How Does Social Learning Theory: Bandura’s Bobo Beatdown Experiments Work?

Social learning theory shows how kids learn by watching and copying others, just like when they copy what you do at home.

Imagine a kid named Timmy who sees his favorite cartoon character, Mr. Puddles, getting beaten up by a big, mean robot in the show he watches every day. Instead of crying or running away, Mr. Puddles laughs and beats up the robot right back! Timmy is amazed and thinks, “Wow, that was cool!” So when Timmy gets his chance to play with Bobo, the funny red-and-blue clown who’s always hanging around, he decides to copy what he saw.

He grabs a big toy hammer and starts whacking Bobo. That's exactly what happened in Bandura’s Bobo Beatdown Experiments, kids watched other people act aggressively toward Bobo, then they copied that behavior when given the chance.

Why It Matters

Just like Timmy learns from his favorite show, kids learn from real life too. If a kid sees you being kind to others, they might copy that kindness. But if they see someone yelling or hitting, they might do the same. Learning isn’t just about being told what to do, it's about seeing and copying what works!

Take the quiz →

Examples

  1. A child watches another kid hit a Bobo doll, then imitates the action.
  2. A student sees their friend cheating and decides to do the same on a test.
  3. A baby watches its parent smile and starts smiling back.

Ask a question

See also

Discussion

Recent activity