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Personal Growth and Development

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People who are successful recognize the need to strive constantly to change, ... Irrationality. Blindness to reality. Rigidity. Fear of the new and unfamiliar ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Personal Growth and Development


1
Personal Growth and Development
2
Personal Development - Receptiveness to Change
  • Adopt an attitude of continuous improvement
  • People who are successful recognize the need to
    strive constantly to change, grow, and improve.
  • Wanting to improve has nothing to do with the
    idea that there is something "wrong" with you.

3
Classify Your Actions
  • Two ways productive and non-productive.
  • Productive actions support the achievement of our
    goals
  • Non-productive actions do the opposite they
    interfere with or work against the achievement of
    our goals.
  • Non-productive actions have their place in life
  • Strike a balance between productive and
    non-productive

4
Classify Your Thoughts
  • Two ways positive or negative.
  • Positive thoughts result in our choosing
    productive actions
  • Negative thoughts result in non-productive
    actions.
  • Negative thoughts often lead negative results
  • Positive thoughts increase the probability of
    success

5
Achieving Your Goal of Graduating in Engineering
  • Requires that you change
  • Your actions from non-productive to productive
    ones
  • Your thoughts from negative to positive
  • Your feelings from negative to positive ones.

6
Student Success Model
  • Goal
  • (B.S. in Engineering)

Productive Actions Behaviors
Non-Productive Actions Behaviors
Productive Thoughts Attitudes
Negative Thoughts Attitudes
Positive Feelings
Negative Feelings
7
Making Behavior Modification Work for You Three
Steps to Achieve Change
  • Step 1. Knowledge - "You know what to do."
  • Step 2. Commitment - "You want to do it."
  • Step 3. Implementation - "You do it."

8
Non-Productive Vs. Productive Actions Examples
9
Non-Productive Vs. Productive Actions Examples
10
Step 2. Commitment - You Want To Do It
  • A commitment to doing something is really an
    attitude - or type of thought.
  • The process of making a commitment to the new
    knowledge base involves making a change in your
    attitudes.
  • To do this, you must first become conscious of
    your attitudes, particularly any negative ones
    that are obstructing your growth

11
Step 2. Commitment - You Want To Do It Example
of This Process
  • A student believes he is failing math because the
    professor is boring, unprepared, never smiles,
    and seems aloof. This student has the attitude
    that "I can't pass a course if I don't like the
    professor. " He sees himself as a victim" in
    which passing his math course is viewed as
    totally in the control of the professor. Once he
    becomes conscious that this is a negative
    attitude (one that interferes with his goal of
    success in school) and he realizes that the
    attitude can be changed, he can go about changing
    it to a positive one.
  • An example of a positive attitude would be "I
    can pass a class when I don't like the professor,
    but it is going to require me to adopt alternate
    strategies and to put in more work. " This
    positive attitude might lead to behaviors that
    include sitting in on another instructor's
    lecture, getting old exams, or seeking help from
    students who passed the course last semester.
  • As this example illustrates, changing your
    attitudes is a necessary precursor to changing
    your actions.

12
Sep 3. Implementation----'You do it!"
  • Most difficult step to take.
  • Actual change is hard, no matter how
    knowledgeable or committed you may be.
  • Why?
  • A payoff for you to keep doing what you are
    doing. You have adopted your current behavior
    patterns because they satisfy some need or want
    that you have. Changing to new behaviors will
    require you to give up old behaviors, ones that
    you may like very much
  • Making change requires you to accept
    responsibility for your actions and to begin to
    view yourself as the creator of your life.

13
Understanding Yourself
  • As you grow in your understanding of yourself,
    you will grow in your ability to understand other
    people

14
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
  • Self-actualization To become what individual is
    most fitted for

Esteem needs Self Respect, achievement,
reputation
Belonginess and love needs Friends, family
Safety needs Security, freedom from fear, order
Physiological needs Food, water, air, shelter
15
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
  • Needs must be satisfied from the bottom up.
  • If a lower-level need exists, you will become
    highly motivated to satisfy that need.
  • When lower needs are satisfied, higher-level
    needs become important, and you become motivated
    to satisfy those needs.
  • To be a successful student, you must be able to
    pursue your need for self-actualization. This
    means that you must first satisfy your
    physiological, safety, social, and esteem needs.

16
Self-Esteem
  • Self-esteem is made up of two interrelated
    components  
  • Self-efficacy - your sense of competence
  • Self-respect - your sense of personal worth

17
Self-Efficacy
  • To be self-efficacious is to feel capable of
    producing a desired result.
  • Self-efficacy is related to your confidence in
    the functioning of your mind and in your ability
    to think, understand, learn, and make decisions.

18
Self-Respect
  • Self-respect comes from
  • Feeling positive about your right to live and to
    be happy
  • Feeling that you are worthy of the rewards of
    your actions
  • Feeling that you deserve the respect of others.

19
Healthy Self-Esteem Correlates With
  • Rationality Realism
  • Intuitiveness
  • Creativity
  • Independence
  • Flexibility
  • Ability to manage change
  • Willingness to admit mistakes
  • Benevolence
  • Cooperativeness

20
Poor Self-Esteem Correlates With
  • Irrationality
  • Blindness to reality
  • Rigidity
  • Fear of the new and unfamiliar
  • Inappropriate conformity
  • Rebelliousness
  • Defensiveness
  • Overcontrolling behavior
  • Fear of others
  • Hostility toward others

21
Understanding Others/Respecting Differences
  • Engineering, now more than ever, is a
    team-oriented profession.
  • Your success both as an engineering student and
    as an engineering professional will be closely
    related to your ability to interact effectively
    with others.
  • As an engineer, you will be required to work
    with, manage, and be managed by people differing
    from you in personality styles and thinking
    preferences and in gender, ethnicity, and
    cultural background.

22
Understanding Others/Respecting Differences
  • How we treat others is closely related to
    self-esteem. If we don't feel good about
    ourselves, it is likely that we won't feel good
    about others
  • Seek out opportunities to interact with people
    from different ethnic and cultural backgrounds.
    You can learn a great deal from them and improve
    your interpersonal communication skills in the
    process

23
Silver Rule
  • What you would not want others to do unto you,
    do not do unto them.
  • If we practiced this simple principle, we
    certainly wouldn't put others down, stereotype
    others, treat others unfairly, resent others, or
    make others the butts of our jokes, since we
    would not like to have these done to us.

24
Assessment of Your Strengths and Areas for
Improvement
  • If you are committed to personal development, you
    need to start by assessing your strengths and
    areas for improvement

25
Personal Development Plan
  • What we need is to work on our areas for
    improvement-the very areas we tend to avoid. For
    example, if we do not write well, we avoid
    classes that require writing.
  • If we are shy, we avoid people. Avoidance
    behavior ensures that we will not improve in
    areas that need improvement.
  • Prioritize areas that need improvement in order
    of importance and choose several of the most
    important to work on.
  • For each area chosen, create a personal
    development plan. What are you going to do in the
    next week? In the next month? In the next year?

26
Personal Development Plan
  • What we need is to work on our areas for
    improvement-the very areas we tend to avoid. For
    example, if we do not write well, we avoid
    classes that require writing.
  • If we are shy, we avoid people. Avoidance
    behavior ensures that we will not improve in
    areas that need improvement.
  • Prioritize areas that need improvement in order
    of importance and choose several of the most
    important to work on.
  • For each area chosen, create a personal
    development plan. What are you going to do in the
    next week? In the next month? In the next year?
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