Courtright J A, Courtright I C
J Speech Hear Res. 1976 Dec;19(4):655-63. doi: 10.1044/jshr.1904.655.
A modification of Bandura's social learning theory (imitative modeling) was employed as a theoretical base for language instruction. This approach was experimentally compared to an alternative technique which required the subject to literally match each stimulus statement made by che clinician (mimicry). The results support the prediction that modeling is more effective in teaching the subject the appropriate grammatical rule, which he or she initially lacked. Moreover, subjects in the modeling condition exhibited both greater retention of the rule and a more successful generalization of it to novel contexts. The results are explained in terms of an "interference hypothesis," which suggests that a client's overt verbalization may interfere with the cognitive processing necessary to learn an abstract language rule.
班杜拉社会学习理论(模仿建模)的一种变体被用作语言教学的理论基础。将这种方法与另一种技术进行了实验比较,后者要求受试者逐字匹配临床医生给出的每个刺激语句(模仿)。结果支持了这样的预测,即建模在教授受试者最初所缺乏的适当语法规则方面更有效。此外,处于建模条件下的受试者对规则的保留程度更高,并且能更成功地将其推广到新的语境中。研究结果依据“干扰假说”进行了解释,该假说认为,客户的公开言语表达可能会干扰学习抽象语言规则所需的认知加工。