A Study of Using Reward and Punishment in The Education of School-Aged Children— Based on Behaviorism Theory Operant Conditioning
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54097/ehss.v10i.6896Keywords:
Behaviorism; Operant conditioning; reward; punishment; school-aged children.Abstract
Reward and punishment can change children’s behaviors, so the two strategies are widely used in education, especially with young learners. Researchers found that the two strategies have positive and negative effects on children, but they put little emphasis on how to use them more effectively. Through literature analysis and case analysis, this paper aims to discuss the advantages and disadvantages of using reward and punishment on school-aged children based on B.F. Skinner’s Operant conditioning and his experiment skinner box. The research found that using reward and punishment on school-aged children is necessary. The strategies have an immediate effect, and they can increase prosocial behaviors. They are more useful than reasoning when the educated are young. However, some researchers argue that reward and punishment only focus on short-term success. They become a representation of power and decrease the autonomy of children when they are overused. Three strategies are suggested in this paper for effective use of reward and punishment, including using them immediately after behaviors, selecting the proper reinforcement and concentrating on behaviors rather than children themselves.
Downloads
References
Qi, C. Educational Psychology (2nd ed.). Higher Education Press. 2011.
Carton, J. S. The differential effects of tangible rewards and praise on intrinsic motivation: A comparison of cognitive evaluation theory and operant theory. The Behavior Analyst, 1996, 19(2), 237-255.
Tingting, C. An analysis of reward and punishment in education. Journal of Chifeng University (Chinses Philosophy and Social Sciences ed.), 2016, 01, 260-261.
Sidin, S. A. The Application of Reward and Punishment in Teaching Adolescents. In Ninth International Conference on Language and Arts (ICLA 2020), 2021, 251-255. Atlantis Press.
Zhengwen, L. Shaping and Correcting Children Behavior. Beijing Normal University Publishing Group. 1998.
Untermeyer, L. The Boy Who Cried Wolf. 2010. https://raynhalfpint.wordpress.com/2010/11/16/the-boy-who-cried-wolf/
Penner, L.A., Dovidio, J.F., Piliavin, J.A., & Schroeder, D.A. Prosocial behavior: multilevel perspective. Annual Review of Psychology, 2005, 56, 365-392.
Wu, J., Luan, S., & Raihani, N. Reward, punishment, and prosocial behavior: Recent developments and implications. Current Opinion in Psychology, 2022, 44, 117-123.
Moberly, D. A., Waddle, J. L., & Duff, R. E. The use of rewards and punishment in early childhood classrooms. Journal of Early Childhood Teacher Education, 2005, 25(4), 359–366.
Dinwiddie, S.A. The Saga of Sally, Sammy, and the Red Pen: Facilitating Children’s Social Problem Solving. Young Children, 1994, 49(5), 16-19. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ486913
Kohn, A. Punished by rewards. Mariner Books. 1999.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.






