Short Answer

Imagine you are designing a study to measure 'prosocial sharing behavior' in toddlers during free-play. Applying the behavioral operational logic from Bandura's Bobo doll experiment, construct a brief operational definition for 'sharing' that includes a specific time-bound period and a list of specific acts to be counted.

Question: Imagine you are designing a study to measure 'prosocial sharing behavior' in toddlers during free-play. Applying the behavioral operational logic from Bandura's Bobo doll experiment, construct a brief operational definition for 'sharing' that includes a specific time-bound period and a list of specific acts to be counted.

Sample answer: Prosocial sharing behavior is operationally defined as the total number of sharing acts—specifically handing a toy to another child, offering to split a play item, or taking turns with a toy—that a toddler performs during a 1515-minute free-play session.

Key points:

  • Applied behavioral measurement logic to a new social construct (sharing).
  • Created a concrete operational definition based on a frequency count of observable acts.
  • Included a defined, time-bound observation duration (e.g., a 1515-minute period).

Rubric: The answer must apply Bandura's measurement logic by: 1. Defining the variable as a count of specific, observable behaviors (e.g., handing toys). 2. Specifying a clear, time-bound observation period (e.g., 1515 minutes).

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Updated 2026-05-26

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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