The programmed instruction uses the learning paradigm of
(a) Classical conditioning
(b) Operant conditioning
(c) Instrumental conditioning
(d) Instructional conditioning
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Hello I am from Russia. I don't understand what you are talking about
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(b) Operant conditioning.
- Although Skinner's original programmed code or instruction format has undergone many different changes, most adaptations still include and has in it three key components in the name of an ordered sequence of items, either questions or certain statements to which the student is asked to respond to, the student's response, which may take the form of filling in a certain blank in it, remembering the answer to a question, choosing from among a series of answers, or solving a certain problem and the provision provided for immediate response confirmation, something that allows for the student's response to be confirmed right away.
- Skinner's theory of operant conditioning, a behaviourist theory that asserts that learning is a change in behaviour that is the person's response to events, is the foundation for programmed instruction (stimuli). By rewarding the proper stimulus-response patterns, behaviour can be trained.
Hence, option b is correct.
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