Bandura (1961)

Aim

  • To find out if children would show more aggressive behaviour if exposed to an aggressive role model and less aggressive if exposed to a non-aggressive role model
  • To see if the sex of the role model and the children made a difference, specifically to see if the children were more likely to imitate a same sex role model and if boys were more aggressive than girls

Hypothesis – 4 Predictions

  • Children exposed to aggressive models will reproduce the aggressive acts seen
  • Children exposed to non-aggressive models will reproduce non-aggressive acts
  • Children will imitate the behaviour of a same sex model to a greater degree than a model of the opposite sex
  • Boys will be more predisposed than girls towards imitating aggression

Procedure

  • Sample: 36 boys, 36 girls aged 37 – 69 months (mean = 52 months)
  • Subjects in the experimental and control groups were matched individually on the basis of ratings of their aggressive behaviour in social interactions in the nursey school – matched pairs design

  6

girls

  6

girls

  6

girls

  6

boys

  6

boys

  6

boys

  6

girls

  6

boys

Male

Male

Female

Female

24 control group, no model

24 non aggressive role models

24 aggressive role models

72 children

Three Independent Variables:

  • The condition the children were exposed to
  • Sex of the role model
  • Sex of the child

Procedure

Stage One: children were brought to the experimental room by experimenter which was set out for play. Model entered room and after they were seated, experimenter left the room.

Non-Aggressive Condition: model ignored Bobo and assembled the tinker-toys in quiet, gentle manner

Aggressive Condition: model began by assembling the tinker-toys but after one minute turned to Bobo and was aggressive to the doll in a very stylised and distinctive way

After 10 minutes, children were taken into a new room

Stage Two: experimenter told the child they were the best toys and let them play

Stage Three: collection of aggressive toys (mallet, dart guns etc.) and non-aggressive toys (tea set, crayons, ball etc.) in third room. Kept in this room for 20 minutes. Observations were made at 5 second intervals so 240 response units were recorded for each child.

Three Measurements of Imitation

  • Imitation of physical aggression
  • Imitation of verbal aggression
  • Imitation of non-aggressive verbal responses

Results

  • More aggressive response in aggressive model condition
  • Boys were more aggressive than girls (Boys:8 acts, Girls: 5.5 acts)
  • Boys more aggressive with male model
  • Girls showed more physical aggression with male model and verbal aggression with female model