUL IN HIS LENGTHY CAREER.[10] BANDURA IS OF UKRAINIAN AND POLISHDESCENT.
  • 3. •BANDURA'S PARENTS WERE A KEY INFLUENCE IN ENCOURAGING HIM TO SEEK VENTURES OUT OF THE SMALL HAMLET THEY RESIDED IN. •THE SUMMER AFTER FINISHING HIGH SCHOOL, BANDURA WORKED IN THE YUKON TO PROTECT THE ALASKA HIGHWAY AGAINST SINKING. •IT WAS IN THIS EXPERIENCE IN THE YUKON, WHERE HE WAS EXPOSED TO A SUBCULTURE OF DRINKING AND GAMBLING, WHICH HELPED BROADEN HIS PERSPECTIVE AND SCOPE OF VIEWS ON LIFE.
  • 4. •IT WAS IN THIS EXPERIENCE IN THE YUKON, WHERE HE WAS EXPOSED TO A SUBCULTURE OF DRINKING AND GAMBLING, WHICH HELPED BROADEN HIS PERSPECTIVE AND SCOPE OF VIEWS ON LIFE.
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    Albert Bandura.

    Presentation on theme: "Albert Bandura."— Presentation transcript:

    1 Albert Bandura

    2 About Bandura Born: 1925 – present.
    He grew up in North Alberta, Canada.He is best known for social and emotional intellectual research.

    3 TheoryThe willingness of children and adults to imitate behavior observed in others, in particular, aggression. Models are an important source for learning new behaviors. He suggested that environment causes behavior, as well as behavior causes environment. He labeled this concept reciprocal determinism. Personality is interaction between environment, behavior , and psychological processes.

    4 Bobo the Doll Experiment

    5 Stages of the Modeling Process
    1. Attention- If you are going to learn anything you need to be paying attention.2. Retention- When the information is stored, you can later “bring up” the image or description, so that you can reproduce it with your own behavior.3. Reproduction- Translating images in your head to actual behavior.4. Motivation- You have to be motivated to imitate.

    6 Stages of Self-regulatio

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