Author Question: In Bandura's social-learning theory, rewarding the child for gender-appropriate actions is called ... (Read 80 times)

mspears3

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In Bandura's social-learning theory, rewarding the child for gender-appropriate actions is called
 
  a. direct tuition.
  b. heterophobically identified self-denial.
  c. androgynous capitulation.
  d. gender intensification.

Question 2

How does learning provide examples of qualitative and quantitative changes in development across infancy?
 
  What will be an ideal response?



phuda

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Answer to Question 1

A

Answer to Question 2

Some of the changes in the ability to learn through observation and conditioning improve quantitatively; the infant gradually becomes better able to retain, recall, and use what he has learned over longer delays. Some of the changes in learning, such as newborn imitation, change qualitatively: infants can express this ability very early in life but then pass through a developmental stage at a few months of age when they cannot imitate and finally reach another stage of development when imitation seems to take a different form and they again can imitate facial expressions. Another basic example of qualitative change in infancy is the change from expressing newborn reflexes to the loss of these reflexes across the first year of life.



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