Lifespan
Across
- 3. Conditioning that focuses on how an individual operates within their environment
- 8. Differs from + and - reinforcement by reducing the frequency of a behavior, rather than increasing
- 11. Stage in which children are able to think abstractly
- 12. This zone of ___ development, proposed by Zygotsky, refers to the gap between what children are able to learn on their own vs what they may learn with help
- 13. Stage in which children understand reversibility and have reduced egocentrism
- 17. Restructuring mental organization to integrate new information into an existing cognitive framework
- 19. Adding a thought to an existing framework
Down
- 1. Stage characterized by egocentrism, use of language in play, and irreversibility
- 2. Most effective method of classical conditioning where the CS overlaps with the US (not simultaneous)
- 4. "Father of American Behaviorism", conducted the "Little Albert" experiment
- 5. Developed Operant Conditioning
- 6. Stage in which reflexes become intentional interactions and object permanence is learned
- 7. Model that believes people learn from observing and assigning meaning to social information
- 9. First name Joseph, principled Reciprocal Inhibition and treated phobias using a hierarchy of fears
- 10. Acronym for the chronological order of Piaget's stages of development
- 14. First name Albert, developed Social Learning Theory
- 15. Supports needed to help children learn that may be removed upon reaching their potential
- 16. Change necessitated by new information
- 18. Conditioning that focuses on stimulus response