I am preparing to teach Theories of Learning this semester and I remembered the 
story told during my graduate training about a professor being shaped by 
students to lecture toward the corner of the room. They evidently paid close 
attention or performed some other reinforcing stimulus whenever the professor 
moved in a certain direction until he was actually lecturing to the wall.

It sounds like a clear urban legend (of the hoist of his own petard type) and 
Snopes<http://snopes.com/college/pranks/trained.asp> classifies it as a legend 
(of unverifiable nature) and concludes that, "Many people claim to have been in 
a class where such training took place (or to know someone who was); 
undoubtedly a few attempts have actually been made."

However, it appears from this 
site<http://hv.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg.tcl?msg_id=00C0Tw> that 
the anecdote actually may be sourced to none other than B. F. Skinner himself. 
It is funny that the version I remember was the one described by Carl Rogers on 
that site: a behaviorist professor being manipulated by his students. In fact, 
according to Skinner, the classroom version of the story involved behaviorist 
students training a humanist professor and he also recounted a time he did the 
same to a speaker at a professional conference.

This probably isn't news to many of you but I thought it was quite an 
unexpected result to see that the story was not a pure legend or parable but 
was described as fact in two versions by B. F. Skinner himself.

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman
Professor of Psychology
Box 3519
John Brown University
2000 W. University Siloam Springs, AR  72761
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
(479) 524-7295
http://bit.ly/DrFroman

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