PSYCHOLOGY Schools of Thought - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 43
About This Presentation
Title:

PSYCHOLOGY Schools of Thought

Description:

Stress the genetic, medical, and neurological components of the person ... Karen Horney. Conditions of Learning. The Neurotic Personality of Our Time. Neurotic Needs ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:6537
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 44
Provided by: bail4
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: PSYCHOLOGY Schools of Thought


1
PSYCHOLOGYSchools of Thought Theorist
Information
  • Fall 2006
  • Mrs. Bailey

2
Schools of Thought
  • Biological
  • Behaviorist
  • Psychoanalytic
  • Humanist
  • Cognitive

3
BIOLOGICAL
  • Stress the genetic, medical, and neurological
    components of the person
  • Behavior is influenced by biological factors
  • Changes in the body help determine actions and
    behavior changes
  • Also known as neuropsychology, biopsychology,
    psychobiology, behavioral neuroscience, and
    physiological psychology

4
BEHAVIORIST
  • Stress the connection between stimulus/response
    and behavior/reward
  • View the environment as instrumental in behavior
  • Behavior is determined by the actions that
    are/were rewarded or punished

5
Edward Thorndike
  • Law of Effect
  • Behavior that is followed by consequences
    satisfying to the organism will be repeated, and
    behavior that is followed by noxious or
    unpleasant consequences will be discouraged

6
John B. Watson - Behaviorist
  • Inspired by Ivan Pavlov
  • Dismissed heredity as a significant factor is
    determining human behavior
  • Believed humans were more complicated than
    animals, but operated on the same principles
  • Published an article on his studies and
    essentially started Behaviorist Psychology

7
B.F. Skinner - Behaviorist
  • Excited by the work of Watson and Pavlov
  • Determined it was not the stimulus, but rather
    the after effect that prompted behavior
  • Coined the term Operant Behavior and Operant
    Conditioning
  • Developed Programmed Instruction

8
Ivan Pavlov
  • Nobel Prize for Medicine or Physiology in 1904
  • Studied the digestive process/determined it is
    controlled by the nervous system
  • Discovered conditioned reflexes

9
(No Transcript)
10
PSYCHOANALYTIC
  • Behavior is determined by primal drives and the
    experiences of early childhood
  • Emphasizes the unconscious mind
  • Some focus on the relevance of feelings of
    inferiority
  • Others stress the resolution of psychosocial or
    psychosexual conflicts

11
Sigmund Freud
  • Psychosexual Stages of Development
  • Influential - global theory - rules for
    predicting behavior
  • Two basic instincts sexual and aggressive
  • Three levels of consciousness Id, Ego, and
    Superego

12
(No Transcript)
13
(No Transcript)
14
Erik Erikson
  • 8 Stages of Psychosocial Development
  • Extends Freudian psychosexual theory
  • Encompasses entire life cycle
  • Concept of identity crisis
  • Recognizes influence of society, history
    culture on personality

15
Eriksons 8 Stages
16
(No Transcript)
17
Karen Horney
  • Conditions of Learning
  • The Neurotic Personality of Our Time
  • Neurotic Needs

18
Basic Neurotic Needs That
  • Move an individual toward people
  • Affection and approval
  • Fear of being alone/need for partner
  • Prestige/self-confidence and personal identity
    rest on the expectation of receiving recognition
    from others
  • Personal admiration
  • Move an individual away from people
  • Restrict ones life within narrow borders
  • Self-sufficiency and independence
  • Perfection/mistakes are seen as weakness
  • Move an individual against people
  • Power and control/do anything to obtain them
  • Exploit others/relieves feelings of helplessness
    and insecurity
  • Personal achievement/achieve more, even at
    expense of others
  • See page 213 of our text

19
Carl Jung
  • Personality Archetypes
  • Personal Unconscious
  • Collective Unconscious
  • Introversion and Extroversion
  • Believed in primitive, spiritual, and moral
    aspects of life
  • Analytic Psychology

20
Jungs Archetypes
  • Persona
  • people wear masks in public to hide their true
    nature
  • Respond to social pressures, traditions, need for
    acceptance
  • Anima and animus elements of the opposite sex
  • Anima/female side of men
  • Animus/male side of women
  • Provide shading and balance to the personality,
    enable sexes to understand and respond to each
    other
  • Shadow
  • Primitive side of personality
  • Hide socially unacceptable thoughts/desires/traits
    behind persona
  • Self
  • Regarded as life goal-strive for unity and
    completeness
  • Joining of conscious and unconscious mind to be
    completed self

21
Alfred Adler
  • Individual psychology
  • Placed social needs on an equal basis with
    Freuds sex drives
  • Social urges
  • Creative self inner system that guides the
    individual toward a fulfilling life

1870-1937, a Viennese psychiatrist
22
Adlers other concepts
  • Feelings of Inferiority
  • Compensation/attempt to deal with specific causes
  • Fictional Finalism
  • Driven by ideals that may be pure fiction, but
    pursue with great determination
  • Social Interest
  • Desire to make community a better place to live

23
HUMANIST
  • Emphasize the concept that people are in control
    of their own destiny
  • People try to satisfy both basic and enriching
    needs striving for personal achievement
  • Self-concept is important
  • Emphasize the inherent worth of the individual

24
Abraham Maslow
  • Self Actualization
  • Hierarchy of Needs
  • Believed psychology should study healthy people
  • People basically good
  • If basic needs are met, then happy, productive
    lives result

1908-1970, American Psychologist
25
Basic or Deficiency Needs
Metaneeds
  • Cognitive
  • Need to know, understand, explore
  • Aesthetic
  • Desire to bring beauty order to ones life
  • Self-actualization
  • Desire for self-fulfillment
  • Realization of individual potential
  • Physiological Needs
  • Bodys requirements
  • Safety Needs
  • Feeling safe/secure
  • Love
  • Belong to groups, receive/give affection,
    maintain friendships
  • Esteem
  • Recognition, achievement, competence

26
(No Transcript)
27
Maslow on Human NatureFive Basic Concepts
  • Essential nature of needs, capacities, and
    tendencies are good
  • To reach maturity, people should grow from within
    rather than be shaped from without to fulfill
    their potential
  • Mental illness results when basic needs are not
    satisfied, which twists their inner nature
  • Inner nature is weak, delicate, subtle which can
    be stunted by cultural pressures
  • Potential goodness is seen as people mature or
    become self-actualized

28
Self-actualized people
  • Perceive reality better than most individuals
  • Accept themselves, others, natural world do not
    worry about what cannot control
  • Spontaneous thoughts/behavior but not bizarre or
    unusual behaviors
  • Focus on problems outside selves, not
    self-centered
  • Do not allow social pressures to rule lives
  • Continued enjoyment from activities theyve done
    many times before
  • Open to spiritual or mystic experiences, not
    necessarily religious
  • Identify with humanity in a positive manner
  • Deep emotional relationships with a limited
    number of people
  • Democratic in values and attitudes free of
    prejudice
  • Enjoy process of reaching and achievement of
    goals
  • Enjoy humorous situation without turning the
    humor into hostility
  • Capable of great creativity in different manners
  • Part of culture, but do not blindly conform to
    standards

29
Carl Rogers
  • Client Centered Therapy
  • 3 Basic Rules
  • Limitations
  • Experiential Learning
  • Nondirective therapy

1902-1987, American Psychologist
30
COGNITIVE
  • Focus on the mental processing of the individual
  • Difficulties often stem from false perceptions of
    reality
  • People develop ideas of the world and base their
    judgments upon these perceptions
  • Some theorists believe it is stage related

31
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross
  • Death and Bereavement
  • Allow dying to have dignity and humanity
  • Wrote On Death and Dying
  • See bio box on page 428-429

1926- , Switzerland
32
Kubler-Ross Model
33
Jerome Bruner
  • Constructivism Applied to Education
  • Constructivist Theory
  • Discovery Learning
  • "Learners are encouraged to discover facts and
    relationships for themselves."

1915 - , American
34
Noam Chomsky
  • Language/Linguistics
  • Theory of Generative Grammar
  • Chomsky Hierarchy

1928- , Professor at MIT
35
Howard Gardner
  • Theories of Multiple Intelligence
  • Argued Intelligence tests only focus on
    linguistic and logical-mathematical intelligences

36
(No Transcript)
37
Lawrence Kohlberg
  • Stages of Moral Development
  • Found judgment of behavior varied with level of
    moral development
  • Focused on HOW people make decisions not on the
    behavior that might result from the decisions
  • Role playing consider moral dilemmas from
    anothers point of view

Harvard Psychologist
38
(No Transcript)
39
Lev Vygotsky
  • Social interaction plays a vital role in the
    development of cognition
  • Zone of Proximal Development
  • Difference between what a child can do with help
    and without guidance

1896-1934 , Russian Psychologist
40
(No Transcript)
41
Jean Piaget
  • Four Stages of Cognitive Development
  • Assimilation
  • Absorbing new concepts and experiences,
    incorporating them into existing cognitive
    structures/behaviors
  • Accommodation
  • Modifying previously developed though
    processes/behaviors to adapt to a new concept or
    experience
  • Stressed parental love and interaction, physical
    and intellectual stimulation

1896-1980, Swiss Psychologist
42
Piagets Four Stages of Cognitive Development
43
Albert Bandura
  • Observational Learning Theory or Social Learning
    Theory
  • People can learn by observing and imitating the
    behavior of others
  • Often considered the father of the cognitist
    movement

1925- , Canadian/Stanford Psychologist
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com