Preview

Made or Born a Serial Killer

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
930 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Made or Born a Serial Killer
Lexis Munoz
Professor Miller
English 5B
23 April 2013
Are Serial Killers Born or Made? Psychologist John B. Watson expressed in his scientific studies of human behavior that emotion is learnt and as humans we are highly social creatures, and by integrating those two ideas it signifies how much we, as the human race, are influenced by others as well as with the environment causing our behavior to be similar to the ones around us. A study conducted by American psychologist Albert Bandura in 1961 called the Bobo Doll experiment in which Bandura studied on small children between the ages of three and five. Each child was placed in a room with an adult and multiple toys including a bobo doll which is an inflated doll, soon after the adult would then hit, kick, and scream at the doll. Bandura used his theory of social learning to “stress the importance of observational learning, imitating, and modeling.” During the experiment the adult later would leave the room while the child would remain there. Bandura continued observing what the child did to the doll after seeing how the adult treated it and of course the child did exactly what the adult did; imitating everything from what the adult used to hit the doll with, the kicking, and the hitting. Humans cannot control their behavior because it is learned along with the emotions that come with it. Children that are brought up in an unloving, abusive, and neglected environment are later on in their adulthood emotionally scared for life and can soon become psychopathic serial killers at an extremely young age as four or even five. In an interview with a young child named BethThomas this little girl talked about her background of abuse and molestation. Her mothers death lead to the horrific abuse her and her younger 3 month year old brother at the time in the hands of their father. The abuse and molestation happened at a very young age but still stuck with her as she got older. While growing up her and her brother

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    Serial Killer Mind

    • 2375 Words
    • 10 Pages

    The following paper represents the further research to take place in regards to the mind of a serial killer and what their differences are between their mind and the mind of a normal person. This proposal presents the problematic concerns associated with this subject and identifies the framework that will be utilized to support the…

    • 2375 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In 1961 and 1963,Albert Bandura,Ross and Ross were tested the 36 boys and 36 girls who are aged between three to six years old in the Bobo doll experiment.They observe the experiment from the Stanford University Nursery School in years 1961.Albert Bandura has studied the children behavior after he has watching an adult model act aggressively toward as Bobo doll such as get punished,get rewarded,or experience no consequence for beating up the Bobo doll.According to the social learning theory,Albert Bandura shows that people not only learn by being rewarded or punished,but they can also learn from watching someone else being rewarded or punished.Albert Bandura has an emphasis on the people learn the something through observation, imitating,and…

    • 151 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Unit 8 P1

    • 1345 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Bandura’s Theory focuses on the social learning, his experiment consisted on a doll experiment on childhood aggression and how their behaviour develops when watching someone else’s behaviour. There were two groups of children; the first group was the control group which did not see any adult role model however the second group was exposed to adult modelling aggression behaviour towards an inflatable doll and the adult was…

    • 1345 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    HDFS 229 Exam 1 Study Guide

    • 2735 Words
    • 11 Pages

    Bobo Doll Experiment—children modeled the behaviors in the videos that they saw. Aggressive group performed aggressively, even more so than displayed in the video. When children observe an adult doing something they are more likely to do it themselves.…

    • 2735 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    O’Grady speaks about a case, Sandusky’s, that happened around 2008 which started to come out in public. Various mothers decided to stand out for their children since they lacked defending themselves, due to their knowledge. Children thought adults did acceptable things, so they did not question the adult. It develops in a child’s mind assuring them that being abuse is something common and natural when it is not. O’Grady states how children do not react well to the abuse they went through. The problem with today’s society is to maintain their families name clean without a stain of mistake. Matthews-Creech offers examples how one should notice the signs and symptoms of an abused child. The authors contribute a help by identifying a victim by the form of the way they act.…

    • 270 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The key principals of the learning theory is when a child sees certain displays or acts of behaviour, that they are more likely to copy it. He argued that we learn through a process of imitating role models, but that we also imitate the actions that are seen that could be a possible interest. (Bandura, 1961) conducted a study to investigate if social behaviours such as aggression can be acquired by imitation. Bandura tested 36 boys and girls from the Stanford University Nursery School with children between 3 to 6 years old. The role models were one male adult and one female adult. Bandura then arranged for 24 of the boys and girls to watch a male or female model behaving aggressively towards a toy known as the bobo doll. The adults began to attack the doll in a distinctive manner, throwing the doll in the air and shouting. The researchers pre- tested the children for how aggressive they were by observing the children in the nursery and judged their aggressive behaviour on four five point rating scales. It was then possible for the children in the groups to be matched so that they had similar levels of aggression within their everyday behaviour. The children were then tested individually through three stages, which consists of modelling, which is studied as observational learning, as one needs to be paying attention, being able to store information effectively, and reproduction, which involves performing he behaviour that has been observed. Further practise of this skill will then lead to improvement and skill advancement. In stage two (Aggression Arousal) the child is then subjected to 'mild aggression arousal', which is when the child is taken to a room with relatively attractive toys. As soon as the child starts to play with the toys the experimenter tells the child that these were the experimenter's very best toys and she had decided to reserve them for…

    • 2636 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Bobo doll experiment was essentially about getting children to watch an adult act aggressively towards a Bobo doll, children's behaviour was then measured after seeing the adult being rewarded punished or suffer no consequences for beating up the doll. it shows that children not only learn from being rewarded or punished for their own actions, which is behaviourism, they can learn from watching someone else being rewarded or punished, this is called observational learning.…

    • 399 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Albert Bandura was a Canadian psychologist with a keen interest in social learning (Oates, 2012). In 1963 he, together with Dorothea Ross and Sheila Ross, conducted an experiment which explored to what extent children would imitate the aggressive behaviour they saw performed by another person either live, on film or as a fantasy figure on television towards an inflated five-foot clown doll, called the Bobo doll.…

    • 881 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Social learning theory was developed by Bandura and is linked to vicarious learning. Bandura found that we observe other people and imitate their behaviours. A prime example of this was Bandura’s Bobo doll experiment. Children observed when a person was fighting a Bobo doll, and then as each child spent time with the doll they then copied this behaviour by hitting and kicking out at the Bobo doll too, just like they had previously seen.…

    • 550 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The social learning theory can especially be seen in the behaviour of children, who look to others, models, to see how they should behave. Bandura proved this theory in his Bobo doll experiment, in which children watched an adult display unique, violent ways of playing with the Bobo doll (this covered both the attention and motivation steps, as the children were not distracted from observing the aggressive actions and could have been motivated to imitate them due to the older model behaving in such a way). When left alone in a room full of the same toys, the children, observed through a one way mirror, would display similar behaviours to that of the models, even repeating some of the phrases used by the adults in the demonstration, such as ‘Sock him in the nose’. As this was a fairly unique phrase, unlikely to have been heard by the children before, this shows us that the children learnt these phrases directly from the models, whose behaviour they had merely observed, which proves the social learning theory, it also shows that Bandura managed to operationalise how much the children learnt from the models. As well as this, there was no gender bias in Bandura’s research as the models were both male and female, although it was found that children were more likely to imitate the male. This could however be due to the role of ‘the…

    • 1022 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    We have been looking at the Nature vs Nurture debate in psychology and how it can be applied to Serial Killers. In class we also looked at the ways nature and nurture effected how Colin Jackson and found that it was a combination of the two arguments. I believe that it may be similarly a combination of both sides of the argument that lead a person to becoming a serial killer.…

    • 4775 Words
    • 20 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Female Serial Killers

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Everyone’s childhood plays an extremely important role in determining who they will become and who they grow up to be. Your childhood molds and shapes you in every way. But not everyone’s childhood is happy and picture perfect, as some kids grow up in an environment that can set them up for hate and failure, which can ruin their chances for success. The childhood people have is the base that they build on to form their psychological base in adulthood (Vronsky, 2007). So one extremely interesting factor contributing to the makings of a female serial killer is abuse that is experienced in their childhoods. The FBI study has stated and confirmed that most to all serial killers come from an unstable,…

    • 378 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Serial Killers

    • 1571 Words
    • 7 Pages

    A popular argument that frequently arises is whether a serial killer is naturally born with the “serial killer” gene, or is a serial killer raised? In other words it’s an argument of nature versus nurture. There is much controversy in this topic and there have been many different articles that have been written discussing and arguing about these this argument.…

    • 1571 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Cited: Everitt, David, and Harold Schechter. A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Pocket Books, 1997…

    • 790 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Serial Killer Patterns

    • 1240 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The killings and the minds of a serial killer have long fascinated the public both fictional and non fiction. It gives the public the sense of fear, scaring the population and questions if they are going to get caught while it is also repulsing to think someone has died by a person’s own hand. A serial killer is considered as someone who has committed more than three murders within a certain time frame. They are also usually white male with a high average intelligence. Although serial killers are unique and different in the way they kill, there are similar stances that they all have, or at least a similar pattern they follow. Whether it is a serial killer in real life or in movies, it can be frightening to exam a killer or even know whether…

    • 1240 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays