Important Points to Remember on Psychologists and Educationists
- Father of Psychology: Wilhelm Wundt (German Philosopher/Psychologist)
- Father of Educational Psychology: E.L. Thorndike (American Psychologist)
- Learning Theory: S-R framework of behavioral psychology
- Trial and Error Learning Theory: Conducted experiment on Cat
- Transfer of Learning: Positive, Negative, Zero
- Father of Behaviorism: J.B. Watson (American Psychologist)
- Father of Functionalism: William James (American Philosopher)
- Father of Structuralism: Wilhelm Wundt
- Father of Idealism: Plato (Greek Philosopher)
- Father of Realism: Aristotle
- Classical Conditioning: Ivan Pavlov (Russian Psychologist) - Conducted experiment on Dog
- Operant Conditioning: B.F. Skinner (American Psychologist) - Conducted experiment on Rat, Pigeon
- Insightful Learning Theory: Kohler (German Psychologist) - Conducted experiment on Chimpanzee
- Social Learning Theory: Albert Bandura (Canadian-American Psychologist) - Bobo doll experiment
- Discovery Learning Theory: Jerome Bruner (American Psychologist)
- Drive Theory of Learning: Clark Hull (American Psychologist)
- Hierarchy of Learning: Robert Mills Gagne (American Psychologist)
- Learning as a Tripolar Process: John Dewey (American Philosopher) - Father of Progressive Education
- Hierarchy of Needs: Abraham Maslow (American Psychologist)
- Psychosocial Stages of Development: Erik Erikson (German-American Psychologist)
- Four Stages of Cognitive Development: Jean Piaget (Swiss Psychologist)
- Socio-Cultural Theory of Cognitive Development: Lev Vygotsky (Russian Psychologist)
- Stages of Moral Development: Lawrence Kohlberg (American Psychologist)
- Father of Psychoanalysis: Sigmund Freud (Austrian Neurologist)
- Term "Intelligence" First Coined by: William Stern (German Psychologist)
- IQ Formula Given by: Lewis Terman (American Psychologist)
- Concept of MA Given by: Alfred Binet (French Psychologist)
- First Intelligence Test Conducted by: Binet and Simon
- Uni-Factor Theory of Intelligence: Given by Alfred Binet
- Two-Factor Theory of Intelligence: Given by Charles Spearman (British Psychologist)
- Triarchic Theory of Intelligence: Given by Sternberg (American Psychologist)
Educational Theories and Psychologists
Group Factor Theory of Intelligence
Given by: Thurstone (American psychologist)
Multi-Factor Theory of Intelligence
Given by: E.L. Thorndike (American psychologist)
Multiple Intelligence
Given by: Howard Gardner (American psychologist)
3D Model of Intelligence
Given by: J.P. Guilford (American psychologist)
Frames of Mind
By: Howard Gardner
Conditions of Learning
By: Gagne
Adolescence Period of Identity Crisis
By: Erikson (German-American psychologist)
Adolescence Period of Stress and Strain
By: Stanley Hall (American psychologist)
Behaviourists
Pavlov, Skinner, Thorndike, J.B. Watson
Constructivists
John Dewey, Maria Montessori, Lev Vygotsky, Jean Piaget, Heinz Von Foerster, George Kelly, Jerome Bruner
Founder of Constructivism
Jean Piaget
Gestaltists
Wertheimer, Koffka, Kohler
Chief Exponents of Idealism
Socrates, Plato, Descartes, Frobel, Vedic Rishis, Swami Dayanand Saraswati, Rabindranath Tagore, Aurobindo Ghosh
Pragmatists
Protagoras, Heraclitus, Gorgias, Charles S. Peirce, William James, John Dewey, W.H. Kilpatrick, J.L. Child Ratners
Naturalists
Rousseau, Bacon, Herbert Spencer, Huxley, Bernard Shaw, Comenius
Realists
Aristotle, John Locke, Bertrand Russell, Erasmus, Milton, Whitehead, Comenius Rebellias, Mulcaster, Francis Bacon, W.H. Kilpatrick
Play-way Project Method
H.C. Cook
Kindergarten Method
Frobel
Question-Answer Method/Socratic Method
Socrates
Lecture Method
Aristotle
Discovery Method
Bruner
Heuristic Method
H.E. Armstrong
Didactic Method
Maria Montessori
Humanistic Approach/Personality Theory
Carl Rogers
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