Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-4:Compare and contrast the psychoanalytic, humanistic and Cognitive-Social Learning Theory with.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-4:Compare and contrast the psychoanalytic, humanistic and Cognitive-Social Learning Theory with."— Presentation transcript:

1 WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-4:Compare and contrast the psychoanalytic, humanistic and Cognitive-Social Learning Theory with specific attention to Bandura's expectances, performance standards, self-efficacy, locus of control, and learned helplessness.

2 We are here Unit 10 Personality Freud’s Theory Freud’s Theory Triarchic Theory Neo- Freudians Jung Psycho- sexual Stages Adler Horney Maslow Rogers Bandura Objective Projective Humanistic Theories Humanistic Theories Social Cognitive Theory Trait Theory (Big 5) Trait Theory (Big 5) Personality Tests Psychodynamic

3 Cognitive-Social Learning Theories in Personality Albert Bandura We each have a set of personal standards that grew out of our own life history and thus shape our behavior. In this light, behavior is seen as the interaction of cognition, learning, and the current environment. Outline

4 Cognitive-Social Learning Theories in Personality Learning Cognition Environment

5 Expectancies What a person expects from a situation or from their own behavior people evaluate situations based on these Expectancies are formed from personal preferences/past experiences The actual feedback will in turn mold future expectancies

6 Expectancies form Performance Standards. This leads people to conduct themselves according to performance standards –Individually determined standards of excellence by which we judge our behavior –If you meet your own performance standards then you get...

7 Self-efficacy The expectancy that your efforts will be successful

8 Locus of control a common expectancy (Julian Rotter) by which people view a situation –Internal locus of control – they can control their own fate. Through hard work, skill, and training, they can find reinforcements and avoid punishments –External locus of control – do not believe they control their own fate. Instead they are convinced that chance, luck, and the behavior of others determines their destiny and that they are helpless to change the course of their lives. – learned helplessness


Download ppt "WHS AP Psychology Unit 10: Personality Essential Task 10-4:Compare and contrast the psychoanalytic, humanistic and Cognitive-Social Learning Theory with."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google