8. The Self: Identity & Personality
Self:
â˘âŻAll characteristics of a person
â˘âŻSelf-understanding, self-esteem, self-
concept
Identity:
â˘âŻThe set of behavioral or
personal characteristics by
which an individual is
recognizable as a member of a
group.
Personality:
â˘âŻEnduring personal
characteristics of individuals.
â˘âŻYoung children perceive self
as external characteristics.
â˘âŻOlder children recognize
difference between inner and
outer states.
The Self
9. Issues with Self-Esteem
⯠Modest correlations link self-esteem and school performance; links vary
between adult job performance and self-esteem
⯠Self-esteem related to perceived physical appearance across life-span
⯠Depression lowers high self-esteem
The Self
Persons with high self-
esteem:
Increased happiness
Have greater initiative
Prone to both prosocial and
antisocial actions
Undeserved high self-
esteem:
Narcissism: self-centered, self-
concerned
Conceited
Lack of awareness linked to
adjustment problems
12. What is Identity?
Self-portrait of many identities:
⯠Vocational/career
⯠Political
⯠Religious
⯠Relationship
⯠Achievement/intellectual
Identity
â˘âŻ Sexual
â˘âŻ Cultural/ethnic
â˘âŻ Interests
â˘âŻ Personality
â˘âŻ Physical
13. Models of Identity: Marcia & Erikson
Marcia:
⯠Individuals go through periods of-
⯠Crisis: exploring alternatives during identity
development.
⯠Commitment: individuals show personal investment in
what they are going to do.
_____________________________________________________________
Erickson:
⯠Identity versus identity confusion:
⯠Adolescents examine who they are, what they are about, and where they
are going in life.
⯠Psychosocial moratorium:
⯠Gap between childhood security and adult autonomy, part of adolescent
identity exploration.
Identity
15. Personality: Erikson
Eriksonâs
Stages
MISGRIS
Stage Age Strength
M: Many Mistrust/Trust Infancy Hope
S: Steps Shame/Autonomy 1-3 Will
G: Go Guilt/Initative 3-6 Purpose
I: In Industry/Inferiority 7-12 Compete
nce
R: Really Role confusion/
Identity
Teens Fidelity
I:
Independent
Isolation/Intimacy 18-35 Love
S: Stages Stagnation/
Generativity
Midlife:
35-60
Care
D: During
Life
Despair/Integrity End of
life
Wisdom
17. Definition of
Personality?
nďŽâŻ Personality refers to the
relatively enduring
characteristics that
differentiate one person
from another and that
lead people to act in a
consistent and
predictable manner,
both in different
situations and over
extended periods of
time.
nďŽâŻ Personality is defined
as: the enduring or
lasting patterns of
behavior and thought
(across time and
situation).
18. Personality
Four Major Perspectives on Personality
Psychoanalytic - unconscious motivations
Trait - specific dimensions of personality
Humanistic - inner capacity for growth
Social-Cognitive - influence of environment
20. We have Stable Internal Characteristics:
Trait Personality Theories
Source of information about personality:
Observation of
behavior
Questionnaires
People in
therapy.
Cause of behavior, thoughts, and
feelings:
Stable internal
characteristics;
Genetics
Outlook on humans:
neutral - neither positive nor negative.
24. Cardinal, Central, & Secondary Traits
nďŽâŻ Allport: Most important personality traits are those that
reflect our values.
nďŽâŻ Allport suggested that there are 3 kinds of traits:
â˘âŻ cardinal: a single personality trait that directs most
of a personâs activities (e.g., greed, lust,
kindness).
â˘âŻ central: a set of major characteristics that make up
the core of a personâs personality.
â˘âŻ secondary: less important personality traits that do
not affect behavior as much as central and cardinal
traits do.
25. Eysenck:Two Major Trait Dimensions
nďŽâŻ Hans
Eysenck:
found two (2)
major
trait
dimensions:
â˘âŻ introversion
versus
extroversion
(quiet versus
sociable).
â˘âŻ Neuroticism
versus
emotional stability
(moody versus
calm).
26. Cattellâs Distinguishes 3 Types
of Traits
nďŽâŻ Cattellâs Trait Theory:
nďŽâŻ Distinguished 3 types of traits:
nďŽâŻ Dynamic.
nďŽâŻ Ability.
nďŽâŻ Temperament.
nďŽâŻ Also:
nďŽâŻ Surface Traits: Less important to personality.
nďŽâŻ Source Traits: More important basic underlying traits.
nďŽâŻ Cattell identified 16 basic traits.
â˘âŻ He developed the 16PF to measure these traits.
30. Psychoanalysis: The Unconscious
âthe mind is like an iceberg - mostly hiddenâ
Conscious Awareness
small part above surface
(Preconscious)
Unconscious
below the surface
(thoughts, feelings,
wishes, memories)
Repression
Banishing unacceptable
thoughts and passions to
unconscious:
Dreams and Slips
31. Psychoanalysis:
Freudâs Theory of PersonalitynďŽâŻ Three levels of consciousness:
nďŽâŻ Conscious mind:
things we are
focusing on.
nďŽâŻ Preconscious mind:
things are are not
currently aware of
but which we could
focus on.
nďŽâŻ Unconscious mind:
that which we are
unaware of.
32. Freudâs Theory of Personality:
Id, Ego, & Superego
nďŽâŻ The id, the ego, and the
superego are continually in
conflict with one another.
nďŽâŻ This conflict generates anxiety.
nďŽâŻ If the ego did not effectively
handle the resulting anxiety,
people would be so
overwhelmed with anxiety that
they would not be able to carry
on with the tasks of everyday
living.
nďŽâŻ The ego tries to control anxiety
(i.e., to reduce anxiety)
through the use of ego defense
mechanisms.
34. Humanistic Personality Theories:
Maslow and Rogers
⯠Humanistic approach (Third Force):
⯠Rejected Freudâs pessimistic view of personality.
⯠Rejected Behavioristâs mechanistic view.
⯠More optimistic/positive about human nature.
⯠Humans are free and basically good.
⯠Humans are inner-directed.
⯠Everyone has the potential for healthy growth.
⯠Health growth involves Self actualization:
⯠âBe all you can be.â
⯠Given the right environmental conditions,
we can reach our full potential.
35. Rogerâs Person-Centered Perspective
People are basically good
with actualizing tendencies.
Given the right environmental
conditions, we will develop
to our full potentials
Genuineness, Acceptance, Empathy
Self ConceptSelf Concept: central feature
of personality (+ or -)
36. Humanistic Personality Theories:
Carl Rogers
nďŽâŻ Self-concept: our image or perception of ourselves
(Real Self versus Ideal Self).
nďŽâŻ We have a need for positive regard/approval from others.
nďŽâŻ Conditions of worth or conditional positive regard.
nďŽâŻ The conditions under which other people will approve
of us.
nďŽâŻ We change our behavior to obtain approval.
nďŽâŻ What we need is: Unconditional positive regard.
nďŽâŻ Anxiety signifies that we are not being true to our ideal self.
nďŽâŻ Well-adjusted persons: self-concept & experience.
nďŽâŻ Poorly adjusted person: self-concept & experience.
37. Maslowâs Hierarchy of human motives:
one must satisfy lower needs before one
satisfies higher needs.
38. Humanistic Personality Theories:
Abraham Maslow
nďŽâŻ Self-actualization is the culmination of a lifetime of
inner-directed growth and improvement:
â˘âŻ Challenging ourselves to the fullest.
â˘âŻ Can you identify a self-actualized individual?
â˘âŻ Characteristics of the self-actualized person:
nďŽâŻ Creative and open to new experiences.
nďŽâŻ Committed to a cause or a higher goal.
nďŽâŻ Trusting and caring of others, yet not dependent.
nďŽâŻ Have the courage to act on their convictions.
44. Social-Cognitive Personality Theories:
Outcomes of Personal Control
Learned Helplessness:
Uncontrollable
bad events
Perceived
lack of control
Generalized
helpless behavior
Important Issues:
â˘âŻNursing Homes
â˘âŻPrisons
â˘âŻColleges
45. How do we measure
âPersonalityâ?
nďŽâŻ (1) Interview:
nďŽâŻ Ask the person about themselves.
nďŽâŻ Obtain information that reveals personality.
nďŽâŻ (2) Behavioral Observation:
nďŽâŻ Watch the individualâs behavior in an actual or simulated
situation.
nďŽâŻ Personality Tests:
nďŽâŻ (3) Objective tests (questionnaire tests).
nďŽâŻ (4) Projective tests.
46. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality
Inventory (MMPI-2)
nďŽâŻ Most widely used personality instrument.
nďŽâŻ Used in clinical and employment settings.
nďŽâŻ MMPI-2 Has several different scales (multiphasic).
nďŽâŻ MMPI sample items:
nďŽâŻ âI usually feel that life is worthwhile and
interesting (FALSE) = Depression.
nďŽâŻ âI seem to hear things that other people canât
hearâ (TRUE) = Schizophrenia.
nďŽâŻ Measures aspects of personality that, if extreme,
suggest a problem:
nďŽâŻ Extreme suspiciousness may indicate paranoia.
48. Assignments
⯠Enneagram RHETI
Sampler
⯠What were the top two
types and what is more or
less like you?
Forum Topic & Discussion
⯠Attribution Style
Questionnaire Discussion
Reflection Activity & Journal
OtherChapter Reading & Review
Read & Review Personality
Chapter
Clarify the Who, What, Where,
Why, and When of the problem