Treating mental disorders & in education. Classical conditioning applied in aversion therapy to help addicts & systematic desensitisation help with phobias. Education-operant conditioning underlies successful teaching strategies. Positive reinforcement & punishment helped shape behaviour in class & school environment.
Skinner (1954):
Applied operant conditioning to teaching-designed a mechanical programmed instruction device. Believed classroom teaching often ineffective as students learn at different rates & reinforcements are therefore too variable to be effective & delayed due to lack of individual attention. Teaching machine: each student can work at own pace & receive reinforcements to encourage future learning. Answer correct-student reinforced, answer wrong- further explanation offered. Immediate feedback (effective). Breaks learning process into small steps so student receives frequent rewards.
Scientific & objective:
Studies behaviour that's observable & directly measurable. Intangible concepts (e.g, feelings & thoughts) operationalised in terms of stimulus & response behaviours. Believe through use of scientific method, we can analyse, quantify & compare behaviour. Enables us to distinguish beliefs from facts. Evidence to show treatments for mental disorders are successful or not.
Focus on the here & now:
Not concerned with someone's past. Treatments focus on current symptoms & trying to remove them (doesn't look at causes). E.g, aversion therapy treats alcoholism by teaching person new stimulus-response link between alcohol & nausea-reduces undesirable behaviour. Doesn't try understand why person turned to alcohol. Systematic desensitisation- new link made between fear & relaxation. Doesn't try find out why phobia occurred in first place. Some people may prefer not looking into past or less complicated to do so- not successful for all disorders.
Emphasis on nurture:
Environment shapes behaviour. Nature ignored. E.g, wouldn't consider how genetic make-up could influence personality & behaviour. Role of external factors exaggerated. Behaviour is actually governed by many internal factors such as motivation, emotion & innate abilities. (If learning was all that mattered, everyone could become surgeon or rocket scientist).
Determinist:
Believe behaviour influenced almost exclusively by associations made between certain environmental stimuli (classical conditioning) or rewards/punishments provided by environment (operant conditioning). Controlled by external factors. Doesn't consider thought processes that occur before we behave in certain way & suggests we're not making choice. Undermines free will- says no personal or moral responsibility for behaviour. Bad social implications (can't be held responsible so should be punished to change behaviour rather than being taught to think responsibly).
More relevant to animals than humans:
Behaviourism roots in experiments with animals (Pavlov & Skinner). Systematic desensitisation also initially developed with animal research.
Wolpe (1958):
Created phobia in cats by placing them in cages & administering repeated electric shocks. Found he could reduce this learned anxiety response by placing food near cage that was similar to OG. Eating diminished anxiety response (reciprocal inhibition)-gradually cats could be placed in cages more & more similar to OG without anxiety symptoms.
Wolpe (1973):
(Human anxiety may not respond in same way). Treated woman for insect fear & found SD did not cure phobia. Her husband (she was not getting on with) was nicknamed after insect. Fear was not result of conditioning-represented marital problems. Wolpe recommended marital counselling which succeeded where SD failed.