Cook (1988) supports the SLT in animals as it was found that reared Rhesus monkeys, which initially displayed no fear of snakes, displayed alarm after watching the reaction of wildmonkeys to snakes.
SLT accepts that cognitiveprocesses are also involved in learning.
Great deal of supporting research for the SLT from Bandura and others.
Many experiments were in the lab, making them more reliable.
Many of Bandura's early studies used children as participants, which is more unethical.
Many of Bandura's early studies used children as participants which is at greater risk of demandcharacteristics.
The SLT supports the nurture debate in Psychology.
The SLT is deterministic as it suggests situationalvariables cause behaviour to occur.
The SLT has lots of practicalapplications in helping parents and teachers understand how children learn.
The SLT has been criticised for making little reference to biological factors influencing behaviour.
The SLT can help us understand how people are influenced by rolemodels.
Bandura'sSLT has been used to help our understanding of mediainfluence on behaviour.
Bandura (1961) found that children will imitate aggressive behaviour if they observe a rolemodel acting that way.
Bandura (2001) found that watching violence on the internet was linked with increased levels of aggression among young adults.
Bandura (1977) found that children who watched violent TV programmes were more likely to act aggressively towards others than those who didn’t watch them.
A limitation of using SLT to explain learning is that it doesn’t take into account individual differences between people. For example, some people may be more susceptible to social influences than others.
SLT also fails to consider the impact of culture on learning. Different cultures have different norms about what behaviours are acceptable so this could affect which behaviours we choose to copy from others.