QUESTION IMAGE
Question
behaviorism scholars
- include:
- skinner
- dropdown menu
- dropdown menu
- believe partially obscured process of responding to stimuli and continuing to reinforce the process
- believe the learning process is dropdown menu
- believe a teacher’s role is of “expert in the classroom” and functions to present facts and skills
To solve this, we analyze behaviorism scholars and their beliefs:
First Dropdown (Behaviorism Scholars):
Behaviorism's key scholars include B.F. Skinner, John B. Watson, and Edward Thorndike (or others like Pavlov, but common ones with Skinner/Watson are Thorndike or another, but here the dropdown likely includes Watson (already shown) and others—wait, the first list has Skinner, then a dropdown. Common behaviorist scholars: Skinner, Watson, Thorndike, Pavlov. Since Watson is in the dropdown’s visible part, the next could be Thorndike or another, but let's check the learning process.
Second Dropdown (Learning Process):
Behaviorists believe learning is about observable behavior (since they focus on stimuli - response, measurable actions, not internal mental states). The text also mentions "responding to stimuli and reinforcing"—so the learning process is observable (matching the visible option in the dropdown).
Filling the Blanks:
- First dropdown (scholars): Likely another behaviorist, e.g., Watson (if not already selected, but the dropdown shows Watson as an option) or Thorndike. But given the context, the first dropdown (after Skinner) could be Watson (already in the dropdown’s list) or another. Wait, the visible dropdown has "observable" and "Watson"—no, the first dropdown (bullet point after Skinner) is a scholar. Common behaviorists: Skinner, Watson, Thorndike. So the first dropdown (scholar) should be Watson (if not already, but the dropdown shows Watson as an option) or Thorndike.
- Second dropdown (learning process): Behaviorists view learning as observable (since they study measurable, external behavior, not internal cognition).
Final Answers (Assuming Standard Behaviorism Content):
- First dropdown (scholar): Watson (or another, but Watson is a key behaviorist).
- Second dropdown (learning process): observable
(Note: If the first dropdown is a scholar, the correct scholar alongside Skinner is Watson (John B. Watson), and the learning process is observable.)
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To solve this, we analyze behaviorism scholars and their beliefs:
First Dropdown (Behaviorism Scholars):
Behaviorism's key scholars include B.F. Skinner, John B. Watson, and Edward Thorndike (or others like Pavlov, but common ones with Skinner/Watson are Thorndike or another, but here the dropdown likely includes Watson (already shown) and others—wait, the first list has Skinner, then a dropdown. Common behaviorist scholars: Skinner, Watson, Thorndike, Pavlov. Since Watson is in the dropdown’s visible part, the next could be Thorndike or another, but let's check the learning process.
Second Dropdown (Learning Process):
Behaviorists believe learning is about observable behavior (since they focus on stimuli - response, measurable actions, not internal mental states). The text also mentions "responding to stimuli and reinforcing"—so the learning process is observable (matching the visible option in the dropdown).
Filling the Blanks:
- First dropdown (scholars): Likely another behaviorist, e.g., Watson (if not already selected, but the dropdown shows Watson as an option) or Thorndike. But given the context, the first dropdown (after Skinner) could be Watson (already in the dropdown’s list) or another. Wait, the visible dropdown has "observable" and "Watson"—no, the first dropdown (bullet point after Skinner) is a scholar. Common behaviorists: Skinner, Watson, Thorndike. So the first dropdown (scholar) should be Watson (if not already, but the dropdown shows Watson as an option) or Thorndike.
- Second dropdown (learning process): Behaviorists view learning as observable (since they study measurable, external behavior, not internal cognition).
Final Answers (Assuming Standard Behaviorism Content):
- First dropdown (scholar): Watson (or another, but Watson is a key behaviorist).
- Second dropdown (learning process): observable
(Note: If the first dropdown is a scholar, the correct scholar alongside Skinner is Watson (John B. Watson), and the learning process is observable.)