behaviorism

Psychology

2022

We explain what behaviorism is, the behaviorism of Watson and Skinner. Also, how behaviorism works in education.

Behaviorism studies the behavior of living things.

What is behaviorism?

It is understood by behaviorism or behaviorism (from the Englishbehavioorr, "Conduct") to a stream of the psychology that fixes its interest in the behavior of living beings, and that understands it as a set of relationships between certain stimuli and responses.

In its most classical approach, it abandons any interest in the intrapsychic (such as emotions, reflections, imaginations) and focuses solely on the conduct observable, that is, it values ​​what objective above the subjective.

Behaviorism was a highly dominant psychological school from its appearance in the 20th century, especially in the period between wars, and is considered as a response to introspective psychology, dominant in the age of structuralism and introspection as method study. Its greatest exhibitors were the Americans John B. Watson (1878-1958) and B. F. Skinner (1904-1990), each in his own way.

There are in practice numerous aspects of behaviorism, different from the one initially proposed by Watson, such as the school of Skinner, Tolman and Hull, or the interbehavioral psychology (interbehaviorism) of JR Kantor, the teleological behaviorism of Rachlin, the empirical behaviorism of Bijou , and other authors like Staddon, Timberlake or Hayes.

Broadly speaking, however, behaviorism tends to perceive the behavior of living beings as the result of a conditioning imparted throughout their training by external stimuli (such as punishments and rewards), rather than the result of internal mechanisms (such as instincts or thoughts). For this reason behaviorism values ​​the environment above all else, as learning cannot be separated from the context in which it took place.

Assuming this perspective, mental pathologies are not really such, unless there is a biological or physical basis, that is, a disease. Of the rest, they must be considered within the framework of their learning context, which is why they do not approve of treatment using psychotropic drugs.

Watson's behaviorism

J.Watson was the one who inaugurated behaviorism as a psychological current, establishing himself in objective positions around the mind. He did not deny the existence of intrapsychic phenomena, but he did deny that these could be studied, since they are not observable; what, on the other hand, can be done with behavior.

In this sense, Watson was heir to Ivan Pavlov's studies on classical conditioning. According to Watson, observation and behavior modification was the gateway to the interior of the human mind, and not the other way around; furthermore, it was only by aspiring to an objective character in its approaches that psychology could break through natural Sciences, somehow adopting the steps of the Scientific method.

Skinner behaviorism

Burrhus F. Skinner took behaviorism a step further, embracing a radical strand. Thanks to his contributions, psychology is considered today related to the field of Sciences and Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy was developed, in which his studies are very influential.

Skinner's behaviorism was based on Watson's studies and Pavlov's simple conditioning, but it discarded the idea that only external stimuli were responsible for our behavior. For Skinner, this was the product of a learned series of adaptive experiences, both pleasant and unpleasant, useful and useless, that shape the learning.

This addition meant removing the focus from the study of the dynamics stimulus and fix them in the way in which they are incorporated into the psyche, that is, the adaptation process that he calledoperant conditioning. In this new scheme, the perception What we do and the consequences that what we have done is the foundation of the behavior.

Behaviorism in education

Behaviorism influenced the way we understand learning.

Behaviorism was as important as a psychological school, that it also greatly influenced the way we understand learning. Hence, there are behavioral learning theories, and school approaches that seek to get the best out of what these theories propose.

In fact, the behaviorist approach to schooling is based on the use of reinforcements (positive and negative) to stimulate the desired behavior in children and young people, and discourage or eradicate the unwanted ones. In these models the motivation towards the study is external to the student and the development of their memory, which is why other techniques and theories more conducive to a education participatory and less punishing.

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