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HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 1 Chapter 14 THEORIES OF PERSONALITY Section 1: The Trait Approach Section 2: The Psychoanalytic.

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Presentation on theme: "HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 1 Chapter 14 THEORIES OF PERSONALITY Section 1: The Trait Approach Section 2: The Psychoanalytic."— Presentation transcript:

1 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 1 Chapter 14 THEORIES OF PERSONALITY Section 1: The Trait Approach Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach Section 3: The Learning Approach Section 4: The Humanistic Approach Section 5: The Sociocultural Approach

2 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 2 Chapter 14 Question: What are the main features and limitations of the trait theory of personality? Personality Personality refers to the distinctive,enduring characteristics or patterns of behavior. An individual’s personality reveals itself through consistent behavior in a variety of ways. Basic assumptions Basic assumptions Each person has stable dispositions to display certain behaviors, attitudes, and emotions. These dispositions or traits are general and appear in diverse situations Each person has a different set of traits Gordon Allport, Hans Eysenck and Raymond Cattell. Section 1: The Trait Approach

3 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 3 Chapter 14 Question: What are the main features and limitations of the trait theory of personality? TRAIT THEORY OF PERSONALITY Main features: Focus on cataloging traits Examining where traits come from Which traits are predominant Limitations: Pigeonholing people according to oversimplified characteristics Section 1: The Trait Approach

4 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 4 Chapter 14 Question: What is the Five Factor Model? Factor I Factor I:Extroversion Factor II Factor II: Agreeableness Factor III Factor III: Conscientiousness Factor IV Factor IV: Emotional Stability-Instability Factor V Factor V: Openness to Experience Section 1: The Trait Approach

5 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 5 Chapter 14

6 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 6 Chapter 14 Question:What impact has the psychoanalytic theory of personality had, and how has the theory been modified since Freud’s time? Freud has had a number of intellectual heirs and his ideas have strongly influenced psychology Freud was an important champion of the idea that human personality and behavior should be subject to scientific knowledge Later practitioners of psychoanalysis placed less emphasis on unconscious motives and more emphasis on social relationships Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

7 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 7 Chapter 14 Question:What impact has the psychoanalytic theory of personality had, and how has the theory been modified since Freud’s time? Freud’s Theory emphasized three main points: (1) (1) childhood experiences determine adult personality (2) (2) unconscious mental processes influence everyday behavior (3) (3) conflict influences most human behavior. Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

8 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 8 Chapter 14 Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

9 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 9 Chapter 14 Question:What are Freud’s personality component? When do they develop and how do they function? Id: Id: develops at birth and functions as pleasure principle, unconscious instincts, irrational, seeks instant gratification and contains the libido Ego: Ego: develops around 6 months and functions as reality principle, mediates id and reality and is the executive branch. Superego Superego: develops around 6 years old, functions as the morality principle, personal conscience and personal ideals. Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

10 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 10 Chapter 14 Question:What are Freud’s defense mechanisms? Defense Mechanisms Defense Mechanisms: are unconscious methods used by the ego to distort reality and thereby protect us from anxiety, which results from the irrational pleasure demands of the id or from the superego causing guilty feelings Rationalization Repression Reaction Formation Regression Projection Displacement Sublimation Intellectualization Denial Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

11 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 11 Chapter 14 Question:What are Freud’s stages of psychosexual development? Oral Stagefixation Oral Stage: 0-18 months; fixation obsessive eating, smoking, drinking sarcasm, overly demanding and aggressiveness Anal Stagefixation Anal Stage: 18-36 months; fixation extreme messiness, overly orderly, overly concerned about punctuality, fear of dirt, love of bathroom humor, anxiety about sexual activities, overly giving and rebelliousness Phallic Stagefixation Phallic Stage: 3-6 years; fixation excessive masturbation, flirts frequently, excessive modesty, excessively timid, overly proud and promiscuity. Latency Stage Latency Stage: 6-12 years Genital Stage Genital Stage: puberty onward Section 2: The Psychoanalytic Approach

12 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 12 Chapter 14 Question: What do learning theorists believe are the influences on and motivations for behavior? Behaviorist The Behaviorist perspective is that personality is a collection of learned behavior patterns acquired through classical and operant conditioning, social learning, discrimination and generalization Social Learning Theorists Social Learning Theorists emphasize behavior, environment and cognition as important determinates of personality. Believe we can control our own behavior despite environmental changes. Section 3: The Learning Approach

13 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 13 Chapter 14 Question: What do learning theorists believe are the influences on and motivations for behavior? INFLUENCES AND MOTIVATIONS FOR BEHAVIOR James B. Watson B.F. Skinner James B. Watson claimed that external forces or influences shape people’s behavior. B.F. Skinner Albert Bandura, Walter Mischel Julian Rotter. Social Learning theorists also emphasized socialization in shaping behavior, include Albert Bandura, Walter Mischel and Julian Rotter. Section 3: The Learning Approach

14 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 14 Chapter 14 Question: How does the humanistic approach view the role of the self and free choice in shaping behavior? SELF AND FREE CHOICE IN BEHAVIOR Humanistic The Humanistic approach stresses each person’s capacity for personal growth, positive growth, free will, and freedom to choose one’s destiny. Optimistic response to the pessimistic psychodynamic approach. Focuses on conscious experience Carl RogersAbraham Maslow Include Carl Rogers and Abraham Maslow Section 4: The Humanistic Approach

15 HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON P SYCHOLOGY PRINCIPLES IN PRACTICE 15 Chapter 14 Question: How does the sociocultural approach view the importance of ethnicity, gender, culture, and socioeconomic status in the development of personality? EVALUATION OF THE SOCIOCULTURAL APPROACH Sociocultural factors of ethnicity, gender, culture and socioeconomic status are internalized and affect all of us and touch many aspects of personality Without reference to sociocultural factors we cannot understand how individuals think, behave, and feel about themselves within a given cultural setting Section 5: The Sociocultural Approach


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