Previous theories of learning, such as the one put forth by B.F. Skinner argued that people’s behavior was always controlled by the environment. That people were nothing more than passive recipients of environmental influences.  But according to Bandura, not only does the environment influence a person’s thinking, but their subsequent behavior influences their environment. In other words, the environment influences how a person thinks and feels, which in turn influences their behavior, which impacts the environment, and so on.  

Behavioral Factors

According to the concept of reciprocal determinism, a person’s behavior is influenced through cognitive processes and environmental factors such as social stimuli. For example, say a child acts out because they don’t like school. This results in the teacher reprimanding the child, which may cause the child to act out even more.

Environmental Factors

The environmental component refers to the context in which the behavior occurs. More than a person’s physical environment, this includes their social environment as well. Specifically, what people are present (or absent) and the attitudes, beliefs, and ideas these people hold. So if the child from the previous example gets yelled at by a teacher for talking in class, it not only has an effect on them but on the classroom environment for the rest of the students, not to mention the teacher.

Personal Factors

The individual component includes all the characteristics that have been rewarded in the past. Personality and cognitive factors play an important part in how a person behaves, including all of the individual’s expectations, beliefs, and unique personality characteristics. The behavior itself is something that may or may not be reinforced at any given time or situation. If the previous student knows that their teacher is more likely to reward them if they wait the end of the school day to misbehave, they’ll likely tailor their behavior.

Additional Example

Of course, the situation doesn’t have to be a negative one. Imagine a shy student who usually keeps to themselves (personal factor), walks into class on the first day of school to find that the other students are already sitting down (environmental factor). The shy student tries to slip into the back of the class to avoid becoming the center of attention (behavioral factor). But if a classmate sitting at the front of the room boisterously greets the shy student and invites them to sit next to them, the environment has introduced a new reinforcing stimulus (the friendly student) that could lead to a change in this student’s normal routine as well as a change in their behavior.

A Word From Verywell

Bandura’s theory represented an important shift from the behavioral perspective to a more social-cognitive approach to understanding behavior. Behaviorists suggested that it was the environment that almost entirely shaped individual behavior. Meanwhile, Bandura recognized the importance of the bidirectional relationship between individuals, their behaviors, and the environment. This suggests that while people are certainly affected by the things they experience in their environment, they also have the power to exert a change on their situation and circumstances through their own choices and behaviors.