- 1. Founded connectionism
- Through experience, neural bonds or connections are formed between perceived stimuli and emitted responses
- Intellect facilitates formation of the neural bonds
- People of higher intellect can form more bonds
- People of higher intellect form bonds easier
- The ability to form bonds is rooted in genetic potential through the genes’ influence on the structure of the brain
- The content of intellect is a function of experience and cultural background
- 2. Conducted the first animal lab studies
- Research on cats in puzzle boxes
- Trial-and-error learning
- Cats escaped by trying various behaviors until hit on the one solution that worked
- Discard all non-solution behaviors
- “Stamp in” correct connection
- 3. Proposed multifactor theory of intelligence
- During the 1920’s
- CAVD Test of Intelligence
- Completion
- Arithmetic
- Vocabulary
- Directions
- 4. Popularized adult education
- 5. Changed “trained mind” to “transferable skills”
- Locke’s Doctrine of Formal Discipline
- John Locke (1632-1704)
- Empiricism = ideas originate with sensory experience
- No innate ideas
- Blank slate
- The mind is like a muscle
- You have to exercise it to make it stronger
- Transfer depends on the amount of effort you put into mastering a task
- To reason well, a man must exercise his mind by observing the connection of ideas and following them in train
- John & John Stuart Mill “Train of thought”
- Nothing does this better than mathematics
- It should be taught to all those who have the time and opportunity
- Not to make them mathematicians
- But to make them “reasonable creatures”
- Once the mind is trained, they will be able to transfer their reasoning skills to other areas of knowledge
- Thorndike’s Theory of Identical Elements
- Transfer takes place when the original task is similar to the transfer task
- More similarity, more transfer
- It depends on how many “elements” the two tasks have in common
- Taking a high school course in geometry
- Won’t strengthen a general ability to think logically
- May help you later in life
- If you become a surveyor or navigator
- Won’t help you if you become a lawyer
- 6. Laid the groundwork for behaviorism
- Objective experimental approach
- 7. Laid groundwork for operant conditioning
- Law of Effect
- 8. Laid the groundwork for psychometrics
- Used factor analysis before there were computers
- 9. Founded educational psychology