Dr. Moulay Tahar University, Saida
Faculty of Letters, Languages and Arts
Department of English Language and Literature
Educational Psychology
Teacher: Dr. Bouaricha Level: M1
Academic Year : 2025-2026
Lesson: Theoretical Frameworks for Educational Psychology
1. Introduction
Educational psychology is essential because it provides scientific explanations for how learners develop, think, feel, behave, and succeed academically. Without it, teaching becomes guesswork; with it, teaching becomes evidence-based, systematic, and effective.
2. In-Depth Definitions (With s and Examples)
Below are the major definitions, each expanded, accompanied by classic s and practical classroom examples to illustrate their meaning.
1. Educational Psychology as a Scientific Discipline
Definition
Educational psychology is the scientific investigation of how people learn and how teaching can be improved.
“Educational
psychology is concerned with understanding the teaching and learning
processes.”
— Anita Woolfolk (2019)
Explanation
This means educational psychology uses scientific methods—experiments, observation, measurement—rather than intuition or personal belief.
Example
A teacher wants to know whether students learn vocabulary better through:
- flashcards
- or reading paragraphs
Instead of guessing, educational psychology suggests using controlled comparison, measuring results mathematically.
2. Educational Psychology as the Application of Psychology to Education
Definition (Skinner’s Applied View)
Educational psychology applies psychological principles directly to classroom behaviour.
“Educational
psychology is the application of psychological principles and techniques to
human behavior in educational situations.”
— B. F. Skinner (1968)
Explanation
Skinner emphasized that teachers must understand behaviour scientifically to improve learning.
Example
A teacher uses positive reinforcement to increase student participation:
- praise
- extra points
- classroom rewards
These strategies come from Skinner’s operant conditioning.
3. Educational Psychology as the Study of the Learner
Definition
Educational psychology studies the learner’s cognitive, emotional, social, and developmental dimensions.
“The principal goal
of education is to create people who are capable of doing new things.”
— Jean Piaget (1970)
Explanation
This definition focuses on understanding:
- how a child thinks at different ages
- how emotions affect learning
- how individual differences shape classroom performance
Example
A 7-year-old child cannot understand abstract concepts (e.g., justice), so a teacher uses concrete examples, not definitions—following Piaget’s developmental theory.
4. Educational Psychology as the Study of the Learning Process
Definition
Educational psychology examines how learning occurs—memory, attention, problem-solving, reasoning, and metacognition.
“Learning is a
process in which the learner actively constructs meaning.”
— Jerome Bruner (1966)
Explanation
This highlights internal mental processes, not just behavior.
Example
Students remember vocabulary better when they create their own sentences (active processing) rather than just repeating the words (passive practice).
5. Educational Psychology as the Study of Teaching
Definition
Educational psychology studies how teacher behaviours influence student learning.
“Teachers make the
difference in the classroom.”
— Eggen & Kauchak (2016)
Explanation
This view focuses on:
- teacher communication
- instructional design
- assessment
- classroom management
Example
A teacher using clear
instructions + demonstration + guided practice ensures that even slow
learners succeed.
This aligns with Gagné’s instructional events.
6. Educational Psychology as a Developmental Science
Definition
Educational psychology analyzes how learners develop across stages and how this affects learning readiness.
“What a child can do
in cooperation today, he can do alone tomorrow.”
— Lev Vygotsky (1978)
Explanation
Development is not only biological but also social and cultural.
Example
A teacher pairs a
strong student with a weaker one.
→ The weaker student performs better with help (ZPD), and eventually
independently.
7. Educational Psychology as the Link Between Theory and Practice
Definition
Educational psychology connects psychological theory with practical teaching strategies.
“Educational
psychology is the science and technology of education.”
— E. A. Peel (1971)
Explanation
This means educational psychology translates theory into methods teachers can use daily.
Example
- Theory: “Students learn better when they receive immediate feedback.”
- Practice: A teacher checks students’ answers instantly rather than waiting until next week.
8. Educational Psychology as the Study of the Educational Environment
Definition
Educational psychology studies how physical, emotional, social, and cultural environments influence learning.
“Classrooms are
complex environments where many events happen simultaneously.”
— Woolfolk (2019)
Explanation
The environment includes:
- classroom climate
- teacher–student relationships
- cultural backgrounds
- stress levels
Example
Students perform
poorly during exams if the classroom is noisy or if the teacher is aggressive.
Educational psychology explains how environment affects performance.
9. Comprehensive Definition
Educational psychology is the scientific and applied discipline that studies learners, learning processes, teaching methods, and educational environments in order to understand, predict, and improve learning outcomes in educational settings.
“Educational
psychology seeks to understand how students learn and develop, and how teachers
can help them learn more effectively.”
— Jeanne Ormrod (2020)
Example
A teacher planning a lesson uses:
- cognitive theory → organize content
- behaviourist theory → reinforce learning
- constructivist theory → allow discovery
- social learning theory → use group work
This is educational psychology in action.
10. Theoretical Frameworks to Educational Psychology
|
Orientation |
Key Definition |
Classroom Example |
|
|
Scientific |
Studies teaching/learning scientifically |
Woolfolk |
Testing two teaching methods |
|
Applied |
Applies psychology to teaching |
Skinner |
Using rewards to increase participation |
|
Learner-Centered |
Studies learners in all dimensions |
Piaget |
Using concrete examples for children |
|
Cognitive |
Examines thinking, memory, reasoning |
Bruner |
Students create their own meaning |
|
Instructional |
Studies teaching practices |
Eggen & Kauchak |
Clear instructions + modelling |
|
Developmental |
Studies growth stages |
Vygotsky |
Peer tutoring (ZPD) |
|
Integrative |
Links theory with practice |
Peel |
Giving immediate feedback |
|
Environmental |
Studies school/classroom context |
Woolfolk |
Classroom climate affects learning |