Knowing and Valuing Self
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Transcript Knowing and Valuing Self
Knowing and Valuing Self
Self- A separate being within an environment.
Self-Concept
Self-Concept- totality of all your thoughts and
feelings with reference to yourself. It is the
foundation on which almost all your actions are
based.
Your cognitive awareness of who you are
How accurate are we in our assessment of self?
Four Developmental Areas of Self
Physical Self
Mental Self
Emotional Self
Social Self
Spiritual (added)
Development of Self-Concept
Sources of Self-Concept Development
Social Interaction (reflections & perception)
Social Information (verbal feedback from others)
Social Comparison (family, peers & culture)
Self-Observation (awareness of our thoughts and
behavior)
How much should we rely on others? Self?
Self-Esteem
Self-Esteem- the overall value or worth that
we place on ourselves.
Global- overall self-evaluation
Like Self-Concept it is Based on Internal and
External Sources
Effects of Self-Esteem
Academic Performance
Emotions and Behavior (depression & drug use)
Relationships (Closeness)
Career Success
Physical Self
What are the characteristics of “total physical wellness?”
Three Categories or Approaches to Health
Health Gamblers
Health Mechanics
Take health for granted and assume that there is little they can do about
changing the way they are.
Tend to illness when it strikes but do little to promote wellness.
Health Gardeners
Mindful of physical and mental health, take steps to prevent illness, and
are active in promoting wellness.
Mental Self
Your cognitive abilities and capacities for logic & reason. It
includes how you feel about your ability to make decisions.
Intelligence
The ability to profit from experience, acquire knowledge, think
abstractly, act purposefully, or adapt to changes in the
environment.
Intelligence Quotient (IQ) (measures school related abilities)
Multiple Intelligence Theory (Howard Gardner)
He argued that there is more than one type of intelligence
Linguistic, Logical, Musical, Bodily-kinesthetic, Spatial, Interpersonal,
Intrapersonal
Emotional Quotient
The ability to identify your own and other people’s emotions accurately, express
your emotions clearly, and regulate emotions in yourself and others.
Mental Self (cont)
Attitude
Optimist v. Pessimist (optimists get sick less
often and are solution oriented in their approach)
Thoughts Can Drive Emotions and Actions
Events-Thoughts-Emotions-Actions
Consider Assignment 1b.
You are in one way a sum total of all your
thoughts.
Emotional Self
Emotional Expression
Socialization Plays a Big Role in Expression
Culture
Consider your family’s emotional expression.
What about differences between females and males.
Language (“I feel like..” confuses thoughts and feelings)
Awareness of Emotions
Takes practice
Healthy expression can go against socialization and culture
Social Self
Social Status- a position or status held in a social
group
Examples Include: wife, mother, daughter, sister,
friend, employee, friend, king, peasant, citizen.
Social Role- behavioral expectations associated
with a particular social status
Examples Include: lover, nurturer, provider,
decider, doer, listener
Spiritual Self
Religious Faith is Positively Associated with:
Not smoking, taking vitamins, walking regularly,
wearing a seatbelt, engaging in exercise,
enjoying sound sleep, & drinking moderately or
not at all.
A number of studies have definitively linked
religious participation to a longer life.
An increase in spirituality can decrease the
progression of disease.
Integrating the Whole Self
Systems Theory
Physical, Mental, Emotional, Social, Spiritual
Change in one area of self influences or brings about
changes in other areas of self.
Again consider the impact of thoughts on all areas listed
above.
Nature vs Nurture
What Makes You The Way You Are?
Nature- we are what we are based on our biology
Nurture- we are what we are based on the manner in
which the environment shapes and molds us.
Nature vs Nurture (heritability is .50)
System or Reciprocal Relationship (consider
biological-cellular level).
Personality
Personality- a stable or long enduring pattern of
thinking, feeling, and behaving.
Five Perspectives of Psychology
1) Psychodynamic
2) Learning/Behavioral
3) Humanistic
4) Biological
5) Cultural
Psychodynamic Perspective
Emphasis on unconscious intrapsychic dynamics
Belief in the importance of early childhood
Belief that development occurs in fixed stages
Focus on fantasies and symbolic meanings of
events (dreams, slips of the tongue)
Reliance on subjective rather than objective
methods (dreams)
Freud’s View of Personality
Id: Operates according to the
pleasure principle
Primitive and unconscious
part of personality
Ego: Operates according to
the reality principle
Mediates between id and
superego
Superego: Moral ideals and
conscience
Defense Mechanisms
Repression: Threatening idea is blocked from consciousness
Projection: Unacceptable feelings are attributed to someone else
Displacement: Directing emotions toward objects or people that
aren’t the real target
Reaction Formation: A feeling that produces anxiety is
transformed into its opposite.
Regression: A person reverts to a previous phase of
psychological development.
Denial: A person refuses to admit that something is unpleasant.
Learning: Behavioral Theory
Behaviorism (B.F. Skinner): An approach to
psychology that emphasizes the study of observable
behavior and the role of the environment as a
determinant of behavior.
Operant Conditioning: The process by which a response
becomes more likely to occur or less so, depending on its
consequences.
Reinforcer: A stimulus or event that strengthens or
increases the probability of the response it follows.
Punisher: A stimulus or event that weakens or decreases
the probability of the response it follows.
Learning: Social Cognitive Theory
Social Cognitive theory (Albert Bandura): A theory
that emphasizes how behavior is learned and
maintained through the interaction between
individuals and their environment, an interaction
strongly influenced by such cognitive processes as
observations, expectations, perceptions, and
motivating beliefs.
Expectancies-predictions about the outcome of behaviors
Biological Perspective
Heredity and Temperament
Heritability: A statistical estimate of the proportion of the
total variance in some trait that is attributable to genetic
differences among individuals within a group.
Temperaments: Physiological dispositions to respond to
the environment in certain ways; they are present in
infancy and are assumed to be innate.
Heredity and Traits
Biological Trait Perspective:
(Five Central Factors)
Extroversion versus Introversion
Agreeableness
Neuroticism
Conscientiousness
Openness to Experience
Cultural Perspective
Culture: A program of shared rules that
govern the behavior of members of a
community or society, and a set of values,
beliefs, and attitudes shared by most
members of that community
Socialization: a process of learning how to
behave according to the requirements of our
society
Socializers- parents, teachers, friends
Culture (cont)
Individualist Culture: The self is regarded as
autonomous, and individual goals and
wishes are prized above duty and relations
with others.
Collectivist Culture: The self is regarded as
embedded in relationships, and harmony
with one’s group is prized above individual
goals and wishes.
Values and Stress
Where Do Values Originate?
How Do They Develop?
Develop Over Time
Not born with values. They are learned through socialization.
Socializers include: Family, Peers, School, Religion,
Government, & Media
Transmitted Through
Moralizing- Direct, although sometimes subtle transmission
of the adult’s values to young people
Laissez-faire- Opposite means of value transmission than
moralizing. In laissez-faire the young person is left to
discover values without leadership or guidance.
Altering Influences of Our Values
Major Life Changes
Mental Unrest
Changes in Wants
Evaluating Your Values
Characteristics of Healthy Values
Owned
Realistic
Behaviors that promote positive outcomes
Life Enhancing
Recommendations for Values
Development
Set a Positive Example
Do as I say not as I do yields a child who will do
just that, say one thing but do another.
Encourage the Values You Think are Important
Positive Reinforcement
Teach and Guide
Encourage Thinking for Oneself
Allow Experience to Be a Teacher
Instill a Value of Self
Emphasize Universally Acceptable Values
Just Checking in With Self
Based on Assignment 1a, you should have a
better idea of your self-concept and the
manner in which other’s see you. With this
feedback you have some decisions to make.
Do you believe what they have told you?
Do you want to change anything about you?
What are they?
Defensiveness: The Enemy
True or Real Self vs Ideal Self
What do we do when the “Real
Self” and the “Ideal Self” are
not the same
Cognitive Dissonance:
A state of tension that occurs
when a person simultaneously
holds two cognitions that are
psychologically inconsistent, or
when a person’s belief is
inconsistent with his or her
behavior.
Coping with Stress
Benefits of Physical Activity
Nutrition
Weight Maintenance
Diet, Cardio, Weight Training
Adequate Rest
Thought Control
Breathing
Mental Health: Stress Management
Stress- the bodies experience of a perceived
demand to adjust.
General Adaptation Syndrome (Hans Selye)
Stress Management (cont)
Distress v. Eustress (both are taxing)
Sources of Stress
External and Internal
Coping with Stress
Deep Relaxation and Breathing
Cognitive Change (see
Theory of Change I:
Thought Changing
Change Negative Thought Patterns
Cognitive Theory
Event-Thought-Emotion-Action (cycle)
Punctuate Thought
Thoughts become automatic
Negative thoughts begat negative emotions
Change Your Thoughts
Cognitive Restructuring- thought changing
Tune into Self Talk or Metacognition- your thoughts
Irrational Beliefs- unreasonable and exaggerated thoughts
Thought Changing
Change Negative Thought Patterns (cont)
Albert Ellis
Identify irrational thought
Determine the truth of the thought and related facts
Restructure thought Just because ____ doesn’t mean
End with an affirmation
Thought Stopping- A cognitive technique in which
you mentally say “stop thinking this way” or just
“stop”
Theory of Change II.
Behaviorism (B.F. Skinner): An approach to psychology that
emphasizes the study of observable behavior and the role of
the environment as a determinant of behavior.
Operant Conditioning: The process by which a response
becomes more likely to occur or less so, depending on its
consequences.
Reinforcer: A stimulus or event that strengthens or
increases the probability of the response it follows.
Punisher: A stimulus or event that weakens or decreases
the probability of the response it follows.
If you persist in an unhealthy behavior your self-esteem will
not increase. Make wise decisions.