Albert Bandura Biography - Facts, Childhood, Family Life & Achievements
Jessica Burns
Updated on January 17, 2026
Albert Bandura Biography
(One of the Most Influential Psychologists of All Time)Birthday: December 4, 1925 (Sagittarius)
Born In: Mundare, Canada
Advanced SearchAlbert Bandura is mostly referenced to as the greatest living psychologist and the most influential psychologist of all times. A David Starr Jordan Professor Emeritus of Social Science in Psychology at Stanford University, he has been relentlessly contributing to the subject for the past six decades and more. Bandura is best known as the initiator of the social learning theory and the theoretical constructor of self-efficacy. He is famed for the 1961 Bobo doll experiment through which he proved that young individuals are influenced by the acts of adults, thus successfully shifting the focus from behaviourism in psychology to cognitive psychology. He further dealt in detail with social cognitive theory and came out with the relationship of self-efficacy and social cognitive theory. From 1968 to 1970, he served as a member of the APA Board of Scientific Affairs and was later appointed as the 82nd President of the American Psychological Association in 1974. To know in details about his life and his works, read through the following lines.
Quick FactsCanadian Celebrities Born In December
Died At Age: 95
Family:Spouse/Ex-: Virginia Varns
children: Carol, Mary
Born Country: Canada
place of death: Stanford, California, United States
Ancestry: Ukrainian Canadian, Polish Canadian
Cause of Death: Congestive Heart Failure
Notable Alumni: University Of British Columbia
More Factseducation: University Of British Columbia, University Of Iowa
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American CelebritiesCanadian CelebritiesCanadian MenUniversity Of IowaMale PsychologistsCanadian Psychologists Childhood & Early LifeAlbert Bandura was the youngest of the six children and the only son born to a small farming family in Mundare Alberta. He had a Ukrainian and Polish descent.Coming from a small hamlet, educational opportunities were limited. He attained his formal education from a small school. However, he did not limit his learning to the school curriculum and instead indulged in self-education to broaden his knowledge and understanding.To pursue further studies, he enrolled at the University of British Columbia to gain his graduate degree. It was at the university that he was introduced to academic psychology accidentally.Since he arrived to school much before the scheduled start of his course, he decided to enrol in a ‘filler course’ to pass his early morning hours. It was then that he took up a psychology course. No sooner, this ‘pass time’ subject sparked his interest so much so that it formed his career.Completing his graduation in just about three years in 1949, he gained admission at the graduate school at the University of Iowa, which was the epicentre for theoretical psychology then to attain his MA degree. In 1951, he obtained his MA degree and a year later earned his PhD.