Development of social learning in infants and young children

Social learning is one important way that children learn about the world. This thesis presents and discusses several current social learning theories, exploring how they explain different facets of social learning. In particular, I examined the naïve theory of rational action, the theory of natural...

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Main Author: Eydam, Angelique
Other Authors: Nurmsoo, Erika
Published: University of Kent 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724244
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7242442019-03-05T16:03:12ZDevelopment of social learning in infants and young childrenEydam, AngeliqueNurmsoo, Erika2017Social learning is one important way that children learn about the world. This thesis presents and discusses several current social learning theories, exploring how they explain different facets of social learning. In particular, I examined the naïve theory of rational action, the theory of natural pedagogy, the ideomotor approach to social and imitative learning, and the normative account of social learning. Each theory is reviewed on how it explains four facets of social learning: imitation, emulation, action understanding or interpretation, and the consideration of varying social and situational circumstances. The review shows that each theory focuses on only one or two facets, often providing very limited discussion (if any) of the others, and none of the theories systematically varies its predictions of a learner's behaviour as a factor of multiple social and situational circumstances. By means of six empirical studies I show that the social and situational circumstances strongly influence social learning, and that none of the discussed theories can account for the findings at large. I also argue that the current social learning theories explain developmental shifts in different biases that affect social learning rather than core mechanisms of social learning, and that what is needed is a strong social learning theory that explains multiple facets of social learning, in particular making differential predictions as a factor of varying social and situational circumstances.155.4BF PsychologyUniversity of Kenthttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724244https://kar.kent.ac.uk/63406/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 155.4
BF Psychology
spellingShingle 155.4
BF Psychology
Eydam, Angelique
Development of social learning in infants and young children
description Social learning is one important way that children learn about the world. This thesis presents and discusses several current social learning theories, exploring how they explain different facets of social learning. In particular, I examined the naïve theory of rational action, the theory of natural pedagogy, the ideomotor approach to social and imitative learning, and the normative account of social learning. Each theory is reviewed on how it explains four facets of social learning: imitation, emulation, action understanding or interpretation, and the consideration of varying social and situational circumstances. The review shows that each theory focuses on only one or two facets, often providing very limited discussion (if any) of the others, and none of the theories systematically varies its predictions of a learner's behaviour as a factor of multiple social and situational circumstances. By means of six empirical studies I show that the social and situational circumstances strongly influence social learning, and that none of the discussed theories can account for the findings at large. I also argue that the current social learning theories explain developmental shifts in different biases that affect social learning rather than core mechanisms of social learning, and that what is needed is a strong social learning theory that explains multiple facets of social learning, in particular making differential predictions as a factor of varying social and situational circumstances.
author2 Nurmsoo, Erika
author_facet Nurmsoo, Erika
Eydam, Angelique
author Eydam, Angelique
author_sort Eydam, Angelique
title Development of social learning in infants and young children
title_short Development of social learning in infants and young children
title_full Development of social learning in infants and young children
title_fullStr Development of social learning in infants and young children
title_full_unstemmed Development of social learning in infants and young children
title_sort development of social learning in infants and young children
publisher University of Kent
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.724244
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