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Identify Social Identities

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Title: Identify Social Identities


1
Identify Social Identities
  • Johnika Nixon

2
Comp Study Overview
2
  • What competencies does this relate to?
  • Achievement purpose of this competency in regards
    to the ResLife educational outcome of
    citizenship.
  • What does this competency stem from and state?
  • What we would expect of a person who has achieved
    this learning. The types of and ways to evaluate
    the measurability and/or observable qualities.
  • Influence by a treatment or strategy and/or
    practices
  • Recommendations

3
Citizenship
3
  • Become an engaged and active citizen by
    understanding how your thoughts, values, beliefs
    and actions affect the people with whom you live
    and recognize your responsibility to contribute
    to society at a local, national, and global
    level. This will be accomplished through an
    exploration of self, community and connections
  • Self Awareness, Connection Community

4
Related Competencies
4
  • Demonstrate the ability to self reflect
  • Demonstrate generalized knowledge of the social
    identities that exist in our society
  • Identity values
  • Articulate the importance of self-reflection
  • Accept and value other social identities
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the perspectives
    of other social identities
  • With an understanding of belonging needs,
    critically examine peer group impact on you and
    your impact on others
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the power to
    choose between responsibility to self and
    responsibility to society
  • Identity community behavior expectations of self
    and others
  • Demonstrate the awareness of the power of an
    individual in a community

5
Achievement Purpose
5
  • Sociologist Coser argues that people who function
    in complex social structures develop a deeper
    understanding of the social world and are better
    able to function as effective citizens. (Gurin,
    Nagda, Lopez, 2004)
  • Gurin cited the following claim written in
    Democratic Education in an Age of Difference that
    democratic citizenship is strengthened when
    undergraduates understand and experience social
    connections with those outside of their often
    parochial autobiographies and when they
    experience the way their lives are necessarily
    shaped by others (Guarasci and Cornwell, 1997,
    Preface, p. xiii).
  • Colin Powell was cited in an article by Gurin for
    having stated, A great deal of learning occurs
    through interactions among students of both
    sexes of different races, religions, and
    backgrounds who come from cities and rural
    areas, from various states and countries who
    have a wide variety of interests, talents and
    perspectives and who are able, directly and
    indirectly to learn from their differences and to
    stimulate one another to reexamine even their
    most deeply held assumptions about themselves and
    the world (Powell, 1978, p.412) (Gurin,
    Nagda, Lopez)

6
Achievement Purpose
6
  • Without institutional support and guidance in
    making developmental transitions, individuals are
    left largely to their own internal resources more
    so than in the past. The passive response to
    this is to drift from image to image, rather than
    to undertake more difficult developmental tasks,
    like actively exploring, challenging, and
    developing ones beliefs and potentials.
  • (Cote)

7
Understanding Identity
7
  • 5 Commonly documented functions of identity
  • Providing the structure for understanding who one
    is
  • Providing meaning and direction through
    commitments, values and goals obstacles
  • Providing a sense of personal control and free
    will
  • Striving for consistency, coherence, and harmony
    between values, beliefs and commitments
  • Enabling the recognition of potential through a
    sense of the future, possibilities and
    alternative choices.
  • (Adams Marshall, 1996, p. 433)

8
Social Identities
8
  • Social identities vary in the degree to which
    they are visible and voluntarily adopted. (Smith)
  • An individuals personal or social identity not
    only is shaped, in part, by the living systems
    around the individual, but the individuals
    identity can shape and change the nature of these
    living systems. (Adams Marshall)

9
What does this competency state?
9
  • Identity is not just a private, individual
    matter but a complex negotiation between the
    person and society.
  • Jones and McEwen developed a model that states
    sexual orientation, race, culture, class,
    religion, and gender are identity dimensions that
    circulate around ones core identity.
  • While individuals can identify multiple social
    groups to which they belong, they have difficulty
    understanding the interplay among their multiple
    social identities.
  • Reason Davis

10
Revealed Identities
10
  • Broad
  • Elementsinnate and visible
  • Race and Gender

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11
Silent Identities
11
  • Identities that are not adopted
  • May not be visible

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12
Chosen Identities
12
  • Identities that are chosen and/or achieved
  • Not visible, unless disclosed/displayed

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13
Social Connectedness
13
  • Among the most common psychological symptoms
    presented by individuals seeking counseling are
    feelings of loneliness, isolation, and alienation
    (Lee and Robbins)
  • Subjective awareness of being in close
    relationship with the social world (Lee and
    Robbins)
  • Proximal and distal relationships with family,
    friends, peers, acquaintances, strangers,
    community, and society (Lee and Robbins)
  • 2 Levels of Social Connectedness

14
Issues
14
  • Family values--powerful motivating force that
    people can use to guide their decisions and
    justify their actions. (Baumeister)
  • Many of the issues facing late 20th century
    adolescents may be a result of a conflict between
    what they view as good for their self and what
    their parents (society) may demand of them.
  • Finding ones self (Baumeister)
  • Movies, books and talk shows allude to the
    importance of finding ones self but with no
    clear conception of that meaning, how or the
    benefits.
  • Modern need to find this hidden identity may
    result in more experimentation with different
    roles and greater suggestibility from peer
    groups, as the person tries to find a self that
    fits

15
7 Vectors
15
  • Developing competence
  • Managing emotions
  • Developing autonomy
  • Developing mature interpersonal relationships
  • Establishing identity
  • Developing purpose
  • Developing integrity
  • (Evans, et. All)

16
Treatment vs. Strategy
16
  • The active response is to develop strategies for
    dealing with these influences in terms of
    sustaining some sense of direction and meaning,
    and taking initiative in ones own personal
    development. (Cote)
  • Prime testing ground for this is the university,
    where opportunities abound for creating
    tangible/intangible resources. (Cote)

17
Treatment vs. Strategy
17
  • Chickering noted the following environmental
    influences on student identity development
  • institutional objectives,
  • institutional size,
  • student-faculty relationships,
  • curriculum,
  • teaching,
  • friendships and student communities,
  • student development programs and services,
  • integration of work and learning,
  • recognition and respect for individual
    differences, and
  • acknowledgement of the cynical nature of learning
    and development.
  • (Evans)

18
Treatment vs. Strategy
18
  • Maslow suggested that we can ask people for their
    philosophy of the future -- what would their
    ideal life or world be like?

19
Review
19
  • Definition of Citizenship
  • Competency Overview
  • What does this competency state, stem from and
    relate to?
  • Achievement purpose of this competency in regards
    to the ResLife educational outcome of
    citizenship.
  • What we would expect of a person who has achieved
    this learning. The types of and ways to evaluate
    the measurability and/or observable qualities.
  • Influence by a treatment or strategy and/or
    practices

20
Recommendations
20
  • Modifications
  • Freshman Explore social identities
  • Sophomore Identify social identities
  • Seek out critical issues unmet
  • Proactive with results from SSCprogramming
  • Student Success Contract
  • Personal 11

21
Conclusion
21
  • Question Answer
  • Thank You
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