chapter 11 self and personality. personality an organized combination of attributes, motives,...

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CHAPTER 11 SELF AND PERSONALITY

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CHAPTER 11

SELF AND PERSONALITY

Personality An organized combination of attributes,

motives, values, and behaviors Patterns of traits

Unique to each individual Consistent across situations and time

Self-Concept: Perceptions Self Esteem: Evaluation Identity: Overall sense of who you are

McAdams and Pals (2006) Five Principles Personality shaped by evolution for

adaptation to environment People differ in dispositional traits People differ in characteristic adaptations Each has a unique life story Cultural and situational influences ever

present

Psychoanalytic Theory: Sigmund Freud Three parts of the personality

Selfish Id; Rational Ego; Moralist Superego Stages of psychosexual development

Biological: ends at sexual maturity Personality formed in first 5 years Childhood anxieties become adult traits

Psychoanalytic Theory: Erik Erikson Emphasized

Social influences Rational ego Life-span development

Crisis-Oriented Stages Result From: Maturational forces Social demands

Trait Theory Psychometric Approach

Personality: a set of traits Individual differences in each trait Measurement approach “Big Five” - Universal and stable Evidence of genetic basis Universal

Social Learning Theory Personality: A set of behavior tendencies

Shaped by interactions Found in specific social situations

No universal stages Not enduring traits People change as environment changes Situational influences important

E.g., cheating

Infancy:The Emerging Self First 6 months: Discover physical self Joint attention at about 9 mo

Difference in perceptions can be shared Self-recognition about 18 months Categorical self (age, sex): 18 – 24 months Based on cognitive development Requires Social Experience

The looking-glass self: a “reflection”

Temperament Seen in infancy Genetically based Tendencies to respond in predictable ways Building blocks of personality Goodness of Fit (Thomas & Chess)

Parenting techniques Learning to interpret cues Sensitive responding

Changes in Self-Concept: age 8 Include psychological, social qualities

Previously used only physical traits Increased Use of:

Social comparison, multidimensionality Hierarchy with self-worth on top

More accurate self evaluations Widening gap between ideal-self and real-self

Contributions to Higher Self-Esteem Competence! Positive social feedback Warm democratic parents Social comparisons that are positive Some temperament traits

established Will develop into adult traits

The Adolescent Increased awareness of psychological

and abstract traits Self-concept more integrated Self-esteem dips temporarily, rebounds Erikson’s Stage of Identity vs. Role

Confusion “Who Am I?” Can last as long as into early 30s

Marcia’s Ego Identity Statuses Diffusion: “Hey wait a minute – they didn’t know

everything. Maybe I’m not who they said I was.” (No crisis. No commitment)

Foreclosure: “I’ll be a (Catholic, Democrat, doctor, etc.) because that’s what they told me was right.” (Commitment without crisis)

Moratorium: “Who am I? What is right? Who will I become?” (Crisis, no commitment)

Identity Achieved: “I can make my own life choices.” (Commitment, evolved from crisis)

• The Four Identity Statuses as They Apply to Religious Identity

Identity Achievement Ethnic Identity begins in infancy Vocational Identity - increasingly realistic

“Goodness of fit” becomes useful Influential Factors

Cognitive development Openness to experience trait Warm, democratic parenting Culture that encourages exploration

Self-Concept and Adulthood Stable Self-Esteem

Generally good Ability to adjust ideal to real self Evaluate self with different standards Comparisons with age-mates Related to stable personality traits Losses in self-esteem in later old age

Changes in Personality Cross-sectional studies show more changes Longitudinal, Cross-Cultural Studies

Adulthood: achievement and confidence Older adults

Decrease: activity level, openness to experience

Increase: introversion, emotional stability, conscientiousness

Influences on Personality Change Heredity Earlier experiences Stability of environment Biological factors (e.g., disease) Poor person-environment fit

Adulthood – Erikson and Research Identity provides for intimacy in young

adulthood More traditional women solve identity crisis

after intimacy (marriage, children) Midlife generativity supported “Midlife crisis” not supported Integrity in old age supported

Includes life review Life Stories: narrative identity approach

Vocational Development Young adults: Career exploration Thirties: Settling down Forties & Fifties: Career peaks Older Workers

Competent, satisfied, and positive Selective optimization with

compensation

Retirement Average age 63 Adjustment phases Success Factors:

Person-environment fit Selective optimization with

compensation Disengagement versus Activity Theory

Support for activity theory