CHAPTER 1
THE EMPIRICAL BEGINNINGS
         AND BASIC CONTENTS
      OF        EDUCATIONAL
      PSYCHOLOGY
                        Man is good. He strives to attain goodness.
           If he is vile, it is because the path of goodness has been
        closed to him.
                      -Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi
Introduction
        Educational Psychology as a field of study has quite
literally struggled throughout its history with an identity problem.
Existing by definition somewhere between psychology and
education, the dis-
cipline has experienced the crosscurrents and whirpools often
created when two great oceans meet. Many educational-
psychological problems ofdevelopment that are still ofcurrent
interest were discussed in ancient times.
Historical Background
        The empirical beginnings ofeducational psychology were
set forth by Aristotle in his foundation ofthe laws ofassociation:
similarity, contrast, and contiguity, supplemented by frequency.
Both Socrates and Plato showed great interest in education, but
from the point of view of developmental; psychology,
Quintilianus, a Roman Rhetorician, is particularly interesting. His
views on the bad effects ofcorporal punishment and on the value
of comradeship in school like, in
   contrast to the private instruction that was then the rule in Rome,
  are relevant today. Like many ancient writers, Quintilianus was
  rediscovered at the beginning ofmodern times. His views
  stimulated educational thoughts, which had been rather neglected
  during the middle ages.
         Erasmus and Rottcrdam agreed on Quintilanus' views on
  in corporal education.punishment. also but stressed denied the
  categorically part played its by moral interest significancein
  playing. Who
          During the 17th c. Comenius, one ofthe most prominent
 figurcs in the history of education, stressed the necessity of taking
 the individuality of the child in consideration. Locke, towards the
 end of the same century expressed the view that the child has
 natural inclinations and interest, but that should be curbed on
 account of the sinful nature of man. Such views dominated the
 debate well into the 18th century.
        Jean Jacques Rosseau, with his gospel of the natural
good. ness ofman, opposed the view that man is vile. His
educational novel, Emile, published in 1762, was the topic of
lively discussions and an important factor in modern child
                           psychology. He stressed that, "the
education of the child was naturally a central theme," Adults
should not force their opinions and behavior on children. The
child's own
gifts and interest should be the guiding principles, and
consideration should be paid on the wishes and impulses ofthe
child.
        Pestalozzi, whose theories ofeducation have enormous
      influence on the 19th century thought, wrote on similar
account. The following quotation from one of his main works
shows how much he influenced by Rosseau: "Man is good and
strives to attain goodness, and if he is vile, it is because the path
of goodness has been closed to
        The beginnings ofeducational psychology as an
  experimental science, however, are to be found in the writings and
        research of psychologists around the turn of the century.
        Herman Ebbinghaus published the results of his
experiments on memory in 1885. He hoped to lay the basic for
scientific study of learning by memorizing long lists ofnonsense
syllables and then measuring his retention capacity. His pioneering
research on learning earned him the title "Father ofLearning
Psycholoue" His works led
      to draw two titajor conclusions:
         1. Once something is learned. it is not forgotten at an even
            rate. Most of what is forgotten is lost very quickly, and
            the rest is lost at a slow and fairly stable rate.
         2. In order to learn new material, it is more efficient to
            space practice than to mass it.
         James McKccn Catcll was the first to use the now familiar
 "mental test." He administered tests in Columbia College
 freshincluding tests ofafter-images, color vision, perception ofpitch
 sensitivity to pain, color preferences, perception of time, accuracy
 of movement, imagery and memory. His works on letter and work
 recognition, legibility of letters and print types, and stimulus
 intensity the groundwork for most basic reading research fo the
 next years.      to understand Alfred Binct defined intelligence as
 the ability and to judge well. He developed his first test battery in
 1895 used the term "mental age to" describe his scoring technique,
 and early system is an example of norm-reference scoring
         Edward Lee Thorndike conducted the first experiments in
       learning (with chicken) and puzzle box learning (with
       kittens)
hilli1898, and was appointed professor of educational psychology
     at College, Columbia University, in 1901. He published a
     paentitled, "animal intelligence" and thereby was catapulted
     to the
         of the emerging field of learning psychology For most of
 term men,
   first half of the 20th century, he was truly "Mr. Educational
   Psy-
         in the United States.
formed 30
      G. Stanley Hall, a pioneer modern psychology in America,
         new methods of obtaining information about children.
         He
     the systematic use of questionnaire, now so widely
    employed. of his important contributions was in the
    psychology of
             a branch of psychology for which his great work of ado-
 well,
 and this
 maze in
Teachers per
forefront the
chology"
introduced
began
One
adolescene,
lescence
gence
the
    (Goddere, Terman, and Gessel), and because he was the first to
    translate the Biner Intelligence Tests into English.
           Jean Piaget was a Swiss Psychologist who made a direct,
  careful, and systematic observation ofchildrens began to form a
  view that will revolutionize our understanding of intellectual
  growth. He formulated the most important and influential theory
  ofcognitive development. When children ask "why" it is because
  they each thing has a specific purpose. He conclude that reality
  does not reach the individual from the outside world but from
  within, from his own logic, with his dependent on the structure
  ofhis mind. The mind, then, is not a passive "tabula rasa" as the
  17th century English philosopher John Locke supposed, but
  operates on its environment. The child image of reality is not a
  passive copy but an active reconstruction of the world.
        Arnold Gessel, was one of the first to advocate that
  growth and development occur in an unvarying sequence. He
  made the mistake though of overgeneralizing from studying
  only a few children and he presentel an overly detailed "map"
  of development. However, in order to understand cognitive
  development, one must under-
  stand more about the process of growth.
        Other educational psychologists follow:
        James Sully published his Outlines ofPsycholou with
 Special References to the Theory ofEducation in 1884: William
 James (1892-1910) his Talks to Teachers on Psycholou and to
 students on Life's Ideal in 1899; Edouard Claparede, his
 Experimental Pedagov and the Psycholou ofthe Child in 1905;
 Thorndike First Educational Psycholou in 1903, which he
 expanded the three volumes in 1913.
        During the deade from 1910 to 1920, at least five
textbooks on educational psychology appeared and during the
1920s at least ten more. Heinrich E. Buchholz founded the
Journal on Educational Psychgolou in 1910. Binet's final scale
appeared in 1911. Lewis M. Terman's first American revision in
1916, and the first group tests, the Army Alpha and Beta, for
testing recruits in World War I, 1917. Those parts ofpsychology
which have been most explored for their valuesin education have
become the basic content of educa-
  tional psychology.
  Educational Psychology in the I'llilippines
        In 1910, Educational Psychology Was first offered by the
 College of Liberal Arts of the University Of the Philippines under the
 Department of Philosophy and Psychology. Thus, Educational
 Psychology can be best seen in the context of the discipline of
 psychology as a whole.
         Considered as the springboard to all education courses,
 Educational Psychology is required in all educational curricula, both
 undergraduate and graduate. It is also required in the present
 Bachelor of Science in Nursing curriculum. Undergraduate programs
 in psychology offer it as a required subject or as an elective.
        Educational Psychology is useful in the development of
curriculum policy making, determination of method of teaching,
determination of course content, measurement and evaluation,
management        of educational system, evidence purposes,
enhancement of community-school relationship, guidelines for
classroom management, production-selection of materials
appropriate for a grade level or curriculum and improvement of
human relations in school.
        As an academic discipline, Educational Psychology has
followed the trend of psychology as a whole. When the Thomasians
arrived in the Philippines, teaching and learning in schools were
carried on with foreign concepts as guidelines. The method of
 teaching,
 school administration, disciplinary methods, and educational
innovations were literally copied from abroad. The trend has not
abated in the decades that followed as returning scholars and
educational consultants transplanted into the Philippine educational
sy tem what they learned in foreign countries.
        In 1923, the first English book on psychological testing in the
Philippines was printed. Isidro Panlasigui who succeeded Agustin
Alonzo to become the second chairman of the UP Department of
Psychology had a doctoral degree in Educational Psychology.
Sinforoso Padilla followed Panlasigui to the chairmanship of the
UP
Department ofPsychology and established the first psychological clinic,
the purpose of which was to provide vocational guidance and educa-
   tional testing. particularly IQ testing, to UP students.
          Lupdag illustrates the sources of educational
 psychology in the Philippine setting. These are ( 1) western
 tradition, since the theories and principles of learning and of
 behavior that were developed in the west svhen relevance to
 learning and teaching are concerned; (2) indigenious
 Philippine psychology, attributed to the theory advanced by
 Enriquez on the bases of early or traditional psychology, such
 as child-rearing practices and the so-called traditional values
 (pakikipagkapwa); man and his thoughts (diwa); psychology of
 awakening (pagbabagong-sip); psychology of human behavior
 and abilities; social issues and problems and native language;
 (3) current researches leading to the mainstream of educational
 psychology.
 BASIC CONTENTS
           Growth and Development of the Learner
       When historians divide history into periods of dates
they do so for practical reasonse _Sometimes the dates may
be exact, but frequently they give only a very approximate
estimate. It is equally difficult to divide human development
into different stages, but divisions are necessary for
practical purposes, Classification calls for a degree of
uniformity and we find that some valuable criteria cannot be
taken into account. The following classifications are
convenient but in some respects arbitrary.
THE BIOLOGICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL STAGES OF
DEVELOPMENT
I e The prenatal period. This period is from conception to
   birth, During this period all parts ofthe human body such
   as the internal organs, skeletal bones, flesh, etc., are
   formed, The inherited characteristics from the parents are
   also imparted to the child during this period,
2. The period of infancy or babyhood. This period is from
birth to two years. Basic physical and physiological
behavior patterns
      begin to develop such as rolling, crawling, sitting, standing,
     walking, talking, laughing, taking solid food, controlling
     elimination of waste, learning sex differences, relating
     emotionally with parents, kin and others. The baby begins to
     learn the rudiment of right and wrong. This is also the oral stage
     when the child enjoys sucking his fingers and toes and usually
     puts into his mouth anything he happens to take hold of.
3. Early childhood. This is from two to six years. This is the
   preschool age although some parents are already taking their
   children to kindergarten. This is exploratory and inquisitive
   period. The child wants to explore and ask to many questions. The
   child enjoys playing with his sex organ. He continues to learn
   what is right and wrong.
4. Late childhood. This is from six or seven to eleven or twelve
   years. This is the elementary school period. The child learns some
   annual skills taught at home and in school. He learns things taught
   in school such as reading, writing, arithmetic and language and
   social studies. He also begins to be interested in the opposite sex.
5. Puberty stage. This period starts at about twelve or thirteen to
   fourteen to fifteen years, The stage when the urge of sex begins to
   assert itself very rapidly, Physical and physiological changes in
   both sexes take place very fast.
6. Early adolescence. This is the period from puberty to
   seventeen years. This is the late high school period. Rapid sex
   maturation occurs. Voice, feelings, and thinking continue
   changing,
7. Late adolescence, This is from eighteen to twenty one years.
   The process ofdeyelopnpent continues. The youth college ape
   now pyeparipg fcy thei! ?89Cessiopql or yoga!iona! gaqeeps
   and those aye enteging finding      in pyeparation for an
   iodgpendent lice. and socials, skills f9nt!gues.
8. Early adulthood. This is from twenty-one to forty years. New
   life adjustments occur such as courtship and marriage,
   parenthood, employment, recreational, hobby, religious
   affiliation. Higher studies may be pursued, This is the start of
   productive years.
9. Middle age, This period is from forty to sixty five years. This
   is also the time for the preparation for retirement. Some
   physical and physiological functionings begin to deteriorate.
10.Old age. This period starts at sixty five. This is the period of
   retirement. The physical, physiological and mental
   functionings continue to decline.
      The most notable growth studies have been carried on at
Yale by Arnold Lee Gessel, who studied development and
adhered to this division strictly. These four aspects are:
       l . Motor Behavior, which refers to posture, ability to
           group, movement, general coordination ofthe different
           parts of the body and more specific motor
           coordinations.
       2. Adaptive Behavior, which refers to the actions that
          reflect the ability to begin new activities and take
          advantage of earlier experience. It is closely related to
          intelligence.
       3. Language Behavior, which implies all the ways of
          communicating with other people.
       4. Personal-Social Behavior, which includes the child's
          reaction to other people and to the cultural influences,
          adjustments to home life, to "mine and thine." to social
          groups, and social conventions.
      Darwin made a direct contribution to child psychology by
the publication in 1899 of a biographical sketch ofan infant. It
was old manuscript begun in early 1840 when his first son was a
few days old. He believed, even at this early period, that the most
  complex and fine shades of expression must afi have a gradual
  and natural origin.
         It has long been recognized that instruction should be
         adapted
     but for which
     against,
to the     age brought
                or
     Colonial   and of
child Illust learn
     switchest,
bizarre   theories was
this and fatniliar
             the quill
day. pen.
     Adult
           The four trated
   in the Table
           Learning
   be distinguished
   hood,
   particularly,
   learned but are
   "learn" to walk
   actually occurs
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                                                   듇
     Moreover, the learner must learn how to think and to solve
nus. from the psychological point problems.
                                          of        view. education does
merely transmit the cultural heritage;more it than helps people learn to
adequate responses in a wide variety of correct
                                        are     situations, whether these
in the natuæ of motor skills, words, andresponses sentences, or unspoken
and ideas.                              thoughts
     On the assumption that teaching will
                                            be more effective if the teacher
knows something about the processes      involved in learning, educational
psychologists have studied the research learning
                                          of     and conducted much of
their   own.
                        Theories of Learning
1, Thorndike's Connectionism.
      Acknowledged by many as the "Founderof Learning
                                          United States,Theory"
                                                         Edward in
                                                                Leethe
   Thorndike                         viewed the mind as a
   system, which merely associatesconnection
   ideas. the intellect, the greater the
                                            According to him, the greater
   number of of making. He offered the
                                          connections the mind is capable
   "law ofexercise the two fundamental
   laws of learning. "belongingness" to       "       and the "law
            describe. the connections  ofeffect" as Thorndike used the
   that        are readily made becauseterm meaningful associations,
                                       those they seem tb belong
         Learning is facilitated when the
   data      are the "spread ofeffect,together.
                                         "        meaningful. He also
   the readiness to                    facilitated learn areas adjacent
                                       to ones with
   which connections have been made.
       Spread ofeffects determines training in one subject aids
   whether learning another. For      in training in the Greek classics
   example, will                      help such transfer will only take
   to    produce      better          activity can even interfere with
                                engineer?
   Apparently, place if areas         "),
                                      are and newly learned material
   related. Learning one learning     already learned ( "retroactive
   another ( "preactive inhibition canare aspects ofthe interference
   even prove descriptive to somethingmerely to the passage of time
   inhibition "). These two types
                                            set forth the conditions
                                      under postulated the three major
                                      laws: readiness means that
                                      individuals rapidly if they are
                                      ready if they
      ofinhibition theory of forgetting. Forgetting is not due but to
      intervening activity.
          Thorndike developed these laws that which learning best takes
      place. He
                    Readiness. The law of more effectively and
      have matured to that point and if there is a felt need. Learning will
     be satisfying if tnaterials are presented when an individual meets
     these standard. This law also works in reverse. It will be annoying
     and dissatisfying to do something when the individual is not ready.
     The closer an individual is to reaching the point of readiness the
     more satisfying the act will be. Thorndike was speaking here of
     neurological readiness and not maturational readiness. He was
referring to a more momentary phenomenon, a kind of neurologically
teachable moment.
        O Law of Exercise. This law is similar to the law of use and
   disuse. As a result of continual practice, strength is gained, but as a
   result ofdisuse, weakness ensues. Thorndike made it clear that
   practice led to improvement only when it was followed by positive
   feedback or reward. Blind practice, with no knowledge of the
   consequences of the act, had no effect on learning.
        O Law of Effect. This was by far Thorndike's most important
   law. The law of effect maintains that an individual will be more likely
   to repeat satisfying experiences than those that are annoying. If
   experiences are annoying, the learner will shift to other, satisfying
   responses.
   Pavlov's Classical Conditioning.
       In the early 1900s the Russian Physiologist Ivan Pavlov conducted
  a series of experiments with dogs that demonstrate the principle ofthe
  conditioned response. It is the pairing of the conditioned stimulus with
  an unconditioned stimulus over long numbers of trials until the
  conditioned response. In Pavlov's basic experiment, a dog was
  vonditioned to salivate to the sound of a tone. The tone was presented
  (conditioned stimulus), until the dog began salivating just to hear the
  tone. Salivating at the sight of food termed as reflex or unconditioned
  responses, while salivating at the sound of the tone is the result of
learning—and is termed a conditioned responses.
    Pavlov's discovery, known as "classical conditioning, " left
such impression on subsequent psychology that conditioning
virtually became synonymous for learning. He also found that some
learned responses could spread to related areas C'generalization"),
and other learned
responses could be so finely distinguished that they are readily
discernible ("discriminations"). Because of generalization, acquiring a
fear of a furry rat could generalize to other furry animals. Acquiring
expertise is
         Moreover, the learner must learn how to think and to
 solve problems. Thus, from the psychological point ofview,
 education does more than merely transmit the cultural heritage;
 it helps people learn to correct adequate responses in a wide
 variety of situations, whether these responses are in the
 nature of motor skills, words, and Sen.
 tences, or unspoken thoughts          and ideas.
         On the assumption that teaching will be more
 effective if the teacher knows something about the
 processes involved in learning, educational psychologist have
 studied the research of learning and conducted much of
 their own.
            Theories          of Learning
1. Thorndike's Connectionism.
               Acknowledged by many as the
              "Founder of        Learning
    Theory"in the United States, Edward Lee Thorndike viewed
    the mind as a connection system, which merely associates
    ideas.
     According to him, the greater the intellect, the
   greater the num         ber of connections the mind is
   capable of making. He offered                the     "law
   ofexercise " and the "law ofeffect"as the two fundamental
    laws of learning. Thorndike          used the term             the
    "belongingness"
    describe the meaningful associations, those connections
    that are
    readily made because they seem to belong together.
    Learning is
    facilitated when the data are meaningful. He also
    facilitated "spread of effects," the readiness    to
    learn areas adjacent to ones
        with which connections have been made.
              Spread ofeffects determines whether training is one
subject aids in learning another. For example, will training in the
Greek classics help to produce better engineer? Apparently, such
transfer will only take place if areas are related. Learning one
activity can even interfere with learning another ("proactive inhi
              bition "), and newly learned material can even prove
descriptive
    to sonwthing already learned ("retroactive inhibition"). These
    two types of inhibitions are aspects of the interference theory Of
    forgetting. Forgetting is not due merely to the passage of time
    but to intervening activity
        Thorndike developed these laws that set fortil the conditions
    under which learning best takes Place. He postulated the three
    Inajor laws:
        Law of Readiness. The law of readiness means that individual
   will learn more effectively and rapidly ifthey are ready - if they
   have matured to that point and if there is a felt need. Learning will
   be satisfying if material are presented when an individual meets
   these standard. This law also works in reverse. It will be annoying
   and dissatisfying to do something when the individual is not ready.
   The closer an individual is to reaching the point of readiness the
   more satisfying the act will be. Thorndike was speaking here
   neurological readiness and not maturational readiness. He was
   referring to a more momentary phenomenon, a kind of
   neurologically teachable moment.
       Law of Exercise. This law is similar to the law of use and
   disuse. As a result ofcontinual practice, strength is gained, but as• a
   result of disuse, weakness ensues. Thorndike made it clear that
   practice led to improvement only when it was followed by positive
   feedback or reward. Blind practice, with no knowledge of the
   consequences of the act, had no effect on learning.
      Law of Effect. This was by far Thorndike's most important
   law. The law of effect maintains that an individual will be
   more likely to repeat satisfying experiences than those that are
   annoying. If experiences are annoying, the learner will shift to
   other, satisfying responses.
2. Pavlov's Classical Conditioning.
       In the early 1900s the Russian Physiologist Ivan Pavlov
   conducted a series of experiments with dogs that demonstrate
   the principle of the conditioned response. It is the pairing of the
   conditioned stimulus with an unconditioned stimulus over long
   numbers of trials until the conditioned response. In Pavlov's
   basic
      experiment, a dog was conditioned to salivate to the sound
                    of a tone. The tone was presented (conditioned
      stimulus), until the dog began salivating just to hear the tone.
      Salivating at the sight of food termed as reflex or unconditioned
      responses, while salivating at the sound of the tone is the result of
      learning and is termed a conditioned responses.
          Pavlov's discovery, known as "classical conditioning," left
     such impression on subsequent psychology that conditioning
     virtually became synonymous for learning. He also found that
     some learned responses could spread to related areas
     ("generalization"), and other learned responses could be so
     finely distinguished that they are readily discernible
     ("discriminations"), Because of generalization, acquiring a fear
     of furry rat could generalize to Other furry animals. Acquiring
     expertise is a consequence of discrimination learning, Ballistic
     experts, for example can discriminate so finely that they can tell
     with gun fire which bullet. The discovery of the orienting reflex,
     or "what-is-it reaction," which dogs have they prick up with
     their ears at a curious sound of sight, is a Pav-
 lovian contribution, The concentration of human beings when they hear
s strange sound in the middle of the night is a compa-
     rable response.
3. Skinner's Operant Behaviorism
 Burrhus Frederick Skinner, the leading figure in "Behavioral
    Psychology,     '?'   noted     types    Of     conditioning;
    operant .respondent. Operant \earnipg tom oxganism'y opera!
    ing on its environment. Whateyer does that proyes msg-
    umpptar in obtaining its objective is by the obtaining
    objective, A pigeon, (or example, is ploced in the during its
    endeavop to find good, happens deprpss a leyerm pallet of
food Calls into, the dish. Gvadua!ly thg get food by pressing
down leye!' and ipsVumepta! conditipping has been
established.
    Skinner believes that education should maximize
Knowledge. This is done through through up a students
repertoire of responses. insists that stut
  dents Can answer questions in a given area, and speaks and
 write fluently about the area, then by definition, they
 understand the area, A verbal repertoire is not a sign language
 —it is the knowledge. Good teaching, therefore, is the ability
 to arrange the proper sequence of reinforcements to make sure
 that- these reinforcements are contingent upon students
 emitting the appropriate responses.
     Skinner also suggest that teachers should use techniques
 that produce meaningful behavioral changes. Though teachers
 may sometimes use primary reinforces such as candy,
 condition reinforces such as good grades,nromötion and
 prizes. He favored the use of teaching materials,' programmed
 instruction, and behavior therapy, for it can provide immediate
 reinforcement and
 help bridge the gap between the students behavior and the more
 instant conditioned reinforcers such as promotion or grades. Skin-
 ner is against the use ofpunishment in the classroom, not
 because it will not control behavior but it may produce a host
 of negative emotional reactions.
     According to Skinner, teachers cannot always wait for
 behavior to manifest itself; therefore they must sometimes
 shape the behavior of the individuaL By means of innovations
 such as videotape replay, for example, students see themselves
 in action and
 discover their deficiences. Such devices prove beneficial in
reinforcing learning in large classes, in which the teacher is
unable to cope with all the individual problems that arise.
     To generalize the laws of classical conditioning to the whole
 range of human behavior is to carelessly overwork a fairly restricted
 formula. 'A Skinner pointed out, a human being is far more than a
 mere jack-in-a-box with a list of tricks to be elicited by pressing the
 correct buttom. The bulk of an individual's response repertoire lakes
 another form.
       Hull's Drive-Reduction Theory
           Clark L. Hull behavior theory means learning as
       response reinforcements occurring as a resulg ofdrive
       reduction. Subjects learn the specific response that
 occurs when a drive or need—for
foods for example, is reduced. The response then becomes
a habit. For Hull, habit, which strengthens with each added
reinforcement or stimulus responses unit, is the
fundamental law Of learning. Without either drives or
habits, the subject will not perform, for without habit
strengths there is no knowledge of how to act and without
drive there is not motivation to act. Since neither these
psychodynarnic factors could be directly observed, Hull,
called them "'mental constructs" or intervening variables. "
    Hull envhasizes that learning occurs when the individual
adapts to the environment and that such adaptation is
necessary for surviva]. When the needs arise, the
   individual's survival threatened and the individual must act
   in a certain manner to reduce the need. The responses that
   the individual makes that lead to the reduction of the need
   are reinforced, resulting in habits or learning.
According to Hull's theory, a stimuls causes a responses that
   results in a need. The need evokes a response on the part of the
   individual, which reduce the need. The response that resulted in
   the reduction ofthe need is then reinforced, which developes
   habits or learning.
       The major implications of Hull's theory to education is his
   finding that practice periods, which are extremely long and
   lacking in reinforcement.
5. E.C. Tolman's Purposive Behaviorism
      E.C. Tolman, creator of "Purposive Behaviorism" a bridge
  between rigid behaviorism and doctrinaire gestaltism, offered a
  cognitivist thoery of learning: the mental processes at work in
  the learning experience are more than mere stimulus-response
  connections. The fundamental law of learning is the acquisition
  of "sign-gestals," that is, of cognitive representations
  intervening
     It   was                             called    purposive
 behaviorism because Tolman insisted that far from being
 random and chaotic, leaming is goal directed. The learning
 organism is a striving organism, striving to give meaning to
 behavior. Yet Tolman's theory was also behavioristics
 because he believed that scienctific validity could be
 achieved only
   by observing objective behavior,
       Tolman Was more responsive to the work of the
   developmental psychologists than Were the most of the other
   behaviorists. He postulated his famous Il-A-T-E variables
   (Heridity, Age, Training, Endocrine) as of crucial importance
   in understanding and predicting behavior.
       Tolman's system is called an "S-S (sign-significance)
   theory" rather than "S-R (stimulus-response) " psychology.
   These cognitive processes, or sign-gestalts, consist of"cognitive
   maps" (mental
   layout of terrain). -aolman proved this theory by place-
   learning experiments, in which his rats headed for the same
   place regardless of the route they were trained to take.
                          Mental Health
   Mental health may be defined as the ability to adapt oneself
   satis-
factorily to the changes and problems met within life. By mental
hygiene, it means measure taken to maintain and foster good
mental health.
      After the home, the school is the most important institution
from the point of view of mental hygiene.
Significant Factors of Mental Health in Psychology
      1. Problems of social adjustments were introduced          into
         psychology primarily because ofthe influence of Freudian
         psychoanalysis.
      2. Realization that disturbed children need help before they
         can be expected to do practice to their regular school work.
      3. Belief that the school should not only provide an
         environ-
 trated, maladjustntents are likely to occur.
                  - may take form of excessive daydreamin&
        Escape withdrawal from school work or group tivitics
                      and tardiness and truancy.
             ment that- aggressive
        Aggression       promotes is thefamiliar
                                          mentalbehaviors
                                                  health oftoits children, but
             also teach    appropriate
                      everyone    becausesocial   responses
                                           and of its is Overt as part of its
             curricularlikely ture, be punished; this usually
                         responsibility.
                      increases the resentment and
                     Symptoms
                      aggravates thg ofproblems.
                                         Maladjustment
         LedAllbyindividuals   haveJohn
                  Neil Miller and     certain   needs,
                                          Donald,       andofwhen
                                                   a group      Yale they
                                                                      Psy- are   frus-
 chologists in the late 1930s introduced the now famous
 frustrationaggression hypothesis. According to them "The occurence of
 aggression always presupposes frustration." In many instances, this
 hypothesis is obviously valid. We have seen people very angry,
 sometimes to the point of irrationality, over having a goal blocked.
          Nevertheless, frustration-aggression hypothesis does have
 some major drawbacks as an explanatory model. Some people react
 to frustration no with overt aggression but merely sitting quietly and
 seething inwardly. Another person may respond to goal blockage
 by
 regressing, that is, acting in a less mature fashion. Also, there are
 countless examples of aggressive behaviors that are not triggered
 by
 frustration. Being annoyed or attacked by another person often re-
 sults in aggression aimed at the source of the annoyance. For
 ex-
 ample, a student who was about to sit when without
 provocation the other student pulled his chair and found
 himself lying on the floor. Later he is punching the "playful
 chair-puller."
       Like the intelligence debate, the question of whether
aggression is primarily innate or learned has also stirred
controversy among psychologists. The nature theories see
humans as instinctively violent, destined by their genes to be
aggressive. The social psychologists, on the other hand, pointed
aggression on TV/mass media as it viewed or encouraged
violent acts being imitated by children as a avid television
viewers,
         justments made.
      2, Provide counseling to change the pupil's perceptions.
      3. Breakdown undesirable habits and substitute more
          satisfactory methods of response,
      4. Provide deep therapy, cases through psychological or
          psychiatric clinic.
Techniques for Controlling Aggression
      Create a non-permissive atmosphere
      Limit aggressive models
      Help children learn to evaluate frustrating situations
      Use inductive discipline
      Teach and reinforce behavior incompatible with aggression
      Use nonhurtful ways of dealing with aggressive children
      Stop persistent aggression by intervening and attending to
      the victim
      Be attentive in routine play situations
      Work with parents
                            Group Process
       Recently a combined discipline, social pychology, has
dealt with the individual in the group, and largely under the
influence of the late Kurt Lewin (1890-1947), the youngest of the
Berlin Gestalt psychologists, with the nature of the small groups.
This work has been of great interest to the educational
psychologist, who have long recognized that emphasis on the
individual tended to result in neglect of the socio-psychological
factors as found in classrooms and other school groups, such as
student councils, homerooms, clubs and other school activities.
                     Styles of Leadership
       Most of you have been members of many different groups
scout troops, athletic teams, school clubs and the like. You have
thus been exposed to various styles of leadership, and you may
have no-
   ticed that the eflicicney of the group's performance and the
   satisfac. tion of the group members were due in large measure to
   the style of the group's leadership. You may recall a coach who
   was so lenient that the temn failed to perform to expectations. Or
   perhaps you re. metnber a scout leader who was so rigid and
   domineering that most of the members quit and the group had to
   fold.
         Many years ago Kurt Lewin, who had once been a StudRnt
   of Max Wertheimer, conducted an experiment to assess the ways in
   which
   groups respond to different kinds of leadership. The study was about
    the effects ofauthoritarian leader and democratic leader. The results
ofthe study indicated the completely different atmospheres were gen.
erated in the two groups. The democratic members were more satis
fied, less hostile, and better able to carry on group activities when the
leader was not present. Though the authoritarian group did have higher
rate ofproduction, the work of the democratic group was ofa higher
quality.
     Styles of Leadership and Its Effects in the Learning Process
          Style                          Effect
    Authoritarian produces more agrresive behavior and Direction
    less cooperative behavior.
    (domineering, strict, prone to dissension but an atmosphere
    stern, discipline and ofdiscipline is conducive to success.
    aggression but well
   -organized)
                               produces      more    satisfied,   more
   cooperaPermissiveLeadership tive, less hostile and better able to
   carry
   (democratic, flexible, on group activities when leader was not and
   creative in present. approach)
  Laissez-Faire leads to slackness and lack of initiative (absence
  of control) teaching is inadequate for a student who (passive)
  oftentimes is unsure of what to do.
                      Classroom Lcndcrship
        Although the teacher is handed the main leadership role in
the classroom, other leaders are also present. The broad base of
influence from which the teacher operates in large measure shapes
the social climate in the classroom. The degree to which the leader
is authoritarian or submissive or coercive or democratic sets the
tone
for norm formation in the classroom. It is also explains why a given
teacher may be successful leader with one group of students and not
so successful with a different group.
         Thus, effective leadership depends on flexible behavior, the
ability to know what behaviors are needed at a particular time in
order for the group to function most efficiently, the ability to
behave as required or to get other members of the group to do so.
The effective
leader must learn to spot what the group needs in a given situation
and then be flexible enough to provide diverse types of behavior
that are required under different conditions.
            The Group Process and the Contributors
       Group Process                          Contributor
Group Dynamic Kurt Lewin the study of
   interrelationships among members in different kinds
   of small groups.
Role Playing Jacob L, Moreno aims at therapeutic treatment of
individual maladjustment (Psychodrama).
aims
        The principles emerging from research in group dynamics,
carried on in an educational setting, are applicable to adult as well
as to juvenile groups. Group processes are taught and practiced in
student organizations and in what is referred to as teacher - pupil
planning of lessons, field trips, and other projects.
                     Individual Differences
             Teachers must be aware of the differences among the
     students. Some factors influencing differences among learners
     are: age, sexy family and community background.
            Of course it is the case that some people need more
   stimulation than others. We all know individuals, for example, who
   seem to need constant social stimulation; who cannot eat meals
   without reading or watching television; who cannot read without
   listening to music; who cannot listen to lectures without doodling.
   In various ways, these people are telling us that their sensory needs
   are relatively high.
  Age Differences and Personal Adjustment
          What the schools expect of their new students does not of
 course depend merely upon the chronological age entry. Clearly
 a child cannot learn to write if his motor control is not
 sufficiently advanced to enable him to hold and guide a pen. In
 countries where there is a compulsory education for all, an age
 has to be set by law at which children meet their school lives.
         Seven is the norrnal school commencement age in several
countries. Since there is no reason to suppose that the children in
all these countries develop at different rates, it will be more
obvious that the child's level of maturity is not the only
consideration that. the respective activities were obliged to have
in mind drafting the laws.
      Early efforts to maintain standards by the methods of failing
pupils resulted in the clogging the early grades, where they learn
more on repeating a grade than when they went out to the next.
Then, too, the effects on the _personality of the pupils of being
considered a failure, and his difficulty in getting along with a new
group younger children can sometimes be "held back" to
    advantage, and fast-learners
           ahead a grade, through the latter are similarly plagued by
          ofadjustment which pupils who are older and more mature.
 can be put
 problems
Sex     Disturbance in growth and sexual maturation are caused by
Differencesearly, too strong or weak, too slow or rapid activation Of
           processes, and variations even within the normal range
           are The differences are caused not only by heredity.
too late orEnviconditions have much influence on these processes,
hormonal too.
               puberty occurs earlier now than it did only 50 years
              be attributed to change in heredity factors, but must be
              to generally improved living conditions.
                 biological factors like anatomical, physical and
         physidifferences between boys and girls may lead to
         pychological Beginning in early life, the culture creates
         roles for each roles are reflected in the kind of toys and
         games which are children and in the kind of behavior which
         is expected. are apparent when the children develop self
         concepts with their roles. By the time they enter school,
         certain traits and value systems have already developed.
        Likewise, there is uncertainty in this development, that is,
         which be developed in some cases. As a teacher, one
         must be conflicting behavior. There is a need to you, for
         inwhen he was a child, he is more attached to dolls and
         toys his sister. On the other hand, a girl may be attracted
         to her the other hand, a girl may be attracted to her
         brother's toy is inevitable and in fact, gradually being
         accepted by the teacher's role is important to save them
         from any further through proper guidance and
         counselling. The students exsuch conditions are prone to
         inferiority and the stigma of society."
considerable.
ronmental The
fact that agao
cannot      due
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        Certai
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sex.     These
provided to
These
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personality
gender is to
aware of the
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played     by
sister.   On
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society. The
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"hum iliating
            Aspects for rcrsonality in which Learners
                     Show Wide Variations
   Physical Conditions
          The various parts of the body do not grow at the same
  rate, nor do they reach maturity simultaneously. Rapid physical
  growth and changing physical proportions are important factor in
  a person's achievement of a position within his own group: By
  the age Of 15-18 years girls have particulary stop growing, while
  boys continue growing until they are about 20,
         A number ofchildren suffer from various physical defects
 such as, diseased tonsil, adenoid, lameness, speech defects
 (stuttering, stammering, lipsing, etc.), and other physical
 handicaps. These varying degrees and kinds ofphysical ailments
 present a challenge to the teacher or any of these physical defects
 may interfere with the pupil's learning progress ånless all available
 means are utilized to correct such a defect.
 Emotional Response and Attitudes
       Many aspects of child training aim directly at diferentiation of
 the emotion - above all at control of displeasure reactions. It is true
 that we can weep for joy and even laugh for our sorrow, but such
reactions seem to be exceptional expressions of emotion or due to
extraordinary conditioning. They are not normally the primary
expression of these emotions. Hence, people in our modern society
eramin ambivalent in many respects.
       Learners vary in their emotional patterns or
temperament. School children bring to their school life varying
kinds of degrees of attitudes and emotional tendencies. Some
children are markedly gloomy while others are distinctly
cheerful. No two learners are alike in their degree and kind of
emotional response to people and things about them. Teachers
need to recognize the importance of the learner
ofthe effects of his own emotional nature upon his learning
success, It is very important for every learner to develop
desirable emotional control. Since emotional responses are
determined largely by the fulfillment or denial of wants and
needs of the learner and by the emotional behavior ofpeople
around him teachers can help direct and guide the learner to
achieve emotional stability.
Blcntnl Abilities and Specific Aptitudes
        It is apparent that teachers must have an understanding of
the principle of intelligence and some means of measuring the
intelligence level of their pupil if they are to present meaningful
learning experi-
ences.
         General intelligence is made up of several primary mental
abilities. The primary mental abilities are: ability to do arithmetic
problem, verbal meaning, spatial perception, word flucncy,
memory, and perceptual speed. These abilities, however, are
independent to one
another. On the other hand, those children who are identified as aca-
demically weak may need extra help in discovering the solution to
various problems they are required to solve. Teachers must have a
good assessment of their pupils, which means that individual
differences are discovered so that pupils can be provided with the
activities that will meet their needs. These differences between the
best and the poorest pupils in a class are considerable for it affect
methods of instruction, psyhologists have grouped the learners into:
(l) genius or mentally gifted; (2) superior or bright; (3) average; (4)
dull or borderline, and (5) mentally retarded or feeble-minded.
Social Adjustment
        Social adjustment is desirable and necessary. As the individual
emerges from the sheltered life within the home toward an additional
needs and wants appear. Boys and girls differ widely in their social
adjustment due to varying circumstances and conditions in the
environment, social conditions, economic conditions defects or
laminations, incompatible needs producing internal conflicts, and
conflicts between ideals and certain needs.
        Social-class di fferences have only recently been given particular
study. Human nature is exceedingly complex. However, in the edu-
cational setting, as in others, it has made remarkable advances in the
past half century or more, though the cultural lag has delayed many
of
t
 he disadvantages that might otherwise have accrued. With the
deVelopment of the television and of lesson programming for
teaching machines, coupled with a public awakening, dramatic and
revolutionary changes may be expected in the forseeable future.
                               SUMMARY
             There has never before been such keen interest on why
    children behave as they do, why they are obstinate and
    disobedient, Why young people pass tllrough puberty crises, and
    why it is so difficult for them to adjust themselves to the world of
    adults. Yet the fact that such questions are difficult to answer is a
    discovery of our time. Anger and fear, sorrow and joy are typical
    emotions. But emotional life does not consist only of powerful
    and violent feelings but also - and more usually in. normal people
    - of calm and temperate emotional condition.
           The study ofeducational psychology has arisen out
   ofeducational needs and problems. The history of modern
   psychology shows how closely education and psychology are
   related. An understanding of the biological bases of behavior is
   important to understanding de.
   velopmental psychology. The teacher's role is no way minimized by
   the efforts of the early experienced specialists.
      Thorndike, an early associationist, posted three major laws of
     learning: (1) the law of readiness, showing the importance of
    neurological anticipation; (2) the law of exercise, showing the
                               importance
ofpractice, and (3) the law of effect, showing the importance ofmo-
  tivation.
      Pavlov, a Russian psychologist, discovered some lawful rela-
  tionships between stimuli and responses. He showed how
            learning could take place through conditioning, a
 trained association among stimuli and certain response. Pavlov,
 system is now called "classical conditioning" and applies only to
 reflex activity.
       Leaders seem to be chosen on the basis of both personal
characteristics and the demand of the group. In a study comparing
styles of leadership, democratic versus authoritarian, it was
shown that demo-
cratic leaders were apt to have groups in which the members
were more satisfied, more cooperative, less hostile, and better
able to follow through on group projects even when the leader
was absent.
         What should we, as educators, derive from this
evidence? Traditional behaviorism should no longer be
accepted at face value. What seemed like an almost non-
interactive model of conditioning we should now, most
assuredly, be viewed as extremely interactive.
should not glibly use the "instinctive drift" argument to give up on
changing behavior we can't seem to control. It becomes not too easy
to say "This kid was born to be bad" when his disruptive behavior
continues despite efforts to change it. We must keep in mind that
whatever the genetic basis might be for a particular set of responses,
the innate predisposition, is still being expressed in learning
manners.
                         STUDY GUIDE
1. Without consulting your text, identify and briefly explain the basic
   contents of educational psychology.
2. What is the relationship of psychology to education?
3. List the main concepts and draw the implications for education of
   each of the theories of learning.
4. What are the types of leadership and how are they. being used to
   enhance performance?
5. Why is adolescence referred to as a period of conflict? List some of
   the conflicts that you have personally encountered during this
   period,
                        THINGS TO DO
I. Bring pictures showing the eight stages of growth and
   development and label them, Cite prominent features described
   by the four aspects of the development of behavior, namely:
   motor havior; physical behavior; adaptive behavior, and
   personal/social behavior.
2. Sociometry: Form a group of five and write the name of any
   member you like most. This shall be followed by an interaction
   relevant to group process.