1 / 41

Unit 5: Personality and Individuality

Unit 5: Personality and Individuality. Ch 13: Psychological Testing Ch 14: Theories of Personality. Characteristics of psychological testing. One of the ______ of testing is that we tend to forget that tests are merely tools for measuring + predicting ______ ___________.

egallagher
Télécharger la présentation

Unit 5: Personality and Individuality

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 5: Personality and Individuality Ch 13: Psychological Testing Ch 14: Theories of Personality

  2. Characteristics of psychological testing One of the ______ of testing is that we tend to forget that tests are merely tools for measuring + predicting ______ ___________. We start to think of test results as an __________ (ex. IQ tests). The fairness + usefulness of a test depends on 3 things: 1. ___________ 2. ________ 3. ________________ Ch 13 – Psychological Testing

  3. Reliability The ability of a test to give the same _______ under similar ___________ – it’s ______________. There are 3 ways of determining a test’s reliability: 1. If a person _______________ or a similar test w/in a short time after the 1st testing, they should receive approximately the _____________. 2. The test should yield the same results when scored at different _______ by different _______. 3. If the test is randomly split in ½, you should receive roughly the ________ on each ½.

  4. Validity The ability of a test to measure what it is ________________. ________ to determine than reliability. One of the main ways for measuring validity is to find out how well a test ___________________. Do the people who score high on a test later do well like the test says they should? One problem that may arise is that the test only predicts _________ of what it is supposed to be testing.

  5. Standardization The tests are administered + scored in the ________ every time + establish the ______ _______ made by a large # of people. The test should _________ how a person will score at a given level, but that ______ ______ how that person does against others. A percentile system is a ranking of test scores that indicates the _______________ lower + higher than a given score. If 50% of people score a 70 or lower, then 70 is the 50th percentile. If 75% of people score a 85 or lower, then 85 is the ____th percentile. To make these comparisons, a test is first given to a large _________________ of the group to be tested (ex. High school freshmen, army privates, etc…) + the percentiles, also known as ______, are determined. Norms determine how someone compares to others, not ___________________ overall. End Section 1

  6. Intelligence Believed by most to be the ability to acquire new ______ + new ________, + to adapt to new _______________. Not all psychologists _______ on this definition. Some believe it is what allows you to do well on _________________ + in school. The 2 Factor Theory of Intelligence proposes that 2 factors contribute to an individual’s intelligence – a person’s __________________ (ability to perform complex mental work like problem solving) + a person’s ______________ __________ (like verbal or math skills). Thurstone’s Theory of Intelligence proposes that intelligence is composed of ____________ _________________ (verbal comprehension, numerical ability, spatial relations, perceptual speed, word fluency, memory, + inductive reasoning). See chart p.349.

  7. Gardner’s Theory of Multiple Intelligences proposes that intelligence is more than the ability to ____________. Howard Gardner believed there are 8 kinds of intelligence: 1. _______ ability 2. Logical-mathematical reasoning 3. Spatial ability (mental maps) 4. ________ 5. Bodily-kinesthetic 6. __________ (understanding others) 7. __________ (understanding oneself) 8. Naturalist Sternberg’s Theory of Intelligence proposes a triarchic theory which states that intelligence can be divided into 3 ways of __________________. They are analytical thinking skills (problem solving), _________ thinking (dealing w/ new situations), + practical thinking skills to help adjust to + cope w/ one’s ________________.

  8. Emotional intelligence is the ability to perceive, imagine, + understand emotions + to use that information _______________________________. It helps us gauge the situation + determine an _______________________. It includes the 4 major aspects of interpersonal + intrapersonal intelligences: 1. The ability to perceive + express emotions accurately + _____________. 2. The ability to use emotions while ___________. 3. The ability to understand emotions + use the knowledge ______________. 4. The ability to regulate one’s emotions to promote _____________. Major proponents of this view of intelligence have linked emotional intelligence to success in the ____________. Read p.372-3 “The EQ Factor”

  9. Intelligence tests Alfred Binet was a French psychologist who was asked by authorities to design an intelligence test pick out “_____________” to be placed in separate classes. This led to the development of the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale which groups items by _______. A person’s IQ (intelligence quotient) is his/her standardized measure of intelligence based on a scale in which _____ is average. About 95% of people score b/w ___________. People who score _______ are usually classified as handicapped. Mildly handicapped, but educable (55-69) Moderately handicapped, but trainable (40-54) Severely handicapped (25-39) Profoundly handicapped (below 25) IQ scores are most useful when related to _______________ – they are very accurate at predicting how well people will do in school. Critics argue that IQ testing doesn’t ________________ intelligence though.

  10. Controversy over IQ testing Is IQ based on _______________________? Researchers have found a high degree of heritability (the degree to which a characteristic is related to _________ _________________) in intelligence. Although debated, many believe heredity accounts for ____% of a person’s IQ. The richness of the home environment, the quality of food, + the # of _____ all affect a person’s IQ. How does _____________ affect IQ scores? A major criticism of IQ tests is that they are culturally biased (an aspect of a test in which the wording used in questions may be more familiar to people of one _____________ than to another group). End Section 2

  11. Aptitude tests Tests designed to discover a person’s _____ + to predict how well he/she would be able to learn a __________. Often used to determine what ____________ a person might enjoy +/or find success in. Can also be used to measure aptitude in things like language, math, art, music, + other ______________________. The SAT + ACT are general aptitude tests designed to predict a person’s _____________.

  12. Achievement tests Tests designed to measure how much a person has learned in a _____________ or area. Instructors + students can assess a student’s ____________. They are validated in terms of their __________ validity. Many confuse aptitude + achievement tests. The distinction is in whether the test is used to predict __________ (APTITUDE) or to assess what a person ____________ (ACHIEVEMENT).

  13. Interest inventories Test that measures a person’s _________ + attitudes in a wide variety of activities to identify areas of likely __________. There are no _______________ answers. These tests are often used to determine what career students might find most _____________. The more a person’s interest patterns correspond to those of people in a particular occupation, the more likely that person is to _________________ in that profession. It’s important to note that ______ as well as interests should be taken into account when ____________________. End Section 3

  14. Personality tests Tests that assess an individual’s ______________, identify problems + ___________________, + to predict how he/she might behave in the ________. 2 types – objective + projective.

  15. Objective tests Tests w/ limited or forced-choices in which a person ____________________________. The MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) consists of ______________ to which a person must respond true/false/cannot say. The statements were created + then given to groups w/ known __________(well-adjusted, depressed, etc…). People take the test + their answers are ___________to the people in the sample. Used to reveal habits, delusions, sexual attitudes, ______________________, etc… The Myers-Briggs Test focuses on how a person takes in information, _____________, + approaches day-to-day tasks. It looks at 4 different areas (____________________, practicality vs. intuitive, thinking vs. feeling, + judging vs. perceiving contrast). Can be used by businesses to decide who to hire or promote, by students to determine their _______________, etc…

  16. Projective tests ________________ which people respond to freely, giving their interpretations of various test stimuli. B/c the tests have __________________, what the person says must say something about his/her needs, wishes, fears, + other aspects of personality. It’s designed to probe a person’s __________________. The Rorschach Inkblot Test is a set of 10 cards w/ ______________________ + used for interpreting responses. In addition to a person’s responses, the psychologist may consider where + how he/she holds the cards, _________________ before answering, etc… Criticized for lack of ___________ + validity. The TAT (The Thematic Apperception Test) is a set of 20 cards w/ vague but suggestive situations + individuals _______________ about the pictures. Responses are examined for underlining motivation, _________________________ + problems, etc... End Section 4

  17. Personality The ___________, enduring, + unique ________________ of a person. What is the purpose of personality theories? Provide a way of _________ the many characteristics about you + others. Explain _________ among individuals. Explore how people conduct their lives. Determine how life can be _________. Formal personality theories try to make ideas about why people act in certain ways ____________ by stating them precisely + testing them scientifically. Ch 14 – Theories of Personality

  18. Major schools of personality theory There are many ___________________. Psychoanalytic theories emphasize the importance of ____________________. Behaviorist theories emphasize the way rewards + punishments _____________. Social learning theories emphasize the impact of _____________________ on personality. Cognitive theorists emphasize how our _________, perceptions, + feelings shape our personalities. Humanistic theorists stress one’s potential for _________. Trait theorists emphasize the importance of understanding basic _____________ ________________ like friendliness + aggression. End Section 1

  19. Psychoanalytic theories – Sigmund Freud Developed by Sigmund Freud + his followers. Freud suggested that the ________ of the tongue that people say (Freudian slips) + the things they _______ are not really mistakes, but were clues as to what was going on in their unconscious mind. He believed that ________ were clues as well. Freud was the 1st modern psychologist to suggest that every person has a large unconscious, or ______, part of his/her mind. He believed that many of our experiences aren’t forgotten but are stored in our unconscious + continue to __________________ + personality. He also suggested that b/w the conscious + unconscious is the preconscious – which stores thoughts + memories that can be recalled w/ relatively ________________.

  20. Freud believed the energy in personality comes from 2 ________________ – life + death. The death instinct shows up as characteristics like destructiveness + ____________. The life instinct shows up as characteristics like erotic + _______ _________ urges. Freud thought the ___ instinct is more important.

  21. Freud’s structural concepts of the personality are known as the id, ego, + superego. They explain how _______________________________ + regulated. The id is the part of the unconscious personality that contains our needs, drives, instincts, + ________________. It __________________________ of desires regardless of the consequences. The ego is the part of the conscious personality that is in touch w/ reality + strives to meet the demands of the id + the superego in ________ ________________. The superego is the part of the personality that is the source of _________ + counteracts the socially undesirable impulses of the id. The id represents what a person ______ to do, the ego plans what he/she _____ do, + the superego advocates what he/she _______ do. If the id isn’t satisfied, a person becomes filled w/ _______ + longing, but if the superego isn’t satisfied he/she feels _______ + inferior.

  22. Defense mechanisms Examples p.381-383 Certain specific means by which the ego ________________________ against unpleasant impulses or circumstances. People trick themselves into believing nothing is wrong + _____________. They can relieve _____ + give people time to work out problems, but if done too frequently, a person won’t be able to face + solve his/her problems _____________. Rationalization involves making up a logical or rational reason as opposed to the _________ for a behavior. Repression is pushing ____________________ + memories out of awareness w/o realizing it. Denial is _____________________ reality. Projection is believing that your own unacceptable urges are coming from ______________. Reaction formation is replacing an unacceptable feeling w/ the _________ one – putting on a front. Regression is going back to an earlier + _________ pattern of behavior. Displacement is taking out impulses on a ______ _____________ target. Sublimation is redirecting a forbidden desire into a __________________ desire.

  23. Freud’s contribution to understanding humans He recognized that tremendous forces exist in human personality + are extremely ______ ______________. Made it easier to understand why humans have so much ________. It’s the savage individual coming to terms w/ _________________. The id is the ________ part + the superego is representative of ______. In a healthy person, the __ (the “I”) is strong enough to handle the struggle. He was the 1st psychologist to claim that infancy + childhood are critical times for forming a person’s ________________. Believed a person’s personality largely developed in the 1st ___yrs of life.

  24. Psychoanalytic theories – Carl Jung For a while he was Freud’s closest associate, but when he questioned Freud’s psychoanalytic theory, they _______________. Disagreed w/ Freud on 2 major points: 1. He had a more _________ of humans - believed people try to develop their ___________ as well as handle their instinctive urges. 2. He divided Freud’s idea of the unconscious into 2 types. The _______ unconscious was similar to Freud’s unconscious + the collective unconscious which is the part of the mind that contains ________________, urges, + memories common to all people. These inherited ideas, based on the experiences of one’s __________ that shape our perception of the world are archetypes.

  25. Psychoanalytic theories – Alfred Adler Another former associate of Freud. Believed that the driving force in people’s lives is a desire to overcome their feelings of _____________. Described a person who continually tries to ______________________ + avoid feelings of inadequacy as having an inferiority complex (a pattern of avoiding feelings of inadequacy rather than trying to ______________________). Children feel inferior b/c they’re so little + __________ on adults. Emphasized that the way parents ______ their children influences their personalities. Ideally, children should learn self-reliance/courage from their ______ + generosity/compassion from their ________. End Section 2

  26. Behaviorist theories Behaviorism is the belief that the proper subject matter of psychology is objectively ___________________ + nothing else. Behaviorists believe that as individuals differ in their learning experiences, they acquire different ____________, + thus different _____________. They look to the environment to see what is _____________________.

  27. Behaviorist theories – B. F. Skinner Saw _______ for a general concept of personality structure. Instead, he was concerned w/ what causes a person to act in a ______________. Less concerned w/ understanding behavior than w/ predicting + ____________ it. Tried to understand the contingencies of reinforcement (the occurrence of rewards or punishments following ____________________). So what is reinforcing a person’s behaviors? His approach suggests a hypothesis that can be proven ______________. We may be completely _________ of the rewards that are shaping our behavior. Our ________ were not Skinner’s concern – only how we behave. The point is to find out what is reinforcing our behavior + then stop it if our behavior is undesirable. To change __________,you must change the ____________________.

  28. Social cognitive theories – Albert Bandura Social cognitivists believe that personality is acquired not only by direct reinforcement of behavior but also by _________________, or imitation. So much of a young child’s behavior + personality is acquired by exposure to specific everyday _________. Bandura believed that __________________ __________ by their choice of models. The most effective models are those which are most _____ to + most admired by the observer. He also believed that one important concept that governs our behavior is our sense of self-efficacy (our view of our ability to ________).

  29. Another social cognitivist (Julian Rotter) stressed the importance of our locus of control (our beliefs about how much _______ we have over certain situations). People w/ an ________ locus of control believe that they do have control over situations. People w/ an ______ locus of control believe that their fate is determined by forces _____________ _________. “Most tests are fair if a student is prepared.” - Agree – ________ locus -Disagree – ________ locus People w/ an _________ locus of control are usually less anxious + more content w/ life. End Section 3

  30. Humanistic theories Humanistic psychology is a school of psychology that emphasizes _________ ________ + achievement of maximum potential by each unique individual. _______ the more pessimistic views of psychoanalytical + behaviorist beliefs about personality. Stresses our ability to ______ + live by personal standards + perceptions. Founded on the belief that all humans strive for self-actualization (the realization of ____________________).

  31. Abraham Maslow (remember Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs?) studied ___________ people to learn how they coped w/ problems + created exceptional lives. He found that they tended to share _______________: Perceive ________ accurately. ________ themselves, others, + their environment more readily. __________-centered instead of self-centered. Autonomous + ___________. Exceptionally spontaneous + ________. Value privacy + solitude. Appreciate ________ things. Resist conformity.

  32. Humanistic theories – Carl Rogers Rogers developed the __________. He believed that people suffer from a conflict b/w what they value in themselves + what they believe _______ ________ value in them. Also believed that everyone is constantly struggling to become more ________ + perfect. Anything that furthers that end is good. Each individual has what Rogers called a self (one’s experience or image of oneself, ________ _______________ w/ others) which is acquired by observing how others react to us. We all try to develop positive regard (viewing oneself in a positive light due to positive ________ received from interaction w/ others). If this doesn’t happen, we develop conditions ofworth (the conditions a _________________ in order to regard him/herself positively). We may ____________________________ to meet these conditions of worth.

  33. Cognitive theory Based on analysis of our own perceptions, thoughts, + _________. The idea that our thoughts about _______, others, + our world shape our behavior + ____________. Emphasis is on the individual + his/her plans – including ____, errors, mistakes, + _____ ____________. Has to do w/ the individual’s anticipations or _____________. End Section 4

  34. Trait theories A trait can be described as a tendency to ________________ in a way that remains stable over time or as any relatively enduring way in which one _____________ from another. Trait theorists make 2 _______________ about the consistency of an individual’s behavior in different situations: 1. Every trait applies to __________. 2. These descriptions can be _______. They want to discover the ________________ of the consistency of human behavior. The 1st ? of trait theorists is, “What behaviors ______________?”.

  35. Trait theories – Gordon Allport He defined common traits as those that _______________ + individual traits as those that apply more to a ____________. He described 3 types of individual traits: 1. A cardinal trait is a characteristic that is so pervasive that the person is almost _________ w/ that trait (ex. Scrooge). 2. A central trait - is a general characteristic found in some degree in _____________. It makes us __________ in most situations. 3. Secondary traits are characteristics seen only in ___________________ (such as likes/dislikes). They are the least important + have a less consistent ___________ on us.

  36. Trait theories – Raymond Cattell He identified 46 surface traits (stable characteristics that can be observed in _________________). When looking at what surface traits had in common, he identified 16 source traits (stable characteristics that can be considered to be at the ___________ ______________). P. 400. Ex. Relaxed vs. tense, ___________ _______, reserved vs. outgoing, etc… He believed that by measuring these traits, psychologists could _______ people’s behavior in certain situations.

  37. Trait theories – Hans Eysenck He concluded that there are 2 basic dimensions of personality: 1. _______________________ 2. _______________________ Stability refers to the degree of ______ people have over their feelings. Stable people are relaxed, easygoing, + well-adjusted. Extroverts are _________, outgoing, active people who direct their energies towards other people + things. Introverts are reserved, withdrawn people who are preoccupied w/ their _________________ + feelings. He later added a 3rd dimension – _________. People at one end are self-centered, hostile, + ___________. At the other end people are socially sensitive, caring, + ____________.

  38. Trait theories – “The robust five” Various trait theories have shown that 5 traits ___________________ in different research. They are: 1. ______________ - talkativeness, energetic, etc… 2. ______________ - sympathetic, trusting, etc… 3. ______________ - organized, responsible, etc… 4. ______________________ - open-minded to new things 5. ___________________ - ability to experience things relatively easy w/o getting upset Trait theorists assume that traits are _____________________. End Section 5

More Related