Exam Questions and Answers 100%
Pass
behaviorism - ✔✔learning through direct interaction with the environment;motivation
is often the result of drives, internal states caused by a lack of something necessary for
optimal functioning. Consequences of behavior (reinforcement, punishment) are
effective only to the extent that they either increase or decrease a learner's drive state
(Skinner, Watson, Thorndike)
social learning (cognitive) theory - ✔✔learning from observing one another; modeling;
environmental stimuli affect behavior; importance of self-efficacy; human behavior is
typically goal directed (Bandura)
self-efficacy - ✔✔extent to which a person believes they can successfully do a task
self-regulation - ✔✔taking charge of and directing own actions
information processing theory - ✔✔focuses on the cognitive processes involved in
learning, memory, and performance; human thinking is similar to how a computer
works;
Emily Charlene © All Rights Reserved 2025. 1
,constructivism - ✔✔people create knowledge through observations and experience;
people combine much of what they learn into integrated bodies of knowledge and
beliefs (schemas); by working together, two or more people can often gain better
understandings than anyone could gain alone (social constructivism)
sociocultural theory - ✔✔emphasize that the social, cultural, and historical contexts in
which children grow up have profound influences on thinking, learning, and effective
instructional practice; Because of their varying environments, historical circumstances,
and needs, different cultures have developed somewhat different ways of thinking,
learning, and teaching
classical conditioning (Pavlov) - ✔✔when automatic and reflexive responses to stimuli
become associated with new stimuli that previously had no effect (When a conditioned
stimulus (e.g., a buzzer regularly paired with the puff of air) evokes a conditioned
response (e.g., blinking), learning has occurred)
operant conditioning (Skinner) - ✔✔occurs as a result of the consequences of behavior;
Behaviors that are reinforced are strengthened — they are repeated. Reinforcers can be
positive (e.g., presentation of a reward) or negative (e.g., removal of an aversive
stimulus). Behaviors that are punished are extinguished; punishments, too can be
positive (e.g., presentation of an aversive stimulus) or negative (removal of a positive
stimulus)
Emily Charlene © All Rights Reserved 2025. 2
, sensory register (short term memory) - ✔✔Component of memory that holds incoming
information in an unanalyzed form for a very brief time (perhaps one to two seconds)
working memory - ✔✔Component of memory that holds and actively thinks about and
processes a limited amount of information
long term memory - ✔✔Component of memory that holds knowledge and skills for a
relatively long time
semantic knowledge - ✔✔Knowledge of the meanings of words and word combinations
procedural knowledge - ✔✔Knowledge concerning how to do something (e.g., a skill)
how to move info into long term memory - ✔✔Rehearsal
Meaningful learning
Elaboration
Organization
Visual imagery
Mnemonics
accommodation - ✔✔required when people must incorporate a new experience by
modifying an old scheme or forming a new scheme (The period of flux when
individuals are attempting to adjust prior schemes with new experiences that do not fit
Emily Charlene © All Rights Reserved 2025. 3